educational

Branding 101

A brand is, by definition, a name, a sign, a symbol, a design or a combination of these used to identify the product or service offered by one or more companies that separates it from others. The definition suggests that the consumer should be able to recognize a brand and what it symbolizes. Knowledge about the product is the primary key for identification. This again assumes that the customer has found some unique specifications in his brain that enables him to separate one brand from another.

The customer needs to be able to remember and spot a brand. This is the first face of strategic marketing. The consumer needs to be exposed in some way to this brand and at least spot it before we can push this even further. It then becomes a part of his selection. If a brand makes it into his possible list of selection, we have succeeded in the first step. If you ask a surfer for his knowledge of the TGP world, he might mention a few names like the Hun, World Sex or Shemp. These can be characterized as "top-of-mind." These are the strongest brands and are most likely to be his choice when he is surfing.

The consumer also must be able to separate between different brands within similar product categories. When a brand becomes known and the consumer knows the type of product and what it represents, we can start to build a more complex set of associations. This is a part of the brand's image. This is done by promoting some selected core and extra values. We establish those as strong, positive and unique features. XBiz, for instance, is for me a serious, warm and informative website.

The whole point of building a brand is to establish a group of consumers that are loyal to that or those products. We are trying to make the consumer identify with our brand or service over and over again. This might not seem like a big deal, but it is actually very complex. Read on and I'll get back to this later. Loyalty can be seen as a substitute routine where repurchases are made only because they have done it over and over again.

Scientist have different explanations for this behavior, but common ideas suggest that it costs people too much time and effort to try something else or that trust one product more than others. Lately some scientists have suggested that consumers actually have feelings for brands. Consumers are establishing emotional relations and act upon them like real human interaction. I might not be in love with XBiz, but the portal had certainly become something that I need to visit daily. Build an adult brand like that and you'll be sure to have a winner.

The most important criterion for success in all types of branding is to reach the customer with one powerful message. Strong brands are established by selecting one or more values that you build in the customer's consciousness. This happens by pushing these values of the brand over time. To make this happen successfully you need to define a brand concept and some strategies that together will form the framework within communication and profiling for the entire life span of the brand. I bet that most sponsor programs haven't given this much thought.

The purpose of advertising is to gain a match between the selected identity and the actual image that the consumer forms in his head. You can measure this with realistic GAP analysis (ISO standard) that will reveal the important distance between the make and break of your brand.

There are three basic concepts it might be wise to follow as you are launching an adult brand. A functional, an experience-based and a symbolic-based concept. The functional means that you enhance the product or brand's advantages ($35 per signup). If you choose the experience-based concept, you are giving the consumer ideas based on actual and ideal uses of the product (bonuses). With a symbolic concept you are playing with their possible status and social status (picture of a guy with girls).

Selecting brand elements means to select a few symbols to dress the brand. This can be anything, including a name, logo, slogan, jingle, color, design, character or people. These are very important to enhance the attention of the brand and to build positive, strong and unique associations. This will also contribute to form the brand's character and personality. I should emphasize that the job of building a strong brand is hard and that it is not done by just updating your logo or building a new website. An optimal decision of elements demands that you have a clear view of what your brand symbolizes today and what it is supposed to symbolize in the future. You need to define what primary and secondary associations you wish to build.

The choice of building a powerful message means that you create one voice for each brand. The goal for this voice is that it at all times should communicate through all channels. You should adapt this voice to fit with different groups and change it within the frame over time. By doing this you will be sure to reach your customers and make them remember your voice and brand.

In part two we'll continue our look at branding and introduce some advanced concepts.

Copyright © 2025 Adnet Media. All Rights Reserved. XBIZ is a trademark of Adnet Media.
Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission is prohibited.

More Articles

trends

WIA Profile: Taylor Moore

With a 70-person team and a growing slate of tools for content creators, the Teasy Agency has developed a reputation for putting talent first. That commitment owes a lot to co-founder Taylor Moore’s own experiences as a cam model.

Jackie Backman ·
profile

WIA Profile: Cathy Turns Creator Platform Experience Into a Model-First Playbook

As both a model and industry executive, Cathy lives in two worlds at once. “Since I do both things, I can act as the liaison between the model community and the rest of the SextPanther team,” she tells XBIZ.

Jackie Backman ·
opinion

From Compliance to Confidence: The Future of Safety in Adult Platforms

In numerous countries and U.S. states, laws now require platforms to prevent minors from accessing age-inappropriate material. But the need for safeguarding doesn’t end with age verification. Today’s online landscape also places adult companies at uniquely high risk for inadvertently facilitating exploitation, abuse or reputational harm, or of being accused of doing so.

Andy Lulham ·
opinion

What Adult Businesses Need to Know About Florida's Age Verification Law

The rise and proliferation of age verification laws has changed the landscape for the online adult industry. A recent and compelling example is the state of Florida, where Attorney General James Uthmeier has filed multiple complaints against major platforms as well as affiliates accused of violating the state’s AV law.

Corey D. Silverstein ·
opinion

Maintaining Brand Trust in the Face of Negative Press

Over the last year, several of our merchants have found themselves caught up in litigation over compliance with state age verification laws. Recently, Segpay itself was pulled into the spotlight, facing scrutiny over Florida’s AV statute, HB 3. These stories inevitably get picked up by both industry and mainstream news outlets.

Cathy Beardsley ·
opinion

How to Switch Payment Processors Without Disrupting Business

For many merchants, the idea of switching payment processors can feel pretty overwhelming. That’s understandable. After all, downtime can stall sales, recurring subscriptions can suddenly fail, or compliance gaps can put accounts at risk. Operating in a high-risk sector like the adult industry can further amplify the stress of transition.

Jonathan Corona ·
profile

WIA Profile: Katie

Katie is the ultimate girl’s girl. As community manager at Chaturbate, she answers DMs, remembers names, and shows up for creators and fellow businesswomen when it counts. She’s quick to credit the people around her, and careful to make space for others in every room she enters.

Women in Adult ·
opinion

How to Stay Legally Protected When Policies Get Outdated

The adult industry has long operated in a complex legal environment subject to rapid change. Now, a confluence of age verification laws, lawsuits, credit card processing and data privacy rules has created an urgent need for all industry participants — from major platforms to independent creators — to review and potentially overhaul their legal and operational policies.

Corey D. Silverstein ·
opinion

From Compliance Chaos to Crypto Clarity: Making the Case for Digital Payments in Adult

These are uncertain times for adult merchants. With compliance tightening and age verification mandates rising, the barrier to entry keeps getting higher.

Cathy Beardsley ·
opinion

Real-Time Insights to Streamline E-Payments and Stop Lost Sales

A slow checkout process is more than just annoying — it’s expensive. In a high-risk sector like the adult industry, even small delays or declined transactions can cost businesses thousands in lost revenue every month.

Jonathan Corona ·
Show More