What does a branding consultant do?
Here's my fantasy answer: I turn tiny little businesses into giant companies, and we all get really, really rich.
More realistically: I help businesses turn pro.
Or, since you're already a pro in your field, think of it as super-pro.
At that magic moment when it's time to get it together and look the part of a business that's one or two sizes up from where you are now – or whatever size you want to be, you get in touch with me.
And we put together the materials that will make you instantly recognizable to the people who buy from you.
Both online and offline, working together:
- Your web site.
- Your business card.
- Your product literature – whether it's a brochure or a catalogue, or ten brochures. Or a disk that carries a formal presentation folks can watch when they get home or back to the office. Whatever you give people that they can keep and refer to, that lets them know what you do and why they need to be doing it with you.
- If you have a physical location, or packaging, or vehicles, we'll update that, too.
- We'll add pieces of the mix you may not have needed before now: email newsletters, Twitter backgrounds and other social media, signage and more.
When all these pieces are done and deployed, everything your customers see and hear will carry a consistent look and feel and tone.
You'll start to feel what it's like to step into the next phase of your company's development:
- Customers and prospects, and your industry, will see you differently.
- Everything from getting apointments to closing deals will get easier for you and your team.
- (We've even heard of retailers getting fewer returns!)
Because as much as customers like seeing your brand succeed, they like it even better when they can think you built that successful brand for the specific purpose of serving them.
Then we develop marketing campaigns to get that brand in front of your audience.
Decent identity and branding work is an investment.
Fortunately, you can get that investment back by generating new revenue with a few marketing campaigns – as long as they're the right kind.
And you see that growth on your balance sheet as well as in y our business plans and position papers.
Sales materials to seal the deals that turn prospects into customers.
So the brand experience stays consistent from beginning to, well, beginning -As a few interested prospects become a group of satisfied customers . . .
Even programs to make sure your brand delivers what customers are expecting.
The fastest way to kill a brand is to do great marketing for a bad product.
But the best way to turn a defecting customer into a devoted cultist is to catch a problem in time and fix it with some fanfare. Not a lot - just enough to let that customer know you'd do just about anything to make his/her experience right.
Plus, for long-term growth, nothing beats a culture of cultists . . . all talking about your products and services in terms you taught them to use . . . judging your competition - such as it is - by standards you set . . . using criteria you taught them to value.
That's the power of a brand that's working for you.
Now. More about working with a branding broad . . .
If you've never worked with a communications firm before, here's a little about what to expect and how things work. (I'm different in some crucial ways.)
I had a client once who had never worked with a real communications firm before . . . just a series of production artists and illustrators.
I learned from mutual friends that he'd been expecting a questionnaire that asked him what colors and imagery to use . . . he was rather alarmed that all it asked about were his business and communications objectives.
Now, certalnly, if there are colors and styles of photograpy or illustration you detest, or that you love,we want to respect that.
But when any of us works with a communications firm, presumably we're doing it for business reasons. And the primary aesthetic considerations are going to be: What colors, images, sounds and terms do the people who use your products and services expect to see and hear?
If you have – and liked it – here are the things you'll like about working with me.
If you have - and hated it - here's why I do a whole lot of things differently.

Mary Baum
Owner/ Chief Branding Consultant