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[ JANUARY 2006]

What Do Core Values Have To With Brand?
Everything!
by Michel Hogan

At the core, your organization’s Brand is a reflection of the actions and beliefs of the people who work there. Those actions and beliefs are shaped and directed by the core values they hold. So before you start trying to give your brand more sizzle, ask a question sure to generate some long-term results – “Do our core values and our Brand align?”

Both Brand and core values are often afflicted with the same disease – they are “created” to be aspirational or worse expedient, and have no foundation of truth or connection to the organization behind their veneer. They are applied rather than discovered and in so doing
fail to act as an authentic representation of the beliefs
and actions of the organization – leading to cynicism and the loss of credibility inside the organization and outside in the marketplace.

As important as the identification of authentic core values are, this article is not designed to be a “how to” guide for finding them. This article is about the extraordinary opportunity to be found in aligning Brand with those core values. In fact we would take you a step further and argue that they cannot be separated and are in fact inexorably tied together. But to begin we need to reintroduce Brand as we understand it – as a key tenant of the organization.

Defining Brand
Brand is not a subset of marketing, not merely a device for connecting with customers and shaping their perception, not a logo and tag line. While these are all useful and important aspects of a Brand they are just that – small pieces of the whole. To paraphrase author Margaret Wheatley Brand is “both what we want to believe is true and what our actions show to be true about ourselves.

So considering that one of the primary influences of action and belief in an organization are its core values (whether articulated or just held within the culture), we believe it is imperative to consider one in relation to the other. Unfortunately few companies look to
their core values when embarking on a Brand project, choosing instead to focus all attention on the market landscape and customer perception. And while these elements must be incorporated, significant consideration must also be given to the actions and beliefs of the people who deliver the experience. Without this consideration you risk building a brand that is disconnected from the authenic organization and therefore one that cannot build positive customer perceptions. This disconnection in turn sets the Brand up to be fail internally and externally.

Simply, employees cannot deliver on a brand promise that is not tied to their shared day-to-day beliefs and actions and in failing to do will negatively impact the expectations of customers drawn to that same promise.

However, when the Brand is connected to the core values of the organization, consistent delivery of the Brand meshes seamlessly with the existing behavior and belief: no high profile internal “brand education” campaign needed; no change initiatives needed; what customers expect is what they get, strengthening perception; employees don’t feel they are being asked to deliver something they don’t believe, further reinforcing the values and creating a upward spiral of motivation and belief.

Consider Volvo. From the outset the founders held safety as a fundamental core value – “An automobile is driven by people. Safety is and must be the basic principle in all design work.” From that point forward safety has been continually embedded in the design ethic, work practices and Brand. It is so woven into the fabric of the organization and it’s Brand that it is impossible to think of Volvo separate from safety.

This is the ideal and there are numerous examples of organizations who firmly embed their core values in their brand – Google, Whole Foods, Apple, Nordstroms, Patagonia and 3M to name a few well-known examples. There are still many more who forgo the opportunity, preferring to keep the wall between their internal organization and the external marketplace firmly intact and then questioning why their Brands don’t deliver as expected. The hard truth is that until they incorporate the authentic core values of their organization as a key component of their Brand they never will!


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