Building Enduring Brands: The Role of Trust and Legacy
Building Brands
Desk
07/12/2023
Building Enduring Brands: The Role of Trust and Legacy
Established businesses, startups and entrepreneurs, and others such as not-for-profit entities are increasingly waking up to the fact that among their most precious possessions is the brand identities linked to what they offer. An enduring brand's ability to make decisions easier, reduce confusion, and set expectations makes the idea of creating enduring brands incredibly valuable and priceless. Crafting robust and enduring brands therefore stands as an essential obligation in management.
How do we contrast a brand and a product?
A product encompasses anything offered to a market for attention, acquisition, use, or consumption to fulfill a need or desire. It could be a physical item like cereal, a service like an airline, a retail store, a person, an organization, a place, or even an idea such as a social cause. While competition often occurs at the level of enhancing the product, as most companies can create satisfactory products at a basic level, experts argue that the real competition lies in what companies add beyond the basic product. This includes packaging, services, advertising, customer support, financing, delivery methods, warehousing, and other value-added aspects. A brand extends beyond just a product because it possesses unique aspects that differentiate it from other products fulfilling similar needs. These differences might be practical and measurable—related to the brand's performance—or more abstract, emotional, and intangible—associated with what the brand represents.
Branding has existed for ages to differentiate products - powered by trust and legacy
The word "brand" comes from "to burn," as branding originally involved marking livestock to set apart one owner's livestock from another's. According to the American Marketing Association (AMA) a brand is a “name, term, sign, symbol, or design, or a combination of them, intended to identify the goods and services of one seller or group of sellers and to differentiate them from those of competition.”
When marketers create a new name or symbol for a product, they are essentially trying to create a brand. But for most modern managers, a brand means more—it's about establishing an image, recognition, perception, reputation, and importance in the market, tied closely to the concepts of legacy and trust.
A brand can be a person, place, firm, or organization
A brand can indeed represent a person, a location, a company, or an entire organization. It encompasses the collective perception, values, and identity associated with any entity, whether it's an individual, a physical space, a business, or a larger group.
Here are a few use cases illustrating how a brand can represent different entities:
Personal Branding: An individual, like a public figure, celebrity, or influencer, develops their personal brand. They create a distinct identity, values, and image that they project to their audience. For instance, Oprah Winfrey's personal brand represents empowerment, authenticity, and compassion.
Place Branding: Cities, regions, or countries often develop their brands to attract tourists, investors, or residents. Consider cities like Paris or New York City or Mumbai, which have strong brand identities associated with culture, lifestyle, and opportunities.
Corporate Branding: Companies and organizations build their brand identities through logos, messaging, and values. Apple, for instance, has a brand representing innovation, sleek design, and user-friendliness.
Nonprofit Organization Branding: Charities and nonprofits also cultivate brands to convey their mission and values. For example, the Red Cross brand represents humanitarian aid and disaster relief.
A brand is when it exists in the mind
A brand is essentially established in the perceptions and thoughts of people. Trust and legacy plays a big role in establishing a brand in the perceptions and thoughts of people. Trust and legacy are crucial elements in shaping how a brand is perceived and remembered in people's minds. They contribute significantly to establishing and maintaining a brand's image and influence.
The role of trust and legacy in brand building
Trust and legacy play pivotal roles across all forms of branding. Here's how they contribute:
Trust in Branding: Whether it's personal, corporate, or related to a place or nonprofit, trust forms the foundation of relationships between the brand and its audience. Trust is built through consistency, delivering on promises, transparency, and reliability. Customers, stakeholders, or followers need to trust the brand to engage with it, invest in it, or support it.
Legacy in Branding: Legacy shapes the long-term perception and impact of a brand. It's about the enduring impact a brand leaves on its audience or community. Brands that focus on building a positive legacy often have a deeper connection with their audience. This could be seen in how a company's products or services have influenced industries, how a person's actions and values inspire others, or how a place is remembered for its contributions or uniqueness.
In personal branding, a legacy might involve leaving behind a positive impact through one's work or contributions. In corporate or nonprofit branding, it might involve a commitment to ethical practices, sustainability, or societal impact. Even in place branding, the legacy might be about preserving heritage or contributing positively to the lives of those who live or visit there.
The FayrEdge Summit 2023 - a testament to trust, legacy, and enduring brands
FayrEdge, in its pursuit of redefining business success, recognizes the symbiotic relationship between trust, legacy, and enduring brands. The FayrEdge Summit 2023 serves as a testament to this understanding—a convergence aimed at fostering discussions, strategies, and experiences that amplify the importance of fair stakeholder engagements. As the summit beckons C-suite executives to Mumbai, it heralds a transformative journey. It’s an opportunity to unravel the stories of enduring brands, dissect their journeys entwined with trust and legacy, and glean insights that can chart a course toward purpose-driven, stakeholder-centric success.
In conclusion, the future of business isn’t just about profits—it's about its purpose, sustainability, endurance, trust, and legacy, and enduring brands stand as testaments to this truth.