I am a big believer in taglines. They are an effective way to communicate the brand’s “unique value proposition” powerfully, succinctly and memorably. It is very difficult to create the perfect tagline, however, because of all of the objectives that it must accomplish:
It communicates the brand’s “unique value proposition”- In an economy of words
- It is believable for the brand
- Competitive brands are not saying and cannot say the same thing
- It is memorable – it must stick in people’s minds
- It can’t be trite
- It needs to do more than just refer to the product category
- It should not promise a “cost of entry” benefit for the category
- Ideally, it is entertaining or emotionally appealing
Common tagline mistakes:
- Claiming something that is overused or trite
- We are the [quality/service/innovation] leader
- Excellence in all that we do
- You can count on us
- We care about people
- Saying something that sounds good (is “catchy”) but that does not differentiate the brand in a meaningful way
- Communicating what product category the brand is in…period.
- Claiming a benefit that all brands in the category must deliver (a “cost of entry” benefit)
- Saying something that many or all brands in your brand’s category could also say
- Saying something that is so broad that it is meaningless
- Saying something that is too complicated or confusing
- Using too many words
Taglines must be developed based on a well thought through “unique value proposition” informed by customer insight. Only then should one begin the process of generating hundreds, if not thousands, of tagline options, which will be evaluated against the above mentioned criteria to filter out all but the most powerful options.
Over my 30+ years as a marketer, I have encountered hundreds of tagline examples, most of them quite bad. Luckily, I forgot most all of the bad ones.
Here are a few examples of ineffective taglines (current and historical):
Ames Rubber: Excellence through total quality. / BF Goodrich: Creating value through excellence in innovation, quality and people.
Blockbuster : No more late fees. The start of more / Chicago: We’re Glad You’re Here!
Delta Airlines: We get you there. / Denny’s: A good place to sit and eat.
Exxon: We’re Exxon. / Lehman Brothers: Where vision gets built.
Mobile: We want you to live. / O’Douls: What beer drinkers drink when they’re not drinking beer.
Rochester, New York I’d Rather Be in Rochester – It’s Got It
Here are a few examples of effective taglines (current and historical):
Alka-Seltzer: I can’t believe I ate the whole thing. / American Express: Don’t leave home without it.
Apple Computer: Think Different. / Avis: We try harder.
BMW : The ultimate driving machine. / California Milk Processing Board: Got milk?
DeBeers: A diamond is forever. / Foodlink: Abundance Shared
IMAX: Think big. / Kentucky Fried Chicken: Finger-lickin’ good!
Lay’s Potato Chips: Betcha can’t eat just one. / National Pork Board: Pork. The other white meat.
Timex: Takes a licking and keeps on ticking. / United Negro College Fund: A mind is a terrible thing to waste.
VISA: It’s everywhere you want to be. / FootJoy (FJ) The Mark Of A Player.*
*Disclaimer, The Blake Project developed this!
What taglines do you consider effective? Ineffective?
Sponsored by: The Brand Positioning Workshop
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