What comes first – branding or website?
By Fiona Humberstone, http://www.guildfordprinting.com
When you're starting a business or revisiting your marketing, where do you start? With your website or with your logo design? When budgets are tight I can understand the logic behind starting with your website - websites can start generating you visible income immediately, they're an essential part of your marketing mix and if you can get the website right you can use the income generated to refine other areas of your marketing.
However, if you take a step back and look at the bigger picture, I think you'll see why this logic is flawed.
Great marketing always starts with strong branding. If you don't have a strong brand identity you'll simply be making life harder for yourself. You'll have to fight harder to engage your target audience, you'll have to spend more money (in the long term) getting your marketing collateral looking like it's come from the same company and quite simply, you're missing a trick.
Think of branding like losing weight. Imagine you decided that now was the time to go on a drastic image makeover - you'd lose 3 stone and get a new haircut and new wardrobe. When would be the best time to invest in that new wardrobe? Before you'd lost the weight? Or after? Sure, you'd feel better instantly if you went out and bought a new wardrobe immediately, but ultimately you'd end up throwing all your old clothes away when you reached your target weight. Your body shape would be different, you'd have more confidence and your tastes might even be different. You'd probably feel like you'd reached your full potential and feel as though now was the time to be showing off your new body shape. Do you think that the clothes you bought when you were 3 stone heavier would still work on your new, trimmer frame? Unlikely isn't it?
So why then, does it make sense to design your website before you finalise your branding? Getting the branding right at the outset can actually save you money in the long run. To start with, you'll have a clear set of brand values and brand identity to give to your web designer. This means that you'll incur less creative bills (and probably get a better outcome since most web designers aren't branding experts). You'll also get to where you need to be much faster because your web designer will know what you expect of them. And finally, you'll have a website that truly represents your brand. That really says the right things about your business.
So before you rush out and order your new website, just think - am I happy with my branding? Is it saying the right things about me? And if you're not, try talking to a friendly design agency who specialises in branding!
By Fiona Humberstone, a working mum and entrepreneur who runs an award-winning design and print agency in Guildford, Surrey.
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