Washington Business Summer 2018 | Washington Business | Page 25

what’s working Brand-building Through Storytelling Companies are leveraging brand journalism to capitalize on compelling customer and employee stories to build brand loyalty and values awareness. Bobbi Cussins What’s in a brand? That’s the question companies from associations like AWB and the National Association of Manufacturers to purveyors of coffee and airline companies are asking. The answer for today’s communications professionals, and the companies they serve, is that a brand is not just about the product, but rather the story of how what it makes and its culture connects communities and improves lives. At A Glance Brand journalism is the practice of journalism- s tyle storytelling on behalf of a company to accomplish the same goal of earning and keeping an audience’s attention. Brand journalism, also called “strategic storytelling,” creates news-style content of stories about a company for consumption by the company’s main audience, its employees and the media. The shrinking number of reporters has aided in the growth of brand journalism. In the 1980s, there were roughly 40 Olympia statehouse reporters compared to six full-time statehouse reporters and three broadcast journalists that cover Olympia politics part-time in 2018. Behind every company — large, small and everything in between — there is a story of why it was created and who it serves. It’s that story that is the driving force behind a product’s “brand.” At its root, a brand is a reflection of its values. “A brand is not just a logo. It’s not just colors and fonts. It’s ideas. It’s a philosophy and it’s action,” said Michelle Hege, president and CEO of Spokane-based DH, at the Association of Washington Business’ 2017 Spring Meeting in Spokane. Hege was speaking during the unveiling of AWB’s new brand logo. It was AWB’s first logo redesign in more than three decades and it provided a visual representation of changes taking place within the organization. The way employers communicate with audiences is rapidly changing, too, fueled by a rise in new technologies and a decline in the number of traditional reporters. Increasingly, companies, including AWB, are engaging directly with employees, customers and prospective customers, on a human level, through brand journalism, or “strategic storytelling.” AWB launched its own brand journalism channel, AWB News, this year as a way to fill the gap in news coverage at the statehouse. Starbucks Newsroom – Ask Better Questions Campaign: bit.ly/StarbucksAskBetterQuestions Grow Here: www.growherewashington.com Coca-Cola: www.coca-colacompany.com summer 2018 25