Why is branding important? Branding is the nuanced art of actively shaping your brand. With creativity, skill and strategy, a brand can establish an identity that sets itself apart from the competition and sparks a connection with its audience.
Branding is what gives you a reputation and, ultimately, a future. Because of the importance of branding, businesses and organizations should build a strong brand right from the start so they can consistently maintain it as they grow.
If you’re asking why branding is important, we’d challenge you with a counter-argument: Is there any time branding isn’t important?
Branding is everything. Here are the main reasons why branding matters.
Imagine that an audience is being introduced to your brand for the first time. Well-executed branding has a lot to say.
Who are you as a brand, exactly? If you don’t know, then neither will your audience.
Build your identity by establishing brand-defining keywords and using these words to shape the company voice, tone and aesthetic.
Check out the Fair Harvest Coffee logo. Even at a quick glance, the brand shows who they are and what they love most: coffee, social consciousness, the earth and the environment.
Every great brand should be easily explained with a few solid descriptors.
By establishing yourself as a brand, you can deeply connect with customers, employees and the general public. This connection is a gradual process which happens with time, but it starts by establishing a good reputation, letting your audience get to know you and ultimately finding memorable ways to communicate.
Oftentimes, great branding comes from embodying the essence of your brand in an unexpected way. Remember the Nike ad that saluted the last-place marathon finisher?
via Nike
Everything Nike stands for was all wrapped up into one beautiful experience that emotionally united a variety of audiences. Sure, everyone “knew” Nike. But by focusing on the last-place marathon finisher in an inspirational and relatable way, their whole brand identity became suddenly familiar all over again. This wasn’t an NBA basketball player showing off his Nike shoes. Instead, this was the real person behind it all: the aspiring athlete, trying to be the best she can be.
Great branding takes guts, strategy, intelligence—and sometimes—risk. To tell your customers what makes you “you,” confidence is essential.
Think of it this way: some of the most successful brands in the world got to where they are because of a sense of confidence, not because they were offering a particularly unique product or experience.
Look at Lululemon. Plenty of fashion companies make athleticwear, but there’s something inherently confident about the way they go about it. They’re just different.
For example, many of their locations offer yoga classes right in the store, presenting a bold statement that they don’t just want to sell their customers exercise clothes—they want to sweat it out with them. While many competitors may imitate Lululemon, they’re sustained by their brand as a whole, consistently remaining the leader in modern fashion activewear.
Whatever your brand may be, make sure there are goals and meaning behind it. Great branding is more than just your logo, font and colors.
Highly successful businesses have well-established missions, visions and values. But it’s not just for big companies and do-gooder nonprofits. Smaller brands can take a more casual approach while still developing a core set of brand principles.
by Una Design
by DSKY
by Dusan Klepic
by Agi Amri
Your beliefs play a large role upholding your brand identity and communicating it with others. But how you do this is up to you. Some brands take a more subtle approach, while others opt to weave values into a logo itself, like the “Eat Fresh, Eat Local” tagline in the Columbia Farmers Market logo above.
Sometimes even the greatest brands can be greater. Rebranding happens in many ways, and a common approach is a logo refresh.
In 2013, Wendy’s did just that. The colors and imagery still reflect the classic fast food chain that you know and love, but their new logo feels modern and friendlier, too.
Microsoft and Burger King have also made comparable branding improvements over the years by evolving their logos. Rebranding is incredibly important to the long-term sustainability of a mega-brand. Having a strong core brand identity can help ensure the success of a rebranding effort.
And then there’s the hardcore rebrand: the kind that leads to a totally new identity. The ultimate success story is Target. Sure, their stores existed in the 90s, but they full-on reinvented themselves in 1999 by partnering with high-end designers (like Missoni below) for limited-edition collections, including many fashion A-listers.
Target revitalized itself and went from being an ordinary store to becoming a heavy-hitting brand that is relatable not only to everyday consumers, but to luxury buyers alike.
At the end of the day, your brand is a business, and it deserves a great future. Part of the importance of branding is that a strong brand is essential to delivering the results you need.
When you’re good, you’re good. That’s why well-established brands create sizable revenue.
Warby Parker built its brand with a unique mix of convenience (order glasses online, try them on at home, easily return them if you’re not digging the look) and social entrepreneurship (for each pair of glasses sold, one is donated to a person in need).
The Warby Parker aesthetic is clean and straightforward (after all, they’re a convenience-oriented brand). It’s no frills, a bit hipster-y and just naturally cool without trying too hard. And their refined, approachable, kind-hearted outlook worked like a charm. Within five years of its founding, the company was valued at $1.2 billion.
With great branding comes great company culture, and employee morale goes right along with it.
Look at the Lush store, for instance. They’ve been bringing sustainable, handmade beauty, bath and skincare items to the mass market for over two decades. Lush is also known for being incredibly transparent about its values (boycotting animal testing, rewarding customers for recycling their packaging, showing the name and face of the employee who made the product, etc.).
Employees love the brand and live the brand, and this happiness reflects positively on Lush customers and the company as a whole.
Connection on a deep, personal level is a reflection of a well-built brand. It can be as simple as HelloFresh planning meals so that their customers have more family time.
Or maybe it’s a bit more nuanced, like this Joyce Foods brand design by Martis Lupus which reflects that their patrons want special, high-quality condiments instead of run-of-the-mill Heinz and Hellman’s.
Either way, when you unite customers around their needs and your values, the connection ensures brand loyalty, which ultimately leads to brand longevity.