Personal and Corporate Branding Podcast. Interviewing Branding Experts. Key areas: Personal Branding, Corporate Branding, Social Media, Digital Publishing, Book Publishing
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Personal and Corporate Branding Podcast. Interviewing Branding Experts. Key areas: Personal Branding, Corporate Branding, Social Media, Digital Publishing, Book Publishing
“If the character is wrong, changing the font size won’t fix it” — Herman Zapf Today, we are looking at ‘CHARACTER. The character of great brands. This is something most people overlook in marketing or business strategies. But character is the hidden force behind every brand that lasts. When I began writing children’s books, I noticed something immediately. Children don’t just like stories. They fall in love with the characters. A book could have the most exciting story, but if the characters are flat, it won’t connect. The moment a character comes alive, everything changes. Children remember them. They talk about them. They anticipate the next story because they connect with the character’s personality, values, and even flaws. This is true beyond books. Think about hit movies or best-selling series. Spider-Man is more than a superhero. He is a character with traits people admire, relate to, or aspire to. Kweku Ananse in African folklore transcends all the stories; he represents wit, lessons, and values that resonate across generations. Even in movies, from Simba in The Lion King to characters in Nollywood, we always fall in love with the central character. That character becomes the heart of the story. Brands work in the same way. Every successful brand has a character. Coca-Cola, for instance, is more than a drink. It carries an image, a feeling, a personality. Apple is not just technology. It carries creativity, design, and simplicity that people connect with emotionally. These traits are the character of the brand. Character draws people in. It creates loyalty. It makes the audience say, “I understand this brand. I feel this brand. I want to be part of it.” And just like characters in stories, brands that have character become memorable. People talk about them. They advocate for them. They build a relationship with them. Understanding this is the first step to building a brand that lasts. Character is the essence of your brand. It is what people remember when they think of you, when they see your product, or when they interact with your business. Now let’s unpack what character means for your brand, how it attracts people, how it builds loyalty, and how it turns customers into a community. Character as a Magnet of Emotion You see, character is the magnet of emotion. In every story we love, there is always a key character at the center. That character has values, flaws, or a mix of both. And it is that mix that pulls us in. It makes us feel. It makes us care. Think about Simba in The Lion King. He is brave, but he also makes mistakes. That combination makes him relatable. Or Spider-Man. He is heroic, yet he struggles with ordinary life challenges. People connect with that. We see a part of ourselves in the character, or we aspire to be like them. That emotional connection is the glue that keeps us engaged. This isn’t limited to movies or books. It happens in folklore too. Kweku Ananse has lessons embedded in his character. His cleverness, his mistakes, and his personality make people remember him across generations. The same principle applies to brands. A brand without character is forgettable. It might sell once, but it will not inspire loyalty. Every brand must ask itself: what is my character? Aside the brand identities or the product, what does my brand make people feel? What traits define it? Coca-Cola evokes joy, togetherness, and nostalgia. Apple evokes creativity, simplicity, and sophistication. These traits are the brand’s character. People are drawn to them. They become emotionally invested. I see this all the time with children and animations. Kids connect with characters they recognize. It pulls people in, creates curiosity, and builds emotional bonds. In simple terms, your brand must have a character people can relate to. Something they can connect with emotionally. It is that character that transforms a product from ordinary into something memorable. Something people will choose not just once,
Personal Branding Podcast
Personal and Corporate Branding Podcast. Interviewing Branding Experts. Key areas: Personal Branding, Corporate Branding, Social Media, Digital Publishing, Book Publishing