“Power branding is not an intention, nor is it merely an action. It’s a commitment.”
There’s a guy in New Mexico who really understands brand marketing.
Steve McKee is founder and president of McKee Wallwork + Company. He’s also the author of When Growth Stalls and Power Branding.

Credit: McKee Wallwork + Company.
In Power Branding (2014), McKee provides concise, 2-3 page chapters that each deliver a key thought with examples. It’s an easy read that will challenge your thinking and/or reinforce any brand marketing discipline that may have gotten a bit out-of-shape.
Here are 5 Power Branding Pointers to whet your appetite:
1. Branding is everything a company does, from the logo on its letterhead, to the way it handles customer complaints, to whether its uniformed personnel keep their shirts tucked in.
2. Branding is like baseball: You may throw a bad pitch, but it’s a long season. If you execute steadily and consistently, the statistics will work in your favor.
3. In branding – as with everything else in business – strategy without execution is only theory. And effective execution takes time.
4. One of the most difficult things to do in branding is to step out of your own shoes and into those of your customers and prospects. The trick to creating effective branding is to walk in the shoes of your target customers, to see your message through their eyes and hear it through their ears.
5. Continually strive to make your brand the best it can be. Just never try to make it something other than what it is.
Headline
Steve McKee’s Power Branding gives you a brisk marketing discipline workout. There aren’t any shortcuts, so to keep in top shape, remember that “power branding is a commitment.”
Harvey Chimoff is a marketing and business team leader who drives performance in consumer products and manufacturing companies.
[…] First, be sure it makes sense to extend the existing brand to those new customers. (More on brand usage here and brand discipline here.) […]
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