A blog for business leaders interested in behavior-based branding, customer experience design, culture transformation and employee performance.
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# Thursday, June 17, 2010
Employees will pass through a series of phases in their pathway to understanding, committing to, and taking action on your brand. Each step in the pathway is critical to ensuring that buy-in is achieved.

Employee Pathway to Buy-in

  1. Denial. The denial stage results from a lack of understanding about the business reality and branding as a viable strategy.
    • Employees think: “I don’t understand what we’re trying to accomplish. This brand strategy is a flavor of the month. Stop wasting my time so that I can get my work done today. Or tomorrow. Or whenever I get to it since I define what success looks like because you have not.”
  2. Resistance. This is caused by strong beliefs about obstacles that will prohibit successful execution of the brand strategy.
    • Employees think: “Our company doesn’t have the right people or operational processes in place to really do the brand strategy — we won’t be able to keep the promises our leaders want to make.”
    • “Since we’re doomed to fail because of the people we have, this branding initiative will only increase my workload. Ugh!”
  3. Exploration. This signals a desire to learn more.
    • Employees think: “Okay, the company might be onto something meaningful after all. What can I do to bring the brand to reality?”
  4. Commitment. This is generated from the belief that change is desirable.
    • Employees think: “Leadership seems pretty committed to this. They’re still talking about it. Wow! This might not be a flavor of the month after all. The leaders seem to be aligned around this cause.”

Leaders must be careful not to try to take employees from denial straight to commitment. The steps of resistance and exploration are important in helping employees make the brand personal and create meaning out of the brand-building process.

In helping employees down the pathway of buy-in, it’s important to acknowledge that “Rah Rah” kickoff events, T-shirts, mouse pads, and posters won’t be nearly enough. It will take more than a motivational speech or a training class to ensure that employees understand the power your brand can have in stimulating cultural transformation and business results.


Thursday, June 17, 2010 02:56:52 PM   
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# Wednesday, November 18, 2009
Why do companies fail, time and again, to implement strategies, programs, and initiatives? Whether it's a brand strategy, process improvement program, new technology, employee recognition program, or customer service initiative, great ideas and initiatives fail resulting in disappointment and wasted budgets.

My answer is simple:

Companies fail in implementing strategies because their employees don't buy into them.

An employee in your company has bought into your strategy when the three parts of the formula (below) -- understanding, commitment, action -- are in place. If any value is at zero, then buy-in equals zero. Plain and simple. You do not have buy-in unless all three components are achieved.

Employee Buy in = understanding x commitment x taking action


When I began formulating the structure of my book, I paid a visit to Jack Trout, a well-respect author and expert on the subject of brand positioning. Trout coined the term "positioning" as we know it in the business world today. Trout remains a sought-after speaker and consultant, having now written many books on the subject of marketing, positioning, and branding.

Trout was very intrigued with the Achieve Brand Integrity book for one reason -- the concept of gaining buy-in.

I asked Trout to share with me his thoughts on implementation: "Jack, how many of your clients actually implement the strategies you create for them?" Having worked with so many clients, he wasn't likely to give me a specific answer and of course, he didn't.

Trout said, "The majority of my clients are challenged to implement for one reason -- egos! If you can find a way to overcome the egotism inside a company, then you really have something special."

Well, in collaboration with some of the best companies in the world, my team and I have created something very special.
We have proven if you stay committed to the principles of clearly set expectations and employee participation, egos get put aside and powerful brand/cultural alignment becomes a reality.

Buy-in doesn't happen over night. You need to set realistic expectations for yourself and your company. Obviously there are internal and external factors impacting the speed of buy-in (e.g. industry, company size, state of business, etc.), but below is a model for helping to position you to set realistic expectations for employee buy-in.





Wednesday, November 18, 2009 02:52:11 PM   
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