About two years ago, I was looking for a special type of shoe*: white boating shoes with laces. (Believe me at the time they were very hard to find, both in the offline world and the online world). For nearly a year, I could not find what I was looking for. Finally, after giving up for a year, I did another search online and I got to endless.com, Amazon’s shoe outlet. I found my shoe. Yay!.
For three months after my purchase, endless.com sent me their newsletter (or whatever it was supposed to be) by e-mail every single day. I unsubscribed. So, I no longer received the annoyingly blatant “Please buy from us today or we will remind you tomorrow” newsletter anymore. Out of site and out of mind.
Two years later I was racking my brain trying to remember what the name of the Amazon shoe outlet was. I wanted some new shoes and I knew it was a great place to buy shoes. Just like Amazon, endless.com has a huge selection. But even knowing how much I loved the online retailer was not enough to recall the name of the website. Needless to say, it was quite frustrating; especially when I wanted to tell at least three people about the website. I was wishing things would change.
Today, I received one of their postcards in the snail mail (I didn’t get off that list) and there it was: endless.com. Great!
What am I getting at and how does it relate to Branding? A very forgettable brand name is what prompted this post.
So, here is a company who was genius enough to come up with a name you could easily use in the offline world (the world we live in) and it would be very memorable: Amazon. “I got it on Amazon,” you could say to your friend as you stand in line at the bank. But Amazon in their infinitive wisdom came up a rather generic adjective for their new venture. Nice. “I got these on endless” just doesn’t have the same oomph to it as “I got this on Amazon.”
That’s branding. Don’t get caught with the .com domain name syndrome. You are not a brand just because you have a .com after your name. Whatever happened to broadcast.com? And what is a broadcast anyway? How do I get one?
*As I re-read this post for proofreading purposes, I realized how pathetic “special type of shoe” equating to standard white boating shoes really sounds. But I’m not changing it because it really was nearly impossible to find a regular pair of white boating shoes with some regular laces. And that’s the fact, Jack.
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