Brand voice and tone aren’t the same thing. Confusing them leads to inconsistent messaging that confuses your audience. Here’s how to nail both.
What Is Brand Voice?
Your brand voice is your personality — it never changes. It’s how your brand would speak if it were a person. Are you:
– Professional or casual?
– Witty or straightforward?
– Bold or understated?
– Warm or authoritative?
What Is Brand Tone?
Tone is how you adjust your voice for different situations. Your voice stays constant, but your tone adapts to context. You wouldn’t use the same tone in a celebration email as you would in an apology.
Example: Mailchimp’s Voice vs. Tone
Mailchimp’s voice is:
– Friendly and approachable
– Clear and helpful
– Slightly quirky
But their tone changes:
– Success message: Enthusiastic and celebratory
– Error message: Empathetic and reassuring
– Educational content: Patient and informative
Defining Your Brand Voice
Pick 3-4 adjectives that describe your personality:
– Nike: Inspirational, determined, confident
– Innocent Drinks: Playful, honest, friendly
– Patagonia: Purposeful, adventurous, responsible
Mapping Tone Across Contexts
Create a tone matrix for different scenarios:
– Product launch: Excited, confident, engaging
– Customer complaint: Empathetic, solution-focused, humble
– Educational content: Clear, helpful, encouraging
– Sales copy: Persuasive, benefit-focused, urgent
Documenting Your Voice and Tone
Create guidelines with:
– Voice description with examples
– Tone variations for common scenarios
– Dos and don’ts
– Real examples from your brand
Training Your Team
Everyone touching customer-facing content needs to understand the difference. Provide:
– Voice and tone workshop
– Reference guide
– Example bank
– Feedback system