5 Steps for Developing a Marketing
Tag Line for Your Product, Business, or Website
A marketing tag line is the one
or two line descriptor that often comes after a product logo or
company name. It is one of those things that looks simple but
isn't. Large companies pay advertising agencies a lot of money to
develop tag lines for their companies and brands.
Many companies, however, do not
have a large enough budget to hire an advertising agency. If you
belong to one of these small budget businesses, do not despair.
With some creativity and persistence, you can develop your own tag
line.
First, decide what
you want to communicate with your tag line.
If you have a positioning
statement and/or unique selling proposition, write them down. Your
tag line should reinforce them.
Ask yourself these
questions.
1) Who are your
customers?
2) What benefits do you give
your customers?
3) What feelings do you want to
evoke in your customers?
4) What action are you trying
to generate from your customers?
5) How are you different from
your competition?
Try to get one or more of these
across in your tag.
Second, prepare to
brainstorm tag line options.
Gather tag lines from other
companies and brands. Look in other categories besides your own and
try to find tag lines from both large and small
companies.
As you find tag lines, write
them on index cards or individual slips of paper. You will be
mixing and matching them and pairing them with unrelated items as
you brainstorm.
Pay attention to the words
used, how they are put together, and which of the above questions
they address. By doing this, you are more likely to come up with a
unique angle for your own tag line.
NOTE: You are looking
at others' tag lines only to spark ideas. Do not plagiarize. You
must come up with your own, original tag line.
To find tag lines, look around.
You may find them anywhere there are advertisements, packaging, or
logos. Look in cupboards, around desks, in magazines, on TV/radio
commercials, in print advertisements, and on Web sites.
To get you started, here are
some tag lines I found in only a few minutes:
- hp - "invent"
- Craftsman - "Makes anything possible."
- Kenmore - "Solid as Sears."
- Hersheys.com - "The sweetest site on the Web."
- WebSiteMarketingPlan.com - "Marketing Plan and Web Promotion
Strategy."
- Marketing Best Practices - "The Web's leading small business
marketing newsletter."
- Nike - "Just do it."
- TLC - "Life Unscripted."
- Surprise by Design TV show - "We're not just changing rooms.
We're changing lives."
- Schnucks (Midwest Grocer) - "We make it easy."
- Berry Burst Cheerios - "Naturally sweetened whole grain oat
cereal with real berries."
- Altoids - "Curiously strong peppermints."
- The Name Stormers - "Company and Brand Name
Development."
Find your competitors' tag
lines - look at them and strive to be better and
different.
Gather together books to help
you come up with different ways to phrase similar ideas. My
favorite is "Word Menu." Others likely to be of help are "The
Describer's Dictionary" and "Twenty-First Century Synonym and
Antonym Finder."
Third,
brainstorm.
This works best if you can get
a small group together, but can also be done solo. Set up a place
with a lot of writing space - use dry erase boards, easels with big
paper pads, note cards, etc.
Go through your props. Look up
words or concepts in the books. Rearrange your various props so you
can look at them in different ways. Write down *everything* that
comes to mind and all the new ideas each phrase sparks. They do not
have to make sense. You want a large number of ideas.
Fourth, consolidate
your list.
After brainstorming, go through
all of your ideas. Pull out those few you think have the best
potential. Try to reduce longer ones to fewer words.
Fifth, choose the one
best tag line.
You should be left with a short
list of possibilities. To pick the single best tag line, get
others' opinions. If you have some funds budgeted, work with a
market research firm to test the tag lines with your
customers.
You can also conduct informal
research. Set up a free survey at SurveyMonkey.com and encourage
people to take the survey. If you have direct contact with
customers, ask them what they think. Give them an incentive to help
you, such as a discount or small freebie.
When you are done, you will
have a tag line that will help your business thrive.
About the Author
Bobette Kyle draws upon 12+
years of Marketing/Executive experience, Marketing MBA, and online
marketing research in her writing. Bobette is proprietor of the Web
Site Marketing Plan Network
|