5. Invest in the master brand
Nonprofits can’t build a diverse raft of offerings, initiatives, or names (especially non-self-explanatory ones) into meaningful, recognizable brands: they don’t the time, money, or opportunities. Instead, they must sell from the top down (master brand -> offering). Investing at the highest brand level ensures that buzz and equity of successful initiatives flow “up” to the master brand to build trust and loyalty.
For businesses, selling from the master brand on down lowers the cost of introducing offerings, fosters cross-selling, and builds connections that transcend a particular product. German automakers have always gotten this concept: the Audi A3, A4, A5, A6, A7, and A8 are different cars, but they are all Audis—and thus infused with, and so reinforce, the overarching value of the Audi brand. Model numbers easily map to features, benefits, and expectations. On the other hand, the relative positions (and value propositions) of Ford’s non-intuitively branded car offerings—Fiesta, Focus, Fusion, C-Max, Taurus, Mustang—are more complex to parse and connect.
6. Run a tight—and motivated—ship
Nonprofits are often efficient because they are forced to do more with fewer resources. United by a common cause, nonprofits have staff who are engaged and motivated beyond the paycheck they receive—and their volunteer boards raise capital, take on tasks, and serve as ambassadors.
Nonprofits also have to stretch every brand communication dollar. For them (and for businesses), the integration of print, digital, environmental, and social communications is the only way to ensure that every communication dollar reinforces every other one. Shared typographic and color palettes, along with approaches to design and imagery, build brand recognition, meaning, trust, and participation.
Nonprofits have learned a lot of best-practices from the corporate world: they have become more businesslike in their approach to building their brand. And now, in today’s noisy, complex brand environment, they have much to teach for-profits—and they would be smart to absorb as many lessons as possible.
For years, nonprofits were told by for-profit enterprises to become more businesslike. They have. Now they have much to teach.