Tuxedo Branding
415.952.6330
  • Home
  • Services
    • Design Services >
      • Logo Design
      • Corporate ID & Branding
      • Total Corporate ID & Branding
      • Website Design >
        • Bow-Tie Website
        • Waistcoat Website
        • Spats Website
        • Long Tails Website
        • Top Hat Website
    • Specialty Services >
      • Book Signing Kits
  • Contact

How Important is Your Logo Design to Your Business?

5/23/2013

 
Most often than not, businesses owners perceive their company logo design as an item on the check list to get done when starting out on their new venture or launching a new company. Usually considerable care, time and effort are invested in coming up with the perfect business name, which is great! The right name is the foundation stone of a great brand. If you are on this path of starting a new business, then this article would definitely make you pause and think.

Next, they need to get a logo to go with the name. If the business owner has some experience with computers or graphics software or sometimes, even MS Word, they may be tempted to hash out a design themselves. In some cases, a friend, relative or friend of a friend may have some experience with graphic design, and the business owner may simply give them the opportunity to come up with something “awesome”. In yet other cases, the business owner may be tempted to visit a crowdsourcing website and let 100s of “designers” bid for their business by submitting a lof of logo design concepts. All these stem from the desire to spend as little as possible on the logo design.

Learn more about successful logo designs...

How Nations Use Branding and Place Marketing

8/11/2012

 
Picture
When it comes to branding no one ever thinks about who actually uses it. Most simply think of brands as items you pick up while shopping or maybe even the retailer you are shopping in but countries use branding the same way businesses do.

You see a country's "customers" are its investors, tourists, traders, market intermediaries, NGOs, and office-holders in other countries and in multilateral institutions. Their interactions with one another take place in a complex environment, affected by governments, social forces, cultural factors, and markets.

The country must clearly identify its clientele: who are they, what motivates them, what do they do and buy (and how, where and when), what are their decision-making processes and priorities, who influences these and how. It is important to remember that people and institutions buy goods and services to satisfy needs. Nation branding is tantamount to casting the country as the superior if not exclusive answer to those needs it can cater to or even create.

The country's brand manager would do well to analyze the purchasing process: how, when, and where transactions are concluded. Understanding consumption and investment habits and patterns allows for better targeting and education of relevant market segments in order to influence and alter the behavior of target customers. They must also understand the people not only living in the country but visiting it. Understanding their psychology and demographics is crucial.

In this scenario the brand manager must distinguish consumer customers from business customers and from institutional customers. Consumer customers purchase goods and services from the country for their own consumption. Even tourists are consumer customers.

Business customers buy goods and services from the country on behalf of third parties. Tour operators are business customers. Business customers operate on a large scale and are, therefore, less numerous and less dispersed than consumer customers. Consequently, it is easier to foster long-term and close relationships with them. But, being dependent as they are on end-users, theirs is a volatile, demand-driven market. Moreover, business customers are tough negotiators (though some of them seek quality rather than price advantage).

Institutional customers assemble information about the country and analyze it in order to make or to influence political and credit decisions. Banks, governments, NGOs, and lenders evaluate and finance tourism projects based on such data.

To attract these movers and shakers, the country's brand manager must constantly monitor the global economy as well as the economies of the nation's main partners. Everything, from monetary policy to regulatory and fiscal developments affect purchasing and investment decisions.

So the next time you think of branding, take a step back and realize that everyone does it and needs to do it to stay "in business", including who countries.

Good Luck and More Successful Branding
Tuxedo Branding Blog Administrator


    Author

    Tuxedo Branding's Blog Editor scours the trades looking for tips, tactics and information to help you learn and understand branding, brand marketing and logo design.

    Archives

    May 2013
    December 2012
    September 2012
    August 2012
    July 2012

    Categories

    All
    Branding
    Brand Marketing
    Corporate Branding
    Creating A Brand
    Facebook
    Generating Buzz
    Government Branding
    Logo Design
    Mission Statement
    Search Engine Marketing
    Sem
    Seo
    Small Business Branding
    Smm
    Social Media Marketing
    Tourism Branding
    Vision Statement

    RSS Feed

Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.