The Power of Branding For Your Marketing Agency
OVERVIEW
KEY TOPICS OFFERED
- Evolution of Services
- Humanizing the Brand
- Creativity and Consistency
- Importance of Rebranding
- Components of a Brand Guide
- Rebranding as a growth strategy
This lesson talks about Directive, a company that has undergone several rebranding phases over the last 10 years. These rebranding shifts have been viewed as integral to Directive’s growth journey. The company’s origins trace back to Fiverr, with services initially ranging from local SEO to B2B operations. Rebranding was deemed crucial to projecting a larger and more professional image, fostering trust, and attracting clients. This lesson also dives into the creation of a detailed brand guide, encompassing logo usage, color schemes, typography, and visual elements. A balance between creativity and consistency is stressed, alongside the importance of humanizing the brand. The overall narrative pushes the significance of strategic branding in business development.
Learn the power of branding with Directive’s transformative journey. Learn from their strategic rebranding experiences that fueled exponential growth, from humble beginnings on Fiverr to B2B excellence. Gain insights into crafting a comprehensive brand guide, striking the perfect balance between creativity and consistency. Elevate your brand with techniques to humanize and connect, all while avoiding pitfalls.
- Downloadable assets
- Full length transcripts
- Real-life examples
- Interview with subject matter expert
I hope he does, because I’m just going to roast his ass. Ready, guys? Directive has rebranded, I think, probably four times, at least four times. You check the way back machine. Maybe I’m wrong. At least three for sure. I think four, maybe this is the fourth. But over the years I’ve always treated rebranding as part of the growth process. In other words, we started Directive for, a lot of you don’t know, actually started on Fiverr and then eventually was doing local like local search, local SEO, local PPC, vinyl fences, hookah shops, plumbers, you name it, we worked with them. And then we went to B2B. We did that because we had this one customer who was awesome and he taught us B2B essentially as a point of contact. Sean Black from inaudible, shout out to you Sean. And that actually got us into B2B. Well, when I was a local side or when I was a little two employees, whenever the organization had some type of significant change, we always invested in a rebrand because essentially you got to fake it till you make it in this game. In other words, if you look small, people treat you like