Integrated Marketing: Key to Successful Branding
August 24th, 2007A few years ago I had the chance to visit the public relations department of the world’s largest IT outsourcing organization headquartered in Plano, Texas. I was thoroughly impressed with the knowledge and expertise of the people I talked to in their PR department and the structure of the department itself. They had people dedicated to the various vertical markets they provided services for, in addition to corporate PR, internal PR and of course investor relations.
After a few hours of discussions about all areas of PR, I found it interesting that not once did they mention marketing, nor, most importantly, integrated marketing communications. When I brought it up, the PR experts (and I don’t use that term “experts” loosely…they truly are experts in every sense of the way) sitting in front of me said they did not deal with marketing. In fact, the departments were organized such that marketing was on one end of the building, while they occupied the other end of the building. In other words, they had nothing to do with each other.
I left impressed with their PR team and efforts, but just shaking my head at the thought that they had no interaction with marketing at all. Despite their success and phenomenal powerhouse position in the industry and on Wall Street, imagine how much STRONGER and PROFITABLE they could be if they had an integrated marketing effort?
Integrated marketing communications is paramount in building and reinforcing your branding. A consistent message and voice - written, visual and verbal - will ensure that your message is never diluted, but remains strong. As you communicate the same message over and over again on your web site, in your collateral, during your sales presentations, internal to your employees, on the trade show floor and in a magazine article, you’ll find that your message is stronger and becomes more recognized. Think about a TV commercial song: it plays on TV, then on the radio, on the web…and the message is even pulled into ads, on packaging and in promotions at the store. You start to recognize it, and remember it. And if it’s a strong message, you’ll remember not only the company, but the product or service its offering.
So, while the bigger corporations may be able to get away with their PR and marketing teams not working together, don’t rely on a “mish mash” of press releases, brochures and a web site that don’t have a consistent message. Because if you do, you won’t be able to successfully grow your business or increase your sales.
Instead, think integrated. That’s your key to successful branding.
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