I love the business side of branding. To my surprise, I discovered long ago that I share this perspective with many board members of companies I’m working with. Instead of looking at the ‘magic’ of branding, they’re much more interested in the ‘logic’. This is, by no means, meant to disrespect the ‘magic’ — the creative side — of branding; it’s crucial for any brand to form some sort of an emotional bond with its audiences, for which you need the creative side. However, I find that for boards to make decisions on what, where, and how much to invest in the brand, it is key to have the more ‘logical’ side of branding prevail at the boardroom table. To give some insight into how brands are being debated about in the boardroom, I’ll be sharing my top considerations on branding from a boardroom perspective in a series of articles. This is the first article in the series, looking at the business side of branding.
‘Brand equity’ doesn’t exist in the boardroom
For brand marketers and communicators, brand equity is all about orchestrating the intangible relationship between brands and their stakeholder groups. Naturally, these are often customers or clients, and increasingly other audiences such as employees, suppliers of products, services, and capital, and society as a whole. The extent to which brands generate more preference, loyalty, or ultimate value, is referred to as brand equity. Looking more in-depth, this can be split into brand drivers, the ingredients that make up brand equity. Marketers around the world are educated to understand these mechanisms and to operate them in real life — the science and art of marketing.
In the boardroom, however, brand marketers and communicators do not always have a seat. On the contrary, most boards consist of non-marketers or no marketers at all. More often, the common denominator for backgrounds of board members stems from finance, business, and increasingly from IT and digital. Also, the boardroom ‘language’ is financial and factual, and not marketing language. It’s the language of the capital markets, the economy, and 100% captured in systems for financial reporting; be it IFRS, FASB, or US GAAP or whatever regulations apply for a listed company.
The appearance of the brand in a balance sheet
So, here’s the thing: In a balance sheet, ‘brand equity’ is not visible, it doesn’t show. You can see ‘Brand’ under Intangible Assets, at the top-left of a balance sheet. And you can see ‘Equity’ under Capital, at the top-right of a balance sheet. For both ‘Brand’ and ‘Equity’, the financial community has been working for hundreds of years to create a framework of definitions — so practitioners understand exactly what’s what (the first book on this was by L. Pacioli in 1445). They are two different things altogether, for this community.
So, what happens if brand marketers or communicators bring up ‘brand equity’ in boardroom conversations? They run the risk of being misunderstood. The same applies when they start talking about ‘brand in the balance sheet’, as that is mostly interpreted to only be in the balance sheet when a brand has been acquired from another company, and only then when the buyer has decided to keep it. Internally developed brand value can never be shown on a balance sheet. This is why, for example, the brand value of LinkedIn is shown on the balance sheet of Microsoft, whereas the brand Microsoft itself — funny enough — is not.
As a manager of the brand, by not adhering to the business language of a topic, you immediately start off on the wrong foot and might be disconnected from the business conversation. Also, you’re effectively reinforcing the image of the marketing and communications domain; that it’s about spending money and value only comes into the equation later.
Translating data into insights
This is also a plea for data, data, and data. In the digital age, we have access to tons of data and this should be interpreted and translated into insights. Whenever I consult on rebrand programs, one of the key areas is investigating what we can learn from data, which then becomes a crucial input for the program. For example, when merging the banking activities in the Baltic states for DNB and Nordea, data showed that the new name, Luminor — a new generation bank, would really work well with local audiences. Similarly, when rebranding travel agency Arke to TUI, we knew that 50% of the turnover was online, and to convert that, many A-B tests were conducted to ensure a seamless transition for website traffic. Data also taught us how much money to invest in performance-based marketing.
My recommendation here is to always speak about the brand as the most valuable intangible asset and to demonstrate how this asset can support business performance, which is why I love the business side of branding. On average, brand value represents around 20% of the market capitalization of the top 500 companies in the world (Brand Finance).
If you are able to demonstrate how brands generate value and can orchestrate the intangible relationship between an organization and its stakeholders, you will be heard in the boardroom. After all, exhibiting this relationship is not an easy, one-dimensional thing, but it’s what board members understand. Achieve this and I predict that you will instigate questions like, ‘Okay, how does that work then and what do we need to get it right?’. And right there, the journey of making the business case and roadmap for your brand growth begins. This thinking will enable you to sketch out the why, what, and how to go about this, and to obtain the mandate that goes with it to start your journey. You’ll soon be coordinating the brand to drive business performance. And isn’t that the most valuable brand purpose?
Cover image source: Razvan Chisu
*By Marc Cloosterman, originally featured on Brandingmag.com.