A suspicious company story can leave a bad taste in people’s mouths.
Never has it been so easy for that same media to destroy customer trust with a brand, along with hashtags that only flame a firestorm of bad-mouthing.
Simple Rules For Company Storytelling
Rule 1. Tell the truth (and act truthfully)
Any Mad Men fan knows that marketing companies love to weave an authentic story about brands. Even if that story is a little more, or a lot more, homespun than the reality of manufacturing or the people behind the brand.
There is nothing wrong with re-styling yourself to fit the image of your trade. Lumberjacks are known for wearing plaid. These days, bartenders, bakers, and coffee roasters wear handmade aprons. There’s a high likelihood they have tattoos too.
Saying things like “I affirm that we make the best … ” and “we are dangerous” and “we never paid experts” only paints a target on your back. Someone is eventually going to be motivated to expose the discrepancies in the stories and call you out publicly.”
Rule 2. Be Awesome (Your Food Will Be the Story)
When you make something people crave, that people will buy direct from you and ask retailers to carry, your product sells itself.
You won’t need to craft a charming story of being an artisan food crafters, competing against claims by big food companies that they are “artisan.” Instead, people will buy your foods because they are amazing and/or because they love your brand and packaging.
A perfect example of being the best is Chile Crunch, the brainchild of Susie Hotel, who started making her spicy crunchy condiment out of the La Cocina incubator kitchen. Fans of this condiment, which literally took off like wildfire, don’t care where she gets her garlic and pepper. How she makes it isn’t part of her story either. We just want that crunchy goodness as much as possible.
Rule 3. Weigh the Fear of Spinning a Story for PR Purposes
Culinary consultant Laiko Bahrs helps chefs and food brands put up their stories to the media. She takes on weaving a story that’s not quite true: “Stories of origin are so easy to re-write for public relations purposes. When you’re a tech company it doesn’t matter as much as when you’re a small artisan food company.”
In other words, how can someone trust your food if they can’t trust what you say about your company?
Try Avoiding These 5 Words When Telling Your Company Story:
Authentic – Unless you’re saying something is the real deal, as in authentic Levi jeans or authentic black truffles, this is one over-used word.
Handmade – The word handmade is so general, sometimes it’s hard to know exactly what it means. “Hand-kneaded, ” tells a visual story and also, to serious bread lovers.
We know that handmade tortillas mean they will be thicker and kind of misshapen, and infinitely more delicious than tortillas stamped out by machine.
How long will you be making your foil-wrapped, molded chocolates by hand versus eventually using a chocolate co-packer who might find a more efficient way to make it? Is it worth talking about “handmade?”
Small batch – What is a small batch? When does a batch become big?
You might make your caramel over a home stove to start with. When the president falls in love with your candy, and you start to make it in bigger batches, is it still a small batch? And who really cares?
Instead describe how you make each batch upon a word or talk about your amazing ingredients, or how you cook it up fresh daily.
As I wrote about in Good Food, Great Business, those are the value propositions that shoppers care about.
Artisan – “Artisanal methods, another master craftsman, old another,” says a lot. Artisanal means your foods may differ from one batch to the next and that you cobble your products together much old another master craftsman (or woman).
In a major mis-use of the word artisan, big brands began referring to unusual / chef-inspired flavors using better-than-usual ingredients as “artisan.” Those aspects of a food have nothing to do with how food is made, which is where artisanship comes into play.
Crafted – Even more than the word “artisan” being used incorrectly, the word “crafted” has come to mean “made.” Like the word artisanal being more meaningful than “artisan,” the word “craft” as a noun makes more sense. For example, He practices his cider-making craft in the same shed where his grandfather brewed moonshine. (Notice how brewed is so much more descriptive and visual than the word crafted?)