Know who you are today––and who you want to become.

Think of your brand as a mosaic. In that mosaic, you can select and place most, but not all, of the tiles: You can control the communications you make, your offerings, and how your organization behaves––and, therefore, you can control the brand picture these tiles present.

But some of the tiles in your brand mosaic are placed by others––the media, bloggers, tweets, the conversations that happen outside your walls.

Because the brand picture assembled in the hearts and minds of your constituents is a mix of both what you can control and what you can't—but would certainly like to influence––it's important to develop a strong foundation for your brand.

Why? Because that foundation will help guide where others place tiles in your mosaic. A strong foundation is one that can inform a range of communications by you and others; it helps people to understand and value you in the ways you'd like them to.

And while much of your brand foundation may never be visible to the outside world, the stronger these underpinnings are––the more they evolve from your unique identity––the more your messages, visual system, and tactical communications will cohere and support your desired meaning and image.

And, as a result, the more likely it will be that those tiles placed in your mosaic by others will have positive context.

The Thinking to Inform Expression and Action

The components of your brand foundation (see diagram below) are all intangible: They're decisions, strategies, and points of view that define who you are––and aspire to be––and how you want to be understood and valued. And while those decisions and directions should be informed by research on your constituents, environment, and opportunities (see the articles "Gaining Insight..." and "Achieving Relevance..."), in the end they're driven by your leadership's vision.

From the bottom up, the components of your brand foundation:

Category

Do you fit into an existing category (you're a software developer or you're a commercial real estate office), or do you have to invent one?

If you're in one, then your job is to prove you're the most worthy of attention and participation.

If you're not (think of the Sony Walkman before there were any portable, user-programmable, personal music delivery systems), then you have your work cut out—to either establish a new category (and then be the leader of it) or build your brand without the reference point that an existing mental model provides.

Model

How are you structured to do business? If you're a Web-based, language-translation engine, what is your business model? Is everything free to viewers and ads supply the revenue? Do you give away entry-level services and sell subscriptions for more sophisticated needs?

Making your model transparent means people don't have to spend time figuring it out––and can therefore engage with you more productively.

Areas of endeavor

What are the different lines of work you're engaged in? Few organizations do just one thing, but that can often make it hard for people to understand what you're about––either because the range of what you do is hard to get a handle on (so you look diffuse), or because a person associates you with only one of the bits you're about (so they see twigs, or a tree, but not the forest).

Either way, you're not known for what you want to be known for and you don't get credit for your hard work.

Come up with 3-5 focus areas that people can remember: If you're an arts organization with 17 programs, maybe they can be grouped into "performing arts," "visual arts," and "community engagement." If you're a management consulting firm with wide expertise, perhaps you can group services by what keeps your customers awake at night: technology integration, human resource optimization, etc.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Roger Sametz

Roger Sametz is president and CEO of Sametz Blackstone Associates, a Boston-based brand consultancy that integrates brand, editorial, and digital strategy with design and digital media. Sametz Blackstone collaborates with a wide range of academic, cultural, community-focused, and corporate clients.

LinkedIn: Roger Sametz