This document discusses corporate identity and the steps involved in conducting a corporate identity audit. It defines corporate identity as encompassing corporate communication, behavior, and design. The key steps to conducting an identity audit include: 1) selecting an audit team, 2) assessing the company's identity elements, 3) determining interview subjects, 4) conducting interviews, 5) auditing identity factors, 6) summarizing findings, 7) identifying options for change, 8) presenting results, and 9) using results to improve identity. The audit evaluates how the company wants to be perceived versus actual perceptions in order to strengthen brand alignment.
2. DEFINITION
“Identity means the sum of all the ways a company chooses to identify itself to all its
publics” (Margulies, 1977).
“Corporate identity is the tangible manifestation of the personality of a company. It
is the identity which reflects and projects the real personality of the company”
1978).
“Corporate identity is the strategy which helps to increase the economic
performance and the efficiency of a company. It coordinates achievements, values
and information, and leads to integration in the sense of cooperation”
(Hannebohm/Blöcker, 1983).
“Corporate identity reflects the distinctive capability and the recognizable individual
characteristics of the company. Identity in this sense also includes the distinction
recognition of parts of the whole company, and the attribution of those parts to the
whole” (Tanneberger, 1987).
3. CORPORATE IDENTITY
Corporate identity could be interpreted as a strategic manifestation of corporate-level vision
and mission, underpinned by the strategies which a corporation employs in its operations or
production (Melewar and Wooldridge, 2001).
Balmer’s research (1998) outlined some features of corporate identity:
First, corporate identity is a multidisciplinary field.
Second, it is a term used to identify the essence of what the firm is and thus incorporates many
unique characteristics of the firm such as history, philosophy, culture, communication and the
industry the firm operates in.
Third, it is inseparable from the corporate personality of the organisation.
4. CONCEPT OF CORPORATE IDENTITY
The evolution of the corporate identity concept meant that the term became associated with a
wide range of functions including
business strategy,
philosophy of key executives,
corporate culture, behaviour and
corporate design
which are both interdependent and unique to each organisation (Van Riel, 1997).
5.
6. Corporate communication: the value proposition you offer your customer;
distinct visual identity and a strong company culture that evolves together
with its employees. Their outward communication is based on a straight-to-
the-point approach, with informative ads and educational materials about
their brand and general knowledge..
Corporate behaviour: the actions inside the company that define its values
and strategy. They value openness, a hands-on approach towards work, and
small-company family rapport. They nurture a warm work environment and
encourage knowledge sharing between employees to inspire further
innovation and progress.
Corporate design: the design of products and services that help the
company deliver against their value proposition. Visible in every individual
asset a company has in its portfolio, from its logotype to the design, to
extremely user-friendly product design, all the way to the interior design of
their offices.
7. Corporate design: Consider whether the item is present (do you even have it?), consistent with your
brand (does it match colours, font, and quality?) and worth keeping (like paper letterhead for
some companies).
Letterhead. Take a look at both printed and electronic versions. Are they consistent? Check
your paper weight, texture and type. Is everyone using the company font(s)? Create an
electronic master letterhead template in Word with set fonts and styles.
Business cards. Do you use the same design throughout the company? Are you using the
same print styles and card weight?
Fax cover sheets. Fax yourself a copy of your cover sheet to ensure it is legible and
consistent with your other brand images.
Email templates. Ensure the fonts, sizes and colours match your other branding.
Email signatures. Company-wide consistency with email signatures creates branding unity.
Don’t let employees create their own.
8. Website. Fonts and colours look different online. Does the logo on your website match your
print logo?
Envelopes, invoices and statements. Double check all envelope sizes and styles and the
pieces inside. The inside and outside should match.
Mailing labels. If you use labels for shipping, they should match everything inside.
Memos and internal communiqué. Be consistent with internal documents. It sends the
message to your team that brand consistency is a priority.
Promotional items, banners, etc. Take inventory of everything with a logo or brand image
printed on it. If it’s not accurate, fix it or forget about it.
9. Corporate Culture: Downey (1986) believes that corporate culture is the
consequence of corporate identity and argues that culture is the “what” of a
company and identity is the “why. It refers to the beliefs and behaviours that
determine how a company's employees and management interact and
outside business transactions.
Corporate Structure: Corporate structure refers to the organization of
different departments or business units within a company. Depending on
a company's goals and the industry in which it operates, corporate
structure can differ significantly between companies
10.
11. Industry Identity: It pertains to characteristics such as competitiveness, size and
rates of change, which influence the corporate identity of a company (Balmer, 1997).
