Is your Board damaging your brand?
I hope you’re reading that headline disbelievingly, aghast at the very notion. But I know a good few people who’ll be nodding in recognition and sighing wearily.
There are a lot of firms out there run by Boards without representation from the ‘business’ side of the business; particularly in more traditional industries. So very often marketing, public relations, comms, sales, IT and so on are viewed really as a necessary evil. We need them, we wish we didn’t need them, and really we know best anyway.
If you’re involved in company branding, whether your function be corporate communications, public relations or marketing, I’d like to think you value the role you play. You’ve spent years honing your skills, gaining qualifications, perhaps even pursuing your passion in your spare time. Sure, it’s your career, and for your benefit, but the primary way of applying your expertise is for your company. Loving your company helps, but if you’re a pro, you do your best regardless.
And then your ideas and recommendations get scuppered or ignored. You’ve made a fool-proof case, undertaken endless research, spent valuable department resources… Only to get the dreaded ‘no’. Worse still, decisions are being made without your input or your expert advice is ignored. Perhaps you’ve even got a department head who’s, to put it politely, rather behind the times.
Ouch. It’s the sort of situation that can put your stress levels through the roof, stop you sleeping, affect personal relationships and damage your self-esteem and even professional image among colleagues. The company of course isn’t just suffering the results of ill-informed and often over-cautious decision making; it’s alienating its staff.
Recognise this? Your Board is damaging your brand.
The big question, and one I fear without an easy answer, is ‘how does one address this?’
The shortest answer I can give is: evidence.
That includes meaningful statistics, relevant case studies and proposals that answer every conceivable question or objection. And keep it jargon-free. People are suspicious of and turned off by abbreviations like ROI, no matter how important the actual concept might be. Recognise that if your Board is reluctant to relinquish control, or trust your decisions, they’re unlikely to be swayed by buzzwords and trends. Link every suggestion you make to sound marketing strategy.
And if you’re one of those unfortunate people whose line manager or director is the kind to take the credit for your ideas (and we ALL know they exist), then keep a dated digital and printed copy of everything you do. Copy people in to emails you send – in the spirit of teamwork you understand… Copy yourself in. And if you think your manager is blocking you…don’t be afraid of a little honest deviousness. Nope, not the oxymoron it sounds. Subtly lace your work with your identity; solicit opinion on your ideas from respected colleagues outside the department. Make sure the right people know who’s making the suggestions and indeed the headway.
I’d consider creating, and possibly in your own time so that no accusations of time-wasting can be levelled at you, what could be called a personal newsletter. At first it’s a diary of your activities, your thoughts and ideas, your research and observations and of course your recommendations. Tie a month’s activity together and you have a newsletter. Incorporate the activities of the wider department and it’ll look less like bragging, and if distributed effectively can enhance the understanding and appreciation of your value to the company, its staff and of course its Board.
You’re in a tricky position, but it’s a fight worth having the stomach for.
In: brand, corporate communications, internet marketing, marketing, public relations · Tagged with: brand, corporate communications, corporate identity, internet marketing, marketing, public relations





