From
Article in Inc. Apr 27, 2011
Does Your Brand Ring Like a Bell?
Sonic
branding is everything from ringtones to hold music. Cue your
chance to build a memorable company
identity.
Kay
McFadden
"
Companies have a call center, mobile app, a website, all with
different sounds that don't make sense together. They realize
customers are using these products and want something
cohesive that also makes them stand out." - Audrey Arbeeny
If music be the food of customer experience, play on. That's
the tune hummed by a rising chorus of marketing and
advertising experts. Instead of an afterthought to the visual
and written parts of a branding campaign, sound has become
central.
How
to Add Sonic Branding to Your Business: What is Sonic
Branding?
Audrey Arbeeny is founder and executive producer of the
Emmy-winning firm AudioBrain, which is based in New York and
has designed music for NBC's Olympics, Microsoft's Xbox 360
and Virgin Mobile, among others. She defines sonic branding
as "The strategic development of a brand's attributes through
sound and its deployment across a multitude of touchpoints to
create a seamless, cohesive and authentic sonic presence."
Arbeeny, who began in this business in 1995 and also teaches
sonic branding at Pratt Institute's undergraduate
communications design program, says that's a shift from three
or four years ago. Clients back then usually wanted just a
sound logo – a short pattern of notes like NBC's chimes or
the "Intel Inside" tune. Now, she says, "They want their
entire customer experience connected. Companies have a call
center, mobile app, a website, all with different sounds that
don't make sense together. They realize customers are using
these products and want something cohesive that also makes
them stand out."
How
to Add Sonic Branding to Your Business: How Sonic Branding
Works
Sonic branding doesn't yet have a ton of market data to back
its efficacy. However, a growing body of academic research
attests to the powerful emotional and psychological bonds
between music and listener. Much of it is from Europe, where
sonic branding is better established partly because music
surmounts the challenges of marketing to a multilingual
continent. For example, 2008 research at Leicester University
in the United Kingdom found companies that match their brand
to music are 96 percent more likely to be remembered, and
that 24 percent of customers are more likely to buy from a
store that plays music they liked hearing. In the United
States, Dr. James Kellaris of the University of Cincinnati
has popularized the term "earworm" to describe those hooky
little tunes you can't get out of your head. Ongoing surveys
show many earworms include company themes and jingles, which
has excited marketers no end.
How
to Add Sonic Branding to Your Business: Determine if Sonic
Branding Fits
Just because you can get a custom ringtone or website theme
doesn't mean you need one. Consider your customer base and
sales environment. One of Audiobrain's clients is 1st
Advantage Federal Credit Union, which is headquartered in
Newport News, Va.,
and has 11 branches with 60,000 member customers throughout
Eastern Virginia. Jim Craig, vice president of marketing, was
referred to Audiobrain while conducting a re-evaluation of
the credit union's brand image. "We were working on other
touchpoints – our website, marketing materials, etcetera –
and it made sense to consider sonic branding in light of all
the work and money we were putting into everything else."
Still, he wasn't pre-sold on the concept. That changed after
Arbeeny challenged 1st Advantage to describe its brand
personality in order to create a rapport through music,
forcing the company to think through just how it wanted to
sound to customers. "It was revelatory," says Craig. "Sonic
branding may not be for everyone. But our lesson was, if your
business is about delivering an experience to customers,
music should be part of it."
How
to Add Sonic Branding to Your Business: Identify Your Sonic
Touchpoints
The first order of business for 1st Advantage was a signature
piece of music to asset its identity. Audiobrain designed a
sonic logo usable across a variety of sound touchpoints. It
initially was deployed in branch locations, including one
branch where it became a door chime to signal the arrival of
customers. The next step was to foster a positive climate for
branch visitors. So AudioBrain developed a selection of
licensed music for playing over the company's in-house sound
system. The music, consisting of recordings from the 1920s up
through the present, is interspersed with short 1st Advantage
commercials using the sound logo. AudioBrain periodically
sends 1st Advantage an updated selection. "It consistently
matches our brand personality of being human, empowering and
welcoming," says Craig, noting "Audrey even found urban music
with positive themes, "widening 1st Advantage's demographic
appeal. The latest addition is a full music theme based on
the short sound logo. Although 1st Advantage does limited TV
and radio, its 60th anniversary is this year and the theme
will be used in a series of celebratory spots featuring
employees and customers. At some point, the credit union also
plans to use the sound logo on its website.
How
to Add Sonic Branding to Your Business: Sonic Branding
ROI
It's hard to nail the exact ROI for sonic branding, so you'll
sleep better if you regard the expense as a long-term
investment rather than a short-term revenue producer. Craig
has used mystery shops and anecdotal samplings from customers
and says, "We've gotten feedback that shows both customers
and employees like the music, and I have to say we're happy."
Some owners may wonder why they can't just download a generic
ringtone or turn on a radio. The answer to that may lie in
the changing nature of consumers. And consumers have more
choices. "Our ability to get anything we want at any time
makes it imperative to rise above the clutter," says Arbeeny,
"and sound is a very good way to do that."
