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3 Brand Building Tips For Artists And Crafters

by Donna Maria

Yesterday, I delivered a branding presentation to the artists, crafters and independent business owners at the Arts & Sciences Council of Charlotte, NC. Branding is such a huge topic, and while it was impossible to treat it thoroughly in the hour I had today, I managed to cover a lot of ground, and the students were enthusiastic. I enjoyed answering their thoughtful questions. Here’s a photo of me and Katherine Mooring, the Arts & Sciences Associate Vice President of Education & Professional Development.

dm-and-katherine-mooring

Boiled down to its lowest common denominator, a brand is the overall images and impressions your customers and other stakeholders have about our business and the products and services you offer. While you envision your brand and act to solidify it, it is the public that shapes and sharpens it. In other words, you put your brand out there, but the response from the public, customers and other stakeholders makes your brand what it is. Here are some of the highlights from today’s presentation. You can enjoy a summary and the slides on the next page.

Your brand is one of the foundations of your business.  It will either enhance your bottom line or detract from it. It will cause people to buy your products or cause them not to buy your products (and tell others not to buy them!) No matter how good your products are, your brand must be even better. While I only had time in my presentation to scratch the surface of brand development, I was able to address some key steps to creating a brand.

  1. Envision Your Brand. As the business owner, it is up to you to envision the impression you want your brand to create in the minds of people encountering it. What do you want people to think of first when they experience you and your products or services? The Victoria’s Secret brand is sexy, feminine and provocative. The Marilyn Manson brand is shocking, occult-like and edgy. The creators of these brands thought long and planned well to maximize the chances that their product would create these images in the collective minds of the public.
  2. Fix Your Brand In Tangible Form. Once you envision your brand, you will fix it in tangible form. The brand name you choose, the font used, the colors, shapes and textures used, and the graphic or logo used to depict your brand are different things used to fix your brand in a tangible way. As noted in the slides, before you begin to fix your brand in tangible form, make sure you check the United States Patent & Trademark Office trademark search database to make sure that your new brand, graphics, colors and logo do not infringe on anyone else’s brand.
  3. Deliver Your Brand. Conveying your brand amounts simply to living it; delivering it to the world. As an artist or crafter, while you may have logos and brand names, at the end of the day, you are the living, breathing embodiment of your brand. Everywhere you go and everything you do represents your brand and invites the public to assess it and engage with it — or not.You will convey your brand personally, professionally, socially and in every other imaginable way, and you will do it online and offline.You will become the brand you have envisioned. You will live it, breathe it and deliver it everywhere you go. You will also massage and update it from time to time, based in part on feedback you get from your customers and the people you want to influence.

Here are the slides from the presentation.

Question: What do you think of these 3 branding steps? Considering this high level overview, what did I omit?

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posted on October 10, 2009 ·

Facebook comments:

  • http://www.cassiacandlefragrance.com/ Kelly Taylor

    dM. whatever I have done wrong in spending too much money, or bought too many supplies, the one thing I know that I have done right is branded my identity and it is the driving force of (most of) what I do! I live it, breathe it, envision it, it is firmly entrenched. Thank you for reminding me that EVERYTHING I do conveys my brand as well! I suppose that that would even go so far as to state that my appearance and wardrobe should reflect that when I do go out into public. This is something that I have neglected since becoming so engrossed in this new business!

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/Indie_Business Donna Maria

      Kelly: I hear your enthusiasm through your comment and am excited along with you. None of us does everything right and we all learn at different rates in different ways. As long as what you know you need to do is actually a part of your plan, the time to execute will come. It's a work in progress — a fun one at that!

  • http://www.cassiacandlefragrance.com Kelly Taylor

    dM. whatever I have done wrong in spending too much money, or bought too many supplies, the one thing I know that I have done right is branded my identity and it is the driving force of (most of) what I do! I live it, breathe it, envision it, it is firmly entrenched. Thank you for reminding me that EVERYTHING I do conveys my brand as well! I suppose that that would even go so far as to state that my appearance and wardrobe should reflect that when I do go out into public. This is something that I have neglected since becoming so engrossed in this new business!

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/Indie_Business Donna Maria

      Kelly: I hear your enthusiasm through your comment and am excited along with you. None of us does everything right and we all learn at different rates in different ways. As long as what you know you need to do is actually a part of your plan, the time to execute will come. It's a work in progress — a fun one at that!

  • http://scrubzbodyscrub.com/ Roberta

    Excellent tips. Before founding Scrubz, I was a designer, specializing in corporate identity, and your "creating the right look/feel" comments are right on the money. But your comments on "becoming the brand" are the key! For me, it's also about delivering on your promise 100% of the time.

    Thanks dM!

    • http://www.intensedebate.com/people/Indie_Business Donna Maria

      Good point – we all must become the brand. It's the key competitive advantage Indies have, regardless of the industry they are in.

  • http://scrubzbodyscrub.com Roberta

    Excellent tips. Before founding Scrubz, I was a designer, specializing in corporate identity, and your "creating the right look/feel" comments are right on the money. But your comments on "becoming the brand" are the key! For me, it's also about delivering on your promise 100% of the time.

    Thanks dM!

    • http://www.intensedebate.com/people/Indie_Business Donna Maria

      Good point – we all must become the brand. It's the key competitive advantage Indies have, regardless of the industry they are in.

  • http://www.rtartjewelry.com/ Rachel Taliaferro

    Hi Donna Maria! I was in attendance yesterday at the lecture. Thank you for bringing such energy and great information! I am so happy to have found your blog…it looks to be quite the wealth of information. Can't wait to follow you, and put these useful branding tips towards my art jewelry fashion line.

    Rachel
    http://www.rtartjewelry.com

  • http://www.rtartjewelry.com Rachel Taliaferro

    Hi Donna Maria! I was in attendance yesterday at the lecture. Thank you for bringing such energy and great information! I am so happy to have found your blog…it looks to be quite the wealth of information. Can't wait to follow you, and put these useful branding tips towards my art jewelry fashion line.

    Rachel
    http://www.rtartjewelry.com

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