Brand is underplayed as a source of economic power in B2B. We seem to default to the tactical marketing tools used in B2C too easily.
Over the years I have concluded that there are only two core elements in B2B brand strength:
Trust.
Service.
They are mutually reinforcing, or indeed, depreciating, and are both multi-faceted, with variations that are as varied as the businesses that deal with each other.
The dictionary definition of Trust is something like:” A statement that is taken as truth in the absence of anything more than the word of the party giving it”.
So, trust is based on doing what we say we will do.
The definition of service would be something like: “An act of selflessly helping someone else”.
Again, as varied as the contexts in which it is used.
Clearly however, service drives trust, and trust is the fodder of service, and both go both ways.
You still must do all the stuff to get customers inside the tent, once there, they have at least once, accepted that you will do as you say. Do that, and the reasons they might move on for the next time are way more limited than if you fail on some dimension of the service that they believe is important.
Therein lies the dilemma. Every business sees ‘service and trust’ in their own context, within their own definitions of ‘Value’.
It is your task, as the seller to unravel that often unclear ball of expectations.
When you think you would benefit if your customers trusted you more, give me a call, an audit of your trust profile with customers may be enlightening.
Header cartoon credit: Scott Adams’ alter ego Dilbert does it again.