Imagine meeting a person who speaks to you formally and politely on Monday, uses aggressive slang on Tuesday, and doesn't say a word on Wednesday. You would likely find them untrustworthy and confusing. The same psychological principle applies to your business's brand voice.
In a saturated digital market, your brand voice is your distinct personality. It's not just what you say, but how you say it. Consistency in that voice is what builds familiarity, and familiarity breeds trust. Here's how to ensure your brand sounds like "you," whether a customer is reading your website, an email, or a tweet.
1. Define Your Archetype
Before you can be consistent, you have to know who you are. The easiest way to find your voice is to identify your brand archetype. Are you the 'Jester' (Old Spice: funny, irreverent, entertaining)? The 'Sage' (Google: informative, objective, wise)? The 'Rebel' (Harley-Davidson: bold, disruptive, free)?
Choose three adjectives that describe your brand personality, and three adjectives that you absolutely are not (e.g., We are confident, but not arrogant. We are helpful, but not overbearing).
2. Create a Brand Voice Document
If you have more than one person writing for your company (including external agencies like Innovate Beacon), a brand voice document is mandatory. This document should serve as the single source of truth for your messaging.
It should include:
- Your core mission and values.
- Examples of "How we speak" vs "How we don't speak".
- Guidelines on vocabulary and formatting (e.g., Do we use emojis? Do we use exclamation points? Do we say "customers" or "community"?).
3. Adapt 'Tone' While Maintaining 'Voice'
A common misconception is that consistency means sounding exactly the same everywhere. This isn't true. You must adapt your tone to the context while keeping your voice the same.
Think of your voice as your personality, and your tone as your mood. You have the same personality at a funeral as you do at a party, but your tone changes drastically. A tweet about a weekend sale should have an excited, urgent tone. An apology email regarding a service outage should have a serious, empathetic tone. Both, however, should still sound like your brand.
4. Audit Your Current Channels
Take an afternoon to read through your own customer touchpoints. Look at your Homepage, your "About Us" page, an Instagram post from yesterday, and an automated order confirmation email.
Do they sound like they were written by the same entity? Often, businesses neglect the "boring" touchpoints like error messages, 404 pages, and transactional emails. Injecting your brand voice into these overlooked areas is a fantastic way to surprise and delight your customers.