Opinion

Marketing is how you see yourself, advertising is how you act in public, branding is how others see you

While marketing is how you want others to see you, branding is how they actually – and if you have a strong brand, you can spend more time building on it, but if you have reputation problems, however, you need to focus on changing perceptions – writes Peter Gasca.

In my work with entrepreneurs and business students, I often hear marketing strategies explained as ‘having social media’, ‘having an online brand’ or ‘advertising a lot’.

These explanations make me cringe because while they might be part of a plan, they grossly oversimplify the deeper and more complex concepts behind a truly effective marketing strategy.

In order to explain and help others understand marketing – namely the difference between marketing, advertising and branding – I ask them to apply each of these concepts to themselves personally. When you do, this is what it would look like.

Marketing is how you see yourself

Photo by Keagan Henman on Unsplash

Marketing is the image that you are trying to present to others. It starts with how you dress, the colours and patterns you choose and how you groom. We all have a strategy for this – yes, everyone, including your unkempt second cousin who rarely showers and wears the same Star Wars shirt he’s worn since college.

Even not having a strategy for your personal appearance is a strategy itself. You choose your image to portray yourself as a business professional, a punk rocker, a tech nerd, etc; and by doing so, you are expressing to others through your appearance your character, loveable attributes and in the end the value you offer to others.

It isn’t fun to admit that appearances are as important as they are, but let’s be honest, first impressions are driven by appearance. Impressions can evolve and be molded later, but as we all know, they require time and effort to change, so we do our best to get it right up front.

For a business, a marketing strategy considers how you want others to perceive your company. It should convey the vision and values of the business and express these in a way that the public will recognise and associate with your company. How you ‘dress’ your company will determine how effectively your message and image will be accepted by consumers.

Advertising is how you act in public

Photo by Austin Chan on Unsplash

If marketing is how you see yourself, advertising describes your actions. How you carry yourself, where you hang out and what you say are just as important as how you look. All of this should be considered with your marketing strategy to assure that you have consistency between your image and your actions.

For instance, imagine that you wear a New England Patriots jersey and get a ‘I Heart Tom Brady’ tattoo, but during the Super Bowl you cheer for the Philadelphia Eagles and celebrate their victory. You will confound – and probably infuriate – all of your friends and likely be exiled from future Sunday game days.

Your business advertising strategy is the same. If you execute it in the wrong places with the wrong message and tone at the wrong times – or to the wrong audience – it will ultimately confuse consumers and could turn them away.

Branding is how others see you

While marketing is how you want others to see you, branding is how they actually do. Your marketing strategy should assess and consider your personal brand. If you have a strong brand, you can spend more time building on it. If you have reputation problems, however, you need to focus on rebuilding or changing perceptions.

As an example, if your professional network believes you to be fraud or slacker, then it will require more than just dressing professionally and mastering your LinkedIn profile to change this perception.

Similarly from a business standpoint, understanding how consumers perceive your business is crucial for how you decide to execute a marketing and advertising strategy. Now, I understand I just oversimplified complex marketing concepts – exactly what I critiqued at the beginning.

I find, however, that applying these concepts to ourselves creates an effective and simple way to explain how each concept can and should be applied to your business.

Peter Gasca is an independent consultant based in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, in the United States – and a version of this article was first published here.

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