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Report: Strengthen Perception with Brand Health Tracking

Report: Strengthen Perception with Brand Health Tracking

4 min read
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Written by
Monks

Report: Strengthen Perception with Brand Health Tracking

Today, purchase decisions are largely driven by brand values—sometimes more than the product itself. So, understanding consumer perceptions about your brand is key to modern marketing success.

new white paper authored by our behavioral science lead and Director of Strategy April Huff, PhD, outlines methods for measuring, monitoring, and analyzing your brand’s health to garner valuable insights about your brand as well as perceptions about your competitors, your industry and your positioning with both.

“During the pandemic, we’ve seen a lot of shifts in consumer behavior, and we’ve seen people have come to expect a lot from brands—maybe more than in the past,” says Huff. “To me, that indicates you must make sure you’re telling a coherent brand story while understanding your customer and what they expect.” And brand health tracking is one way that marketing teams can quickly get an overview of brand perception, either at a glance or over time—then apply those insights to strengthen consumer experiences.

Are You and Your Audience on the Same Page?

The simplest brand health tracking strategy can accomplish a variety of goals. It can help you understand how you size up among competition or identify your unique strengths. When tracking over time, you can even zero in on quickly shifting trends or sentiments about your products.

Monk Thoughts During the pandemic, people have come to expect a lot from brands—maybe more than in the past.
Headshot of April Huff

Speed is especially important for modern business. Every brand wants to become the most talked-about in their category, and those conversations happen increasingly online, meaning brands must feed the feeds through content that’s relevant to audiences and their concerns—like how L’Oréal Paris drew on social insight to develop a shoppable content hub, Beauty Click, or how Northgate Market capitalized on consumer behavior to hijack Super Bowl ads in a clever way. By tracking brand health over time and across audiences, brands can better identify opportunities to jump into a conversation, rework their messaging or design entirely new experiences—all at a greater speed. 

Build Experiences That Speak to Consumers’ Needs

Brand health tracking can have a much deeper impact than simply knowing what people think about or want from your brand. In fact, Huff advocates that brand teams should build a business case on how health tracking affects clear business KPIs. “Leadership wants to know what brand health is, but unless you can tie it to revenue or other important KPIs, it’s hard to make a compelling case on why these insights should be prioritized,” she says. How might the price of a product or its ease-of-use affect loyalty or purchasing intent, for example? Evaluation of brand health data can help find causality in the way several factors influence how and why people engage—or disengage—with your business.

As brands continue tracking health over time, it’s inevitable that metrics will become more consistent—but far from being a bad thing, this means it’s time to really dig in and pinpoint where to take action. “When we see a baseline established around familiarity, consideration, purchase intent and preference, we ask: where can we add value and move the needle a bit more?” says Huff.

This data may then inspire creative digital ideas, helping turn insights into action—a top-of-mind concern for modern marketers who aim to deliver a fair value exchange through virtualized experiences. In conversation with Tom Beck, Executive Director of SoDA, MediaMonks Founder Wesley ter Haar discussed what he calls the second reawakening of digital, in which experiences across a brand’s ecosystem are measured against how they build brand love while also driving real results.

Monk Thoughts When we see a baseline established, we ask: where can we add value and move the needle a bit more?
Headshot of April Huff

“We’re now at the point of maturity in the industry where we can go, it’s not just cool, it’s delivering impact, business impact,” says ter Haar. “There’s a celebration of digital beyond just being a channel for direct response. We truly believe doing amazing things in digital helps build brands and helps drive business.” Having a better understanding of the audience’s perspective can make these experiences much more effective.

Fill in Gaps in Research and Data

A robust brand health strategy is measurable against key business KPIs over time does more than just tell you how consumers feel about your brand—it’s an excellent initial step in building first-party data, too. “As we move into a world where first-party data becomes king, brand health tracking is an important channel to tap into to understand potential customers independent of changes in privacy laws,” says Huff.

Brand health tracking is built on data willingly offered by consumers—whether they’re your most loyal base or prospects in the general population. And the way you measure sentiment is largely defined by the kinds of data and research that you already have available, meaning brand health insights should complement existing strategies rather than sit in a silo. By growing in sophistication over time, brand health tracking can power evaluation techniques like driver analysis, perceptual maps and more that inform decision-making across the business and the customer experience.

When data and creativity come together, brands can better understand and act on consumer values. From gaining insights that inspire experiences, augmenting existing research or simply finding where your brand stands among the competition, brand health tracking is an important method to meet consumer concerns and needs more effectively—and April Huff’s report offers clear steps on how to apply what you’ve learned to your marketing strategy so that you can make the right decisions at the right time.

Give your brand health a checkup.

