Ken Brand

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Ken Brand - Prudential Gary Greene, Realtors. I’ve proudly worn a Realtor tattoo for over 10,957+ days, practicing our craft in San Diego, Austin, Aspen and now, The Woodlands, TX. As a life long learner, I’ve studied, read, written, taught, observed and participated in spectacular face plant failures and giddy inducing triumphs. I invite you to read my blog posts here at Agent Genius and BrandCandid.com. On the lighter side, you can follow my folly on Twitter and Facebook. Of course, you’re always to welcome to take the shortcut and call: 832-797-1779.

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22 Comments

  1. Ian Greenleigh

    Ken-

    Love the call to action here, get in with those of similar passions. If we read what you’ve written carefully, you do address this, but I just want to make sure: You’re not advocating marketing to different tribes without first belonging to them or engaging with them, correct? This seems like the crucial message many do not get. It’s not just about IDing the tribes out there and slinging stuff at them, it’s about selling to those that *share* your interests.

    Great stuff, thanks.

    1. Ken Brand

      Good eye. Seems are few universal threads that weave success. You are correct, after identifying tribes, figure out which are yours. If you’re not one of them, don’t bother trying to connect/market/prospect with them, it’s like swimming up stream, in wet sweats. Stick with people who like things you like, then you’re having fun and success.

      Cheers.

  2. BawldGuy

    Ken — I’m more than a little intrigued, he said, making use of intense understatement. :)

    I suspect combining this principle with both NLP and Conceptual Selling would be a nearly unbeatable hat trick.

    Would love to see a short version case study, even if you had to construct it out of whole cloth.

    1. Ken Brand

      I’ve read about Psychographics, what there is, and my personal experience is on where, instead of joining the Chamber of Commerce (nothing wrong with them, it’s an example of a typical choice) I did what I loved. I played basket ball. Basket ball at noon with a bunch of guys, Bball on weekends and evenings in the park, 3on3 leagues at the Y and 5on5 at the rec cener and church. Made dozens of friends, played games and listed and sold a ton of homes. Why? Because we shared the same passion, people get to know you well by how you win, lose, hustle, etc.

      So for me, what I’ve experienced and seen, connecting with people who have the same IAO is the fast tract to connection and trust.

      What do you think.

  3. Janie Coffey

    Ken, I have to come back and read this when my brain is free not to multi-task. It looks great and I am with you 100%. Connect with those you connect with. I’ll be back, but camping out here for a bit to digest it all.

    1. Ken Brand

      Thanks. It’s a long post. I’m including in a book I’m writing, so I wrote a bit more indepth than I might usually. Hope you find it useful.

      Cheers.

  4. Lisa Roth

    I totally agree with you. I’m not into dogs and yet consider it every time I see an agent using a dog in their marketing ;-) Hope 2010 is a great year for you. I believe it will be fun and profitable!

    1. Ken Brand

      That’s the thing isn’t it. To an outsider, what the insiders do and understand is completely different. I’m with you on the Dog thing, yet some LOVE it. Since I don’t, pet lovers would know I’m a poser and never trust me. You make a good point.

      I think the same thing applies to things like Facebook Farmville, Mafia Wars, etc. While I’m not interested in playing, I know people who love it and have developed relationships with others that do as well.

      Thanks for sharing.

      Cheers.

  5. Katherine Carrier

    Ken,

    Thank you for this enlightening perspective. As I have studied where I predominantly got sales, I was thinking there was a magic “at least two times a week” face-time denominator (softball practices and games, tennis lessons and matches, fitness camp, church), and I still think that’s true, but I see this is linked to common passions.

    As we broaden our business and seek more non-sphere leads, it would be good to understand better how to craft our marketing messages to speak to our tribes!

    Great content!
    Katherine

    1. Ken Brand

      Thanks for the comment and good point. Sounds like you know what you’re about and it works great. Amen.

