Monday, August 20, 2012

The Tray Way: How Do You Trust Something You Don't Know?

What makes us trust a brand? Obviously, the top answer is when a brand does right by you or someone you know. But, that only accounts for a limited number of situations. What about when that first-hand information isn't available to a person. Unfortunately for brands, the criteria can be less concrete.

This is the thought we had after reading a fun study, conducted by beverage company Honest Tea. They researched and reported on honesty of an array of different topics. The results include:
  • 93% of participants were honest
  • Salt Lake City and Oakland were both 100% honest
  • Women are 95% honest while men are 91% honest
  • Boston baseball fans are more honest than New York baseball fans
  • Redheads are more honest than blondes and brunettes
  • Motorcyclists were 92% honest while Comic Book fans were 86% honest
  • Men with beards were 96% honest while bald men were 85% honest 
Our first response to this release was that this is was a very clever way to promote their brand (well done, Honest Tea). But, our second thought was that these are some random results and that it is hard to believe that all the people surveyed have decisive (and objective) opinions on all of these topics. What this means is that at least some were just making up the answers based on the mood they were in (perhaps) or some other reason that isn't first-hand knowledge.

This is not good news for brands, especially ones that do everything right but feel like they are getting nowhere. The truth is (no pun intended) that sometimes you can't gauge what customer response to your brand will be, especially if they have nothing to base their decision on. It isn't that you aren't an honest brand that can't be trusted, its that a person, for example, may happen to see a website or a billboard for your competitor at the moment they need to make a decision. The best you can do is treat all current and potential customers the way they deserve to be treated, and continue to convey a message, tone and philosophy that is based around honesty and integrity. From there, marketing yourself in the most positive and strategic way possible to better convey your honesty has been proven to be the most effective means of gaining more business. Is there a 100% success rate? Of course not, but a customer's decision to choose a competitor can be for any number of reasons, whether it be a substantial or flimsy one (and that's just us being honest).







The Tray PML Way is the blog for Tray, experts in the printing, mailing, logistics and promotional products. You can learn more about our capabilities by visiting our website, as well as our Facebook and Twitter pages. For information about the company and its successes, visit www.trayinc.com