Are you looking to take your D2C marketing to the next level of awesome? We asked Mason’s Director of Creative, Shannon Gallaher to share her best tips for emerging direct-to-consumer brands. She spoke about the importance of brand identity and meeting your customers where they are with your brand.

#1 Tip for Emerging Brands: Develop Brand Identity

“It’s so important to build a strong brand identity early on, and stick to it. Be strict about it. There’s a common misconception that branding and creative is only about designing ‘pretty’ graphics and a professional logo. In reality, there’s a much deeper strategy behind it all, Shannon says, “Your brand identity goes beyond your color palette and font families— consider your tone of voice; the way you speak to your audience, your values as a company and what you stand for, the look and feel of your product and lifestyle photography, and really get to know your audience personas.” 

When you build the identity for your D2C brand, ask yourself questions like: What words describe the look and feel of my brand? What important social issues does my brand confront? Is my creative inclusive? What type of content speaks to my audiences? 

How do you create a recognizable direct-to-consumer brand identity? 

“There’s an ongoing list of building blocks that make up a strong brand, but you can start with the visuals. Once you have a professionally designed logo, chances are you’ve chosen a color or two for your brand. Make sure you’ve thoughtfully selected a distinct color palette, made up of 2 dominant and 3-4 accent colors.

It’s also important to select your brand fonts. To start, you’ll want a primary font and secondary font. At least one of these should be the font in your logo” Shannon shares, “Having a well packaged brand means that people recognize your brand without realizing the brand name. For example, if I was driving on the highway and saw a Dunkin Donuts billboard, I’d recognize the brand just from seeing the colors from the corner of my eye. I wouldn’t need to stop to read it. And just like that, I’m craving an iced coffee!”

Get to Know Your Audience

Let’s take a deeper look at the audience personas. Shannon recommends identifying 2-3 key audiences and creating a persona around each. From there, you can work to determine what type of creative resonates with each persona.

For example, say you’re selling organic soup. Your first target audience is “parents of young children.” If it’s available, use analytics from your social media accounts to gather more information about this target audience, or just brainstorm what that audience’s interests and behaviors look like. Maybe this audience is interested in nutrient rich foods for their children and tends to shop at natural grocers. Maybe your Persona B is a yogi student interested in clean living and sustainability.

These two personas will be attracted to different types of creative. What resonates with audience A doesn’t necessarily resonate with audience B. A parent of young children will be drawn to creative that talks about natural ingredients, nutrients and benefits for children. Your yogi, however, wants to see facts about sustainability and how you’re doing good for the earth. 

An example of a top of the funnel acquisition video for a client, 80 Acres Farms. We thought of several reasons why a broad audience would be motivated to purchase this product, and spoke to several of those motivators in a single video:

For remarketing, or lower in the funnel, we are showing the same audience a review GIF to get them “over the fence” with some social proof:

Always Think About the Customer Journey

A robust creative strategy goes deeper than audience personas. It’s centered around the customer journey. Always ask yourself ”Is this creative going to resonate with this audience while they’re at this stage of the journey with my brand?” Shannon recommends refreshing and customizing your creative as the customer moves down the funnel. “You’ll want to educate customers about your brand and products when they’re at the top of the funnel. This helps you hook them to your brand and builds ethos. For customers at the bottom of the funnel, promotion-driven creative will perform better”, she says. 

What’s Trending in Creative this Summer?

TikTok, Instagram Reels, and YouTube Shorts have changed the way we respond to content. Majority of the content we consume today is created by real people, and gets to the point quicker than ever. When we see ads on social feeds, we tend to skip them. Shannon challenges brands to create ads that don’t look like ads. This way, people will view your ad before they realize it’s an ad. “While having professional, high quality video that supports your brand is important, that’s not always what will perform best. Try recording yourself or someone from your team talking about your products, add captions, and publish! Your users want to buy products that are used by people like them, not by perfect, scripted models. That’s why TikTok style video ads work so well”, she states.

Most importantly, have fun with your brand! “It’s great to see brands get creative with social media real estate. I’m seeing brands use carousels on Instagram and Facebook to educate their audience. It’s like a “mini pitch deck” that provides information without the audience having to click to a landing page,” Shannon shares her last tip for emerging direct to consumer brands. 

Are you ready to put these tips into action? We recommend working with a creative professional to develop your brand identity. Contact us today to talk with our experts. 

What Does this Google Algo Update Mean?

For a few months now, Google has had the Core Web Vitals algorithm update looming over us. Originally set to launch in May, now pushed back to mid-June, this update is going to change the Google ranking algorithm to factor in a website’s core web vitals. What are core web vitals, you ask? These are metrics defined by Google that identify on-page experience for users. 

Core web vitals identify on-page user experience

The three aspects of core web vitals are load time (LCP), interactivity (FID), and visual stability (CLS). Core web vitals are broken down into Mobile and Desktop experience so rankings for both desktop and mobile could be affected. 

Who Does The Update Affect?

The best way to think of the core web vitals on your site is to ask yourself: is my website loading slowly? If you answered yes, then the update could affect your site. That is not to say that all of the other ranking factors are no longer valuable in the Google Algorithm. If your site has amazing content, high-quality backlinks, but loads slowly then it’s likely that you won’t see drastic drops in rankings overnight. Core web vitals is just going to be yet another factor in the cog that is the Google Algorithm. Google stated

“A good page experience doesn’t override having great, relevant content. However, in cases where there are multiple pages that have similar content, page experience becomes much more important for visibility in Search.”

How to Prepare for Core Web Vitals

Once you’ve identified that your website is loading a bit slow, the next question to ask yourself is: what is slowing down my site? Google Search Console has a core web vitals tool that shows you if there are any glaring page experience offenders. 

Google Search Console Core Web Vitals
“Pages that receive a score of “good” on Core Web Vitals are achieving an aspirational level of user experience, and might get a boost in the page experience component of ranking, provided other components of the page experience signal (HTTPS, mobile-friendliness, etc) are deemed OK.”

If you have some pages that receive the grade of ‘needs improvement’ and ‘poor’ then there are improvements you can work towards. None of these issues can be fixed overnight, but more so worked towards. In the meantime of improving your page experience, it’s a great idea to look at what other ways your site can improve. SEO fundamentals are always going to be important when getting your website to rank.

Still have questions? The experts at Mason Interactive can help answer any questions. Contact us to get started.