      In the future I will write a post that addresses your interest in crafting messages that resonate with a particular tribe. Basically, the approach centers around Persona Based copywriting. Over simplified, what you do is write your advertising/presentation/promotional copy as if you were writing a single person in the tribe. This technique is perceived a personally speaking to the reader/prospect and because you’re writing to a tribe member, most of the tribe can relate to it. For example, your copy/story would sound and feel different and you’d most likely or rather, you should use different metaphors, symbolism, verbs, nouns and context if you were addressing your tennis league pals than you would if you were addressing soccer league tribe.

      I’ll go into more detail in a future post.

      Thanks and Happy New Year to you.

  6. Paula Monthofer

    Great article! Love it and will be incorporating some psychographic marketing into my 2010 business plan. Thank you!

    1. Ken Brand

      Great. Psychographic is smart and when you name drop the word, you’ll get funny looks, then you can impress them with your well rounded, world of marketing and communication knowledge. Cheers and thanks for the comment.

  7. Elaine Reese

    Ken, this was a very good article.

    In my corp mktng career, we used psychographic marketing for specialty products. When I got into this RE business I recall an agent telling me that eventually I would realize that all my clients were ‘just like me’. I developed my target market to be a demographic that I am comfortable speaking with. As you say, we speak the same language – use the same type of terminology. I prefer using a rifle strategy rather than a shotgun. I was pleased to see you suggest that we write our blogs as if we were speaking directly with our phantom target client. I do that and it’s very helpful to keep me focused.

    On a side note, I’m one of those “dog” people and obtain business because of it. I’ve had blog readers make, buy and send gifts to my dog. If I were to try to target joggers, or health nuts, it would be a complete failure … that’s just not me. :-)

    1. Ken Brand

      Thanks and thanks for sharing your experience. It seems obvious, but there are tons of people who think meeting as many people as you can is the key to success. Nope. The rifle strategy is the way to go, it’s easier, funner and more profitable.

      Cheers Elaine, here’s to a BIG 2010.

  8. Houstonblogger

    Couldn’t agree with you more, Ken. I don’t know if it would be possible for me to even be successful in marketing myself to a “tribe” that I don’t believe in, enjoy or even want to be around. I put myself in front of those that amuse me, make me happy and share my love of life, experiences and specific hobbies and interests. Not a bunch of groups that mean nothing to me nor I to them. Great post from a great person!

  9. Ken Brand

    Life’s to short to work with people you don’t click with.

    I think you’re criteria “I put myself in front of those that amuse me, make me happy and share my love of life, experiences and specific hobbies and interests.” sums it up.

    Cheers to our working with cool people in 2010. And speaking of working with cool people, next time you’re in The Woodlands and you have a free few minutes, give me a buzz and let’s grab a cup of coffee or lunch.

    Cheers.

    1. Houstonblogger

      I will do so! I’ve been meaning to head that way, it just hasn’t happened yet. Looking forward to it, though!

  10. Janie Coffey

    Hi Ken,

    OK, I am back. Psychographic connections are the real deal. It is being your authentic self. It works because you make the connections and build relationships built on a common ground (IOA). You know the lingo and share common bonding elements.

    I find it important to go for depth, not breath with this kind of engagement. To create the strongest bonds, it can’t be superficial or occasional connections. If it’s a sport, social media, or whatever, pick a few you LOVE and get in there, be involved, help out, and grow your connections.

    Great ideas, as always Ken! Janie

  11. Ken Brand

    Thank you Janie;-) There’s something sorta liberating about the love me, like me or leave me approach.

    One of the things that I try to remember is that I “choose who to lose”, meaning, do what you do with gusto, the people who are attracted will really like it, the people who don’t, wouldn’t get it or enjoy it anyway. Cheers to you and the best ever in 2010.

  12. Jes Extender

    Interesting, never really though in this way…

  13. Claudia Gonella

    Great article and congratulations on winning this week’s CORE hoted by Mike: http://www.mlpodcast.com/blog/.....e-171.html

    It’s hard to answer the question “who are your writing for?” in precise terms, hold that person in your head and then write to them, and only to them. The internet and social media is perfect for that kind of precise targeting (communicating with the masses is much harder online) so that’s what we should use it for.

  14. ColoradoHomeFinder

    So many times in my life I have been presented with something at the very time when I needed to have it presnted to me. Finding and reading this article is another one of those times. Great article, great subject matter. Thanks.

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