About Stuart G. Hall

Making a positive difference one day at a time. #London #Leicester

Getting your brand’s tone of voice right, and making it pay

I like the guide to creating an authentic tone of voice from Rosie Siman on the 360i blog, as it makes the point that consumers find it pretty intuitive to shift how they interact online depending on the online context, while brands find it not so easy shall we say:

In today’s new media landscape, consumers manage a distributed digital identity – one that changes depending on platform, audience and even interest group.

Surprisingly, shifting among these nuanced states isn’t such a feat. It feels natural, even intuitive.

But when brands attempt to do the same, the results can feel schizophrenic and confused.

How to Develop Your Brand’s Social Tone of Voice

Of course on another level part of this is part of a wider issue about how to relate and connect with your customers, which relates to listening to them and understanding what they enjoy. It’s back to that point that we are taught that we think first and feel second, which is fine until you realise how this splits the behaviour of customers from that of brands by and large:

We live in a world where we are taught from the start that we are thinking creatures that feel. The truth is, we are feeling creatures that think.

In turn online consumers “tend to ignore most information available and instead ‘slice off’ a few relevant information or behavioral cues that are often social to make intuitive decisions,” as Brian Solis puts it in ‘The 6 Pillars of Social Commerce: Understanding the psychology of engagement’.

None more so does this distinction appear online when the brand comes over as self-controlled and artificial. So loosen up and inject some real emotion – and then make sure you track the results in your metrics.

It may also help to research tone of voice using a social sentiment package like Radian6 to surface the keywords, and to have an idea of the % positive vs negative sentiment.

Who knows, getting your tone of voice right might even shift the sentiment around your brand, which in turn impacts on conversion (measure, measure, measure). It may start off as ‘just an idea’ but if you can link the tone of voice change to the metrics which connect to the bottom line then you’re onto a winner.

Of course it helps if you have a budget. When I was at Sony we used Netway to carry out MRI-based behavioural research to show the differing impact of email marketing methodologies on consumer responses. Here’s a little taster of their scientific-based approach. I also like their open-source style approach to allowing you to disseminate results too, subject to attribution:

King Richard III Grey Friars plaque is back on Google’s Street View

Greyfriars

In 2010 I uploaded this image taken off Google Map’s Street View of the King Richard III memorial plaque on Grey Friars in  a blog post, as I thought it was a shame it had been covered over by a ‘To Let’ sign.

I was even more surprised to see the plaque still showing it covered over on Google Map’s Street View after the discovery of Richard’s body; so I wrote to Google to see if they’d take another image and upload that instead. They replied on 23rd February, to say they’d consider the issue:

“Thank you for informing us of your request regarding Street View imagery. We’re currently reviewing the imagery you reported so that we can take the appropriate action per your request. We appreciate your patience and assistance as we work to resolve this situation.”

So not expecting much I checked today, and indeed a new image taken in the city sunshine shows the plaque as it should be; so any visitors from abroad looking at the area via Google maps can see the historic area, and the plaque, and appreciate better the city’s rich history.


View Larger Map

PS: A few days later, after I contacted the Leicester Mercury, a piece appeared in the paper titled ‘Google sorts king cover-up’, complete with a pic of me on the streets of the city!

King Richard III
Posted story to Twitter on 14 June with controversy over Google no longer displaying Winston Churchill in search results for British Prime Ministers.