Matchstic Radically Relevant

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Outlaw & Outcast brand.

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Outlaws & Outcasts

Radically Relevant

Radical
Relevant

Dated & Dying

Copycat

Your Score
Brands of Similar Size (Limited Sample Size)
Brands of Similar Industry (Limited Sample Size)

Your Score     Your Score

Understanding
your Score

Good news: your brand is living life on the bleeding edge! Bad news: people don’t appreciate everything your brand has to offer...yet. As an outcast brand, you scored high on the radical super six. This means you are sporting a big new idea with the power to disrupt an industry. Where your brand falls short is relevance. From the looks of it, your brand is struggling to connect with your audience.

Never fear—spending time and energy on understanding what people really want will go a long way in helping you course correct and optimize your brand relevance. Still feeling stuck? We offer free consultations.

Radical Score

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Relevant Score

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Your Super Six
Clarity

(001)

Do you feel like your sales and marketing materials require long-winded explanations to unpack what you do? Your clarity score suggests customers may have a limited understanding of your offerings or even be confused about your category altogether. Confusion is often found in emerging markets, scaling and growing brands, or merger & acquisition scenarios. This happens most often when you have complicated relationships between your sub-brands or products. (Spoiler: Not everything deserves a logo).

Action Items:

  • Look at your noun–how do you describe your business or category? Don’t sacrifice clarity on the altar of distinction. Is there an opportunity to add more clarity through how you describe the organization?
  • Review your brand’s visuals and messaging. Are you using terms and vocabulary that your audience understands?
  • Sketch out your current brand architecture. Are the relationships between your sub-brands or products creating more confusion than clarity? Hint: Don’t brand your org chart.
Distinction

(002)

You’re doing ok here, but opportunity awaits. This distinction score suggests your brand may be expressing a differentiated offering, look and feel, or message, but not enough to confidently stay ahead of competitors or market trends in your category. Truly standing out in your competitive set can give you numerous advantages.

Action Items:

  • Revisit your brand’s position in the market. Does your position support the needs and challenges of your audience today? Is it future-proofed enough to keep you ahead of your competitors?
  • Consider developing a brand system that is so distinct that competitors won’t be able to easily duplicate you. For example–if most in our space use cheesy stock imagery, maybe you should invest in a custom photoshoot or hire an illustrator to create a new style that is more ownable.
Control

(003)

Your control score suggests your brand might be semi-consistent in your brand communications, but lacks the brand system tools to maintain consistency without draining your teams. For example, you may be inconsistent with your use of color, type, and photography, and your team struggles with brand voice without heavy direction. This can result in an inefficient internal brand process, duplicate work, creative frustration, and general wheel spinning.

Action Items:

  • Take a look at your brand toolkit–do you have what your marketing teams need to create consistent communications? Or are they limited by an outdated or shallow brand system?
  • Consider how you manage your brand. Do you have a role that can act as brand quality control?
Attraction

(004)

Is your brand creating more blank stares than sparks? Your attraction score suggests the brand is not instantly connecting with your audience. This could be due to an outdated or unappealing message and look, or simply one that isn’t speaking to the full value you provide. Low-attraction brands are often legacy organizations that have long relied on relationships and word-of-mouth for new business. Consumers may describe them as dated or irrelevant.

Action Items:

  • Do audience research to understand better what your audience wants or needs. Then retool your brand accordingly.
  • Revisit your brand’s value proposition–is your message relevant and aligned?
  • With your research in mind, what are other brands that are relevant to your target audience? What visual cues can you take from leading brands that inspire a refresh for yours?
Devotion

(005)

Your devotion score suggests your brand provides a valuable experience that keeps audiences engaged and coming back most of the time–but not consistently enough to stay ahead. These brands struggle to express long-term value in the minds of customers as they grow.

Action Items:

  • List your customer’s needs and expectations. How can you realign your offering and/or promise to deliver what they expect?
  • Review your brand’s messaging. How can you operationalize these claims in order to consistently deliver on them?
Alignment

(006)

Does your team believe in your brand? Do you struggle to get buy-in from leadership on the benefits of a strong brand? Your alignment score suggests a lack of internal alignment around the story the brand should tell in the market—or a lack of emotional connection to the brand internally. Low-alignment brands often suffer from challenges in recruiting talent, and struggle to maintain important stakeholder engagement.

Action Items:

  • Take a look at your brand toolkit–do you have a clear internal brand strategy? Does it feel like a memorable rally cry for your team?
  • Gain an understanding of your team’s perception of the brand. Is there an opportunity to align your brand with what lights their fire?

(Share Score)

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