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Branding

What is Brand Messaging?

TL;DR

The core messages your brand communicates, what you do, who you serve, why it matters, and what makes you different. Brand messaging includes your Value Proposition, Tagline, and key talking points. Consistent messaging across all channels builds recognition and trust. It informs all Copywriting and content.

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Frequently Asked Questions About Brand Messaging

What should brand messaging include?

Core brand messaging includes: your value proposition (main benefit), tagline or slogan, elevator pitch (30-second explanation), key differentiators, and 3-5 supporting messages for different audiences or situations. All should be documented and consistent.

How do I create effective brand messaging?

Start with customer research, what problems do they have and how do they describe them? Then articulate how you solve those problems uniquely. Use customer language, not industry jargon. Test messaging with real customers for clarity and resonance.

How often should I update brand messaging?

Review messaging annually or when your business evolves significantly. Markets change, competitors shift, and your offerings may expand. However, avoid constant changes, consistency builds recognition. Major updates should be strategic, not reactive.

Should messaging differ for different audiences?

Your core message stays consistent, but emphasis and details can adapt. A B2B service might highlight ROI for executives and features for implementers. Create audience-specific talking points that ladder up to your core message.

How do I train my team on brand messaging?

Create a one-page messaging guide with key phrases and examples. Practice elevator pitches together. Review customer-facing communications regularly. Make messaging documents easily accessible. Consistency requires ongoing attention.

Featured Branding Case Study

Sealwise Epoxy branded packaging tape with repeating diamond logo pattern
Professional ServicesConstruction BrandingLocal SEO

How a Forced Name Change Became the Best Thing That Happened to a Colorado Springs Epoxy Company

A cease and desist letter forced a name change. Instead of panicking, they went all in: complete rebrand, conversion-focused website, local SEO domination across a 25-mile radius, commercial market expansion, and social media that kept the phone ringing.

Result
From invisible online to #1 across a 25-mile radius, fully booked, and expanding into commercial
$26,240
Revenue Impact
60 Days to First Leads
Timeline
#1 (25-mi radius)
Google Position
View Case Study

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