Companies operating in an industry with a clear and strong identity may adopt
similar strategies in areas of corporate identity management, and in consequence
they commonly develop similar identities. Virtually all of the respondents claimed
that the corporate identity of their organisations is strongly influenced by the
industry that they compete in.
Corporate strategy: It is the blueprint of the firm’s fundamental objectives and
strategies for competing in their given market. It thus determines what the
produces, the level of profit made and stakeholder perceptions about the company.
Differentiation strategy. Differentiation strategy is an aspect of overall corporate
strategy pertaining to the specific strengths of a company and how it chooses to
compete by using these. Differentiation takes advantage of a firm’s strengths that are
important constituents of its basic identity.
Positioning strategy. Positioning strategy is associated with the identity that a
company strives for. Companies position themselves in order to be distinguished from
competitors and they do this through an analysis of their inherent strengths and
weaknesses.
14. Brand identity is how you want your customers to perceive you: from your brand
promise to your logo and the colour palette you use in marketing. It’s a strategy
create to position your brand on the target market (including technical stuff like
keyword research).
Corporate identity relates to the activities inside your organization that shape both
internal and external perceptions of your brand. Simply put, corporate identity
all the aspects of brand identity plus:
The people you work with;
The impact you make outside of the company;
The tone of voice in your messaging;
The feeling you invoke in customers;
How successful you are in implementing your brand promise.
15. IDENTITY AUDIT
A company’s corporate identity can be summed up as the way in which all
stakeholders, both internal and external, perceive the brand.
The times change, and what may have been considered an identity strong
point can very easily become a corporate no-no.
For this reason, there should be conducting regular corporate audits,
revealing how the company is perceived in the eyes of the people who
contribute to its success.
For a new player in the market, Corporate design is the most visible part of
corporate identity. And corporate design is by definition an instrument for
transformation and, at the same time, a guarantee of continuing corporate
recognition.
16. STEPS TO CONDUCT IDENTITY AUDIT
step 1: select the audit team,
step 2: assess the key elements in the corporate identity,
step 3: determine who should be interviewed,
step 4: conduct audit interviews,
step 5: audit corporate identity factors,
step 6: summarize salient points,
step 7: determine the options for change,
step 8: present the audit results, and
step 9: use the audit data to improve the corporate identity.
17.
18. CORPORATE IDENTITY AUDIT STEPS
Even before taking the corporate identity audit, the senior management should be
clear about the context in which that identity operates. This will be of help to make
the subsequent identity audit.
Therefore in the second step the audit team should consider the areas in which
corporate identity manifests itself (Ollins and Selame, 2002). We already defined the
corporate identity as being made from corporate communication, corporate
behaviour and corporate design. Some define corporate design more in detail as
corporate product and services and corporate environments (Ollins and Selame,
2002, p. 4).
The main point of the step two is to found out what kind of identity the
corporation has. Is that a monolithic or branded house, or are we dealing branded
identity or house brands, or are we in between be that with endorsed identity or sub
brands.
19. In the third step it is important to asses the consensus view of the organization internally and
externally. And the second goal is to find out if there are any significant discrepancies
between internal and external perceptions. And finally this step is excellent opportunity to
uncover real or political issues that may either enhance or inhibit the acceptance or
implementation of corporate identity program (Ollins and Selame, 2002).
In the step four, five and six the audit team is to do the prepared in the first three steps. In the
fourth step, conducting the audit interviews the main objective will be:
+ how much people know about the corporation and business;
+ what other opinions or judgements people attach to their knowledge of the organization;
+ how clear and consistent these opinions or judgements are; and
+ how far those opinions and judgements vary from the identity which senior mismanagement
wish to project.
20. In the fifth step the audit team need to asses all corporate identity elements. Be that
product, services and/or environments. The check list of corporate design should be
made. And some questions should be answered, like:
+ is there a graphics standard program (or corporate identity manual) in place for the
current corporate identity program?;
+ consistency of design;
are there ways to reduce costs of elements that constitute the corporate identity, such as
eliminating duplicate communications, consolidating sizes, increasing volume orders, new
ways to use technology…;
+ would be implementing the corporate identity at once rise the costs as in the steps.
According to different field, questions on corporate communication and corporate
behaviour will have to be made
Very often, in the sixth step, certain critical and consistent points will emerge. That is the
opportunity for the auditors to uncover those important issues and build a consensus
within the organization.
21. And in the last three steps the audit team has to explore the differences
between how the company is perceived and how it would like to be perceived.
It should effectively present the audit results.
In the last step the auditors should provide ideas for using corporate identity
as a powerful management tool if the identity is to be managed actively and
effectively.