Loud and Proud for the brand

Working for a small unknown company can have it’s advantages – People don’t yet have a story in their head about what that brand means to them.

[It was a really turning point for RedBalloon when at social events I no longer had to describe what RedBalloon did. In fact now many people tell me what RedBalloon delivered for them – they share the experience of what they gave or received. This is a true delight for me as the founder. The RedBalloon brand has become a promise held in the heart of the customer it is no longer up to us to create that story – they have now created it themselves.]

I digress really from my point about creating employee brand connection. Working for some one small and unknown can have it’s advantages – but many people love working with larger, well known businesses. They are proud to name their employer and will openly promote the products or services of their employer (72% of actively engaged employees according to Gallup)

Given that I write this blog whilst traveling back from holidays. I sit in the clean, cheerful A320 and remember how excited and proud I was to get a job in the aviation industry.

I had been working for a professional services firm and I really wanted to get into a more ‘traditional’ marketing role – a mentor said to me ‘go and work in product marketing for one of the bigger advertisers and that will give you the right footing to rise up through the marketing ranks.’

I looked up the list of top advertisers – approached five and was offered three jobs. (Late 1980s) I was soooo excited to accept a role at Ansett Airlines as a product manager. I literally jumped with joy. I told anyone who would listen so proudly that I worked for Ansett.

Fast forward three years and that view had changed completely. In fact it got to the point that if asked at a social event where I worked. I would answer ‘in the travel industry’ and change the subject really quickly.

I knew within the first month that Ansett was nothing like the organization I imagined it would be. People didn’t have job descriptions, there was no planning process, people seemed to spend a lot of time in meetings without resolutions. I was a young naive marketer who was so passionate about making a difference – but there was no one interested in listening.

I could go on about actual events which caused me to make such a dramatic turn around on my ‘brand connection’. But there is no point. It is just my view of the world – and others would have experienced something completely different.

Simply the external communications (advertising) was inconsistent with the employee experience. One of the TV campaigns ‘You can’t have the greatest airline in the world without the greatest people’ was on air at the time when the pilots first striked and then resigned – Australia did not have an aviation industry of nine months.

Another reasons I stopped being a brand advocate for Ansett – was when people told me things about the airlines service – I knew I had now power to influence what they had told me. I couldn’t fix it. There was no mechanism for collecting this customer feed back. Given I was ‘voiceless’ internally – then I too became ‘voiceless’ externally.

To create a company where employees are truly connected to the brand – cannot be bought – they either believe in what the organization is doing or they don’t. If people are proud then they cannot help but tell others about why they are proud of their employer.

(I know On Brand Partners work in the area of brand connection)

Right now – there is no cheaper nor authentic advertising than your employees talking about you.

(Side note interesting that on 22 April Telstra has embraced employees as advocates with its social media policy  “Telstra has taken a liberal approach to regulating employees’ use of social media, with a new policy assuming that employees are responsible and will be the company’s best advocates. ??Telstra’s policy, Social Media – Telstra’s 3 Rs of Social Media Engagement, states that the organisation "embraces social media as an important tool of corporate and business engagement". ?

This entry was posted in Lessons Learned

One Comment

  1. Alice Henderson
    Posted April 27, 2009 at 2:09 pm | Permalink

    Hi Naomi,

    As an employee of RedBalloon I definitely support your comments.

    I was at a wedding yesterday and shared the RedBalloon story with my table and many people across the room.

    It’s very easy to talk about something you genuinely believe in and enjoy.

    Thanks,

    Alice

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