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People feel vulnerable now. Many have to live their lives in the digital cloud, often not by choice.
Just
like a human, a brand has to learn how
to be + have at every level of social evolution and crisis.
We think that to do this well involves a trait called Brand Empathy.
Empathy means putting yourself in another’s shoes and truly identifying
with their situation.
There
are a few things to keep in mind for a brand to manifest brand empathy.
1. Curate your content based on current events or trending topics
Guinness shifted its focus away from celebrations, and leaned into a message of well-being and lifting each other up with the hashtag #wewilltoastagain. In these delicate moments where no place feels safe, a brand has to be present with empathy in order to stay connected with its audience.
How Guinness changed tack is a good example that the
nuances of your brand personality are more colorful and delicate than ever.
2. Make goodness your brand ally
In 21st century
marketing, marketing is no longer about creating illusions and beautiful
gleaming things and people. Today, a consumer cannot associate with or be
bought into a brand without ascribing to the underlying value that the brand
stands for.
To a certain level, as human beings, we all want to
prompt change in both ourselves and/or the world to make it a better place. A
not-too-difficult way to do it is to associate ourselves with the content we
consume.
Adobe did what it does best. It used its creativity
to honour the people who continue to keep the world turning.
Top fashion brands like Prada, YSL and Gucci pivoted
and re-tooled their manufacturing facilities to produce face masks in response
to the shortage caused by COVID-19.
But, let us also be clear, association with goodness
or the right value is not overly
trying too hard to tap into a cause or make a social impact.
3. Touch that void
Okay, “touch that void” sounds a little elusive.
We are breaking it down. This involves a few
aspects:
First, figure out who are you really targeting i.e. your
niche audience. Mass appeal is not the way to go here.
Second, seek
to educate or entertain, or simply
be kind and care enough for your niche
audience.
A google consumer insights report showed that
millennials with their heavy use of technology are actually self-starters and
doers; they do not merely love to take and pose selfies. Another consumer report
(consumerclarity.com) says that the millennial generation is not interested in
businesses that are driven by the bottom line without a greater good component.
Third, build an authentic relationship.
Listening and creating trust do not happen instantaneously.
This is a furious nod to the age-old adage that content is king. Content needs
to be valuable, which goes back to our second point. Content also needs to be
consistent, so that we can give something for our niche audience to rely upon.
Dove displays empathy with its audience with its
2013 “Real beauty sketches” campaign. The ad sought to evoke an emotive
response with its powerful underlying message that you’re more beautiful than
you think. It depicts women’s struggle that the concept of beauty is passively
found and seek to promote positive self-esteem.
Empathy has taken on a new level of priority! As
human contact becomes restricted, we shouldn’t forget the importance of the
human touch.
The team at Fenzo believes that creativity fuelled
by empathy creates a double win, for our clients and their target audience. Let
us help turn your brand into a good read, and make it harder for
people to put it down!
Sources: https://fenzodigital.com/blog/how-to-express-brand-empathy/
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