Brand Voice

5 Considerations for Powerful Brand Voice Creation

5 Considerations for Powerful Brand Voice Creation

Brand Voice is an essential tool that communicates brand personality and more importantly, helps ensure a brand earns the reputation it desires.

When a brand voice is well defined and consistent it allows the world to understand who the brand is and what the brand stands for. In other words, a brand voice gives a brand focus and personality; it helps the brand tell stories in a compelling and unique way. It allows people to get to know a brand, like a brand, and connect with a brand.

Below are 5 tips to keep in mind when creating a powerful brand voice that cuts through the clutter, resonates with consumers, and helps achieve both strategic and business goals.

1. Consider the reputation you want to earn.

Before you create a brand voice, you need to have a tightly defined brand architecture. This brand architecture is your director—so listen to it. What does your brand stand for? In other words, what reputation do you want to earn? Find the brand essence and positioning statement in the architecture—your brand voice should reflect this. Let’s say your brand stands for inspired simplicity. In that case, you probably want a conversational voice that excites people—so you need to create a voice that will do this. If you have a jargon-filled voice that speaks in long, complicated sentences, you will not earn a reputation for inspired simplicity.

2. Allow the brand personality to inform the voice.

What is the personality of the brand you are creating the voice for? Brand personality is an essential consideration because the brand voice should embody it in the way it communicates. For example, if the brand personality is intuitive, luminous, and warm, how do you break these down for a voice? Well, to be intuitive, you might use language that’s conversational yet intelligent. To be luminous, you might use language that appeals to the senses and creates a feeling of atmosphere. And to be warm, you must use optimistic language that inspires the heart and mind. By creating voice principles like these, you’ll help the brand personality shine.

3. Make sure the voice engages on an emotional level.

Think of your brand as a character. Do you have a clear vision of who your brand character is and how they speak? For example, Apple had such a strong vision of its voice that it could hold a casting call for it. In the “Mac versus PC” ads, the voice of both Apple and Microsoft is represented by characters that couldn’t be more different from one another. And a differentiated voice is precisely the kind of voice you want to develop for your brand. Think about whom you would cast if you had to choose a person to represent your brand and allow that to help you define the voice.

4. Write well.

No matter how well-intentioned and constructed, a brand voice will not come to life if the way it’s communicated doesn’t follow the basics of good writing. This means showing and not telling, using active verbs, writing tightly, and using fresh language. A brand voice that uses passive tense and speaks in clichés and puns (unless done so on purpose to make a point) will not elevate a brand. But good writing that follows well-constructed guidelines will.

5. Create guidelines for consistency and style.

Well – constructed guidelines, every brand voice needs them. Because if the people who need to bring the brand to life on an everyday basis don’t understand how to do that, this will cause inconsistency, and inconsistent does not a good brand voice make.

Brand voice guidelines should detail the brand voice’s overall strategy, including voice principles and writing tactics (the dos and don’ts of the brand voice). The guidelines should also give examples of the voice principles in action. Ideally, as many examples and in as many different deliverables as possible should be included. At the very least, examples of headlines and ad copy should be written in the guidelines. But sample email messages, social media messages, and even customer service conversation examples can help make the guidelines as specific and easy to understand as possible.

Finally, remember: A brand voice reflects a brand's attitude, heart, and mind. It should feel natural –and this can only happen when the voice comes from a well-defined set of instructions, otherwise known as the brand architecture. Respect the architecture, allow it to impact your voice guidelines, and create a strategic way of communicating to help the brand earn its desired reputation.

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Gail Scardapane is a public relations strategist and a brand communications consultant. She served as Head of Brand and VP of Public Relations at Saladworks LLC., a leading franchise company where she was part of the small team instrumental in developing and scaling the brand.

Presently she works with organizations and individual clients to develop and activate integrated communications strategies to achieve business goals. She utilizes her public relations background to position clients as newsmakers, thought leaders, and influencers in their respective fields.

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