Branding vs. Marketing: Perception vs. Persuasion
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Lauren Atherton
I have a theory for why branding and marketing get confused so often. They each deal with two sides of the same coin: perception and persuasion.
👁️ Perception is how people recognize and understand your nonprofit. It’s the overall impression people have based on your visuals, messaging, actions, and reputation. People are constantly looking for cues that your nonprofit is trustworthy, effective, and aligned with their values.
📣 Persuasion is the act of influencing someone to do something or to believe that something is true. Persuasion may feel like an icky word, but your nonprofit exists to solve a problem that the public may not be aware of, understand how it affects their lives, or get involved.
We try to separate these two forces, but perception and persuasion are partners in the same dance.
They work together to build trust and inspire action. You can’t have one without the other.
Branding helps shape how people perceive your brand, but ultimately, the inference differs from person to person. Obviously, it’s hard to measure how much someone feels trust or likes your organization unless they take action.
So instead, a lot of nonprofits focus on what you can measure: persuasion. We follow formulas, best practices, and “hacks” to boost results and numbers so that we can prove our marketing is effective.
But don’t forget, that perception sets the stage for persuasion.
People are more receptive to your message when they feel good about your organization.
It’s easy to think that branding is wasted effort since it can’t be measured, but the truth is it’s working for (or against) your nonprofit in the background.
And persuading people to take action becomes so much easier when your community already has a positive perception of your nonprofit.
Lauren Atherton
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