Brand health tracking is a simple way to see how others perceive your brand, either at a glance or over time. Report: Strengthen Perception with Brand Health Tracking It may be time to give your brand health a checkup.
Brand health first-party data consumer sentiment customer perception

You’ve Analyzed Your Brand Health Data. Here’s How to Make It Matter.

You’ve Analyzed Your Brand Health Data. Here’s How to Make It Matter.

3 min read
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Written by
April Huff, PhD

You’ve Analyzed Your Brand Health Data. Here’s How to Make It Matter.
As marketers, particularly in light of today’s new normal, it’s absolutely critical that we understand the perceptions our customers and our target audiences have about our brand.

One thing we can all generally agree on (and have mostly come to accept) is that customer preferences and perceptions are a moving target and will likely continue to change in the foreseeable future. We know that COVID-19 has shifted consumer behavior in dramatic and long-lasting ways. And we know that recent social and political issues have made consumers more selective about which products, brands, and companies they hold dear or drop. So understanding what your customers are thinking about your brand is table stakes for change-proofing your brand.

While gathering consumer insights and data on the strength of your brand is critically important—and an essential start—many marketing teams mistakenly stop there, viewing moment-in-time results as an indication of overall brand health similar to an annual physical or end-of-term report card. In today’s changing world, a snapshot of customer perceptions and sentiment is just not enough to effectively guide marketing decisions. Monitoring brand health by tracking and analyzing data over time will help you keep your finger squarely on the pulse of what your customers are feeling and thinking. 

So, once you’ve collected your brand health data and tracked it over time, you’re ready to apply those insights to decisions you’re making around brand positioning, marketing investments, and overall marketing strategy. Here’s how.

Better position your brand

The brand tracking results you’ve collected will provide the insights you need to determine whether it’s advantageous—or necessary—to adjust your brand positioning. Here are some questions you should be asking yourself about your brand and the things to look for in your tracking results that can help you adjust your positioning strategy.

Is your brand position still a good fit for your markets? Ideally, your brand position should maximize how relevant your brand is to your customers and your brand’s distinctiveness relative to competitors. You should reevaluate your brand positioning if the brand tracker results indicate:

  • Customers are beginning to associate your competitors with your distinctive brand position.
  • Customer sentiment has shifted and customers are now finding other qualities or features more important. This would signal a drop in your brand’s relevancy

Is there open space that could give your brand a strategic advantage? In addition to indicating the relative strength of your brand’s position, your brand tracker data and perceptual map can also give you a sense of whether there’s an opportunity to position your brand more strategically. For example, you may realize that a quality like “trustworthiness” is highly relevant to your customers and is also a territory that no one owns. It would be worth investigating whether your brand should be repositioned to capitalize on that opportunity.

Adjust your channel and market investments

Your brand tracker will also provide insights into which aspects of your brand are strong and where there are opportunities for improvement. Brand awareness, familiarity, and consideration will help guide your overall marketing investment in channels and markets. 

Evaluating channels

  • Low results for brand awareness, familiarity, and consideration could be an opportunity to invest more in top-of-funnel channels to boost awareness
  • High levels of brand awareness but low levels of purchase intent and preference may have you shifting resources to focus more on conversion and lower-funnel marketing

Evaluating markets

  • Country-level or market-level results from your brand tracker will provide an opportunity to assess where and how you’re marketing
Refine your marketing research strategy

Your findings will, inevitably, lead you to a lot of questions. And there’s a good chance a lot of your questions will start with “why.” Why is customer sentiment shifting? Why did awareness decline in APAC? Any insights that will guide changes to marketing strategy should be based on those findings that show up over multiple waves of your brand tracker. If your “whys” are related to findings that are consistent over time, they merit further investigation and should be incorporated into your overall research strategy. Here are some additional research next steps to consider:

  • Invest in reports about consumer behavior and trends specific to your industry and market
  • Conduct focus groups or interviews to better understand brand perception and decision-making factors
  • Field a survey to get clarity on your target audience
Think marathon, not sprint

Brand management is a long-term strategy and a brand tracking program is a significant investment of both time and money. But, I promise you, if you collect and analyze customer data on a continuum—rather than at a moment in time—the rewards will be well worth the effort. Using your brand tracking results to guide your marketing strategy will not only help you make the most of your research investment, it will ensure that your brand, investment, and research strategies come from a place of knowledge, so you’re making the right decisions at the right time. 

It’s critical you understand the perceptions your customers and your target audiences have about your brand. Here’s how to apply those insights to the decisions you’re making. You’ve Analyzed Your Brand Health Data. Here’s How to Make It Matter. brand awareness Brand health brand activation strategy consumer insights brand strategy

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The website has been translated to English with the help of Humans and AI

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