BlogMarketing

One Brand, Two Channels

[tk_page_header heading=”One Brand, Two Channels” color_theme=”light-text” header_height=”viewport-height” alignment=”start” bg_type=”image” bg_image=”2044″ add_overlay=”1″ overlay_color=”rgba(0,0,0,0.5)”]

A few weeks ago, I gave a webinar to GIMA members. During the Q&A Tony Kersey asked me a deceptively simple question: Should a brand present itself one way in-store, and another online?

My gut instinct was immediate: “No, because that dilutes the brand.”

It’s the classic temptation, isn’t it?

In the home and garden sector, many brands naturally have an older, loyal customer base in-store, people who appreciate service, trust heritage, and enjoy the experience of browsing plants, patio sets or in person. Meanwhile, there’s a whole new audience online — younger shoppers who devour how-to videos, share clever gardening hacks on social, and research before they ever set foot in a store.

Faced with these two worlds, it’s easy to think you need two brands in one:

  • Comforting, dependable and maybe a little nostalgic in-store.
  • Slick, fresh and full of youthful energy online.

But here’s the catch. If you pull your brand too far in two directions, you risk tearing it apart.

[tk_text_row sub_heading=”The trap of “two brands, one logo”” color_theme=”light-text” row_height=”default-height” content_width=”col-sm-12″ alignment=”center” bg_type=”color”]When Tony asked me that question, I found myself answering instinctively: A strong brand can’t afford to fragment.

Your shoppers might not say it out loud, but they feel it, that nagging sense that something doesn’t add up. They see you as heritage and trusted in the local garden centre, then stumble across a wildly different tone and promise online. It creates a credibility gap. And if there’s one thing a brand can’t afford to lose, it’s trust.[/tk_text_row]
[tk_text_row sub_heading=”But here’s what I’ve come to realise…” color_theme=”dark-text” row_height=”default-height” content_width=”col-sm-12″ alignment=”start” bg_type=”color”]The more I’ve thought about Tony’s question since that webinar, the more I believe this:

It’s not about whether you flex. It’s about where you flex.

Yes, your brand’s core must remain rock solid: the promise you make, the values you stand by, the feeling you want to evoke in every customer, young or old, online or off.

But around that core, you can (and should) adapt how you express it.[/tk_text_row][tk_text_row sub_heading=”How does that look in practice?” color_theme=”dark-text” row_height=”default-height” content_width=”col-sm-12″ alignment=”start” bg_type=”color”]Take the home and garden world:

  • In-store, your POS and packaging might highlight trust, reliability and heritage: “Feeding the nations tomato plants since 1975.”
  • Online, the same product can come alive through quick tips, how-to videos, sustainability stories or community projects, designed to inspire a younger customer who wants inspiration and advice.

The medium invites different layers: In-store you have less than 30 seconds to grab attention; online, a curious shopper might happily watch a 3-minute “How to plant bulbs for bees” clip.

Same product. Same promise. But a message shaped to fit the mindset and needs of the audience in that moment.[/tk_text_row]

[tk_text_row sub_heading=”Brands that get this right stay rooted” color_theme=”light-text” row_height=”default-height” content_width=”col-sm-12″ alignment=”center” bg_type=”color”]Let’s take a look at a brand from a different sector: Dove. Whether on a shelf or on social, Dove’s message is always Real Beauty. In-store: trusted everyday skincare. Online: bold conversations about body confidence and digital distortion. Different stories for different people; but always true to one brand promise.[/tk_text_row]
[tk_text_row sub_heading=”The takeaway for home and garden brands” color_theme=”dark-text” row_height=”default-height” content_width=”col-sm-12″ alignment=”start” bg_type=”color”]Your in-store shoppers and online customers might look different. They might want different things from you in the moment. But they don’t want two brands. They want one brand that feels familiar, trustworthy and relevant wherever they meet you.

So by all means, flex your messaging. Add more detail online, more inspiration, more tools to help people learn. Keep your in-store comms clear, warm and confidence-building. Tailor your headlines, your visuals, your formats.

But never pull your promise apart. That’s the line I’ll stick to. Thanks, Tony.[/tk_text_row][tk_text_row sub_heading=”A thought to take away” color_theme=”dark-text” row_height=”default-height” content_width=”col-sm-12″ alignment=”start” bg_type=”color”]Warning desperate pun alert: Root your brand deeply, and you can branch out anywhere. Different channels, different touches, same strong, living core.[/tk_text_row][tk_text_row sub_heading=”Need help to keep your brand consistent across every channel?” color_theme=”dark-text” row_height=”default-height” content_width=”col-sm-12″ alignment=”start” bg_type=”color”]Get in touch and we’ll help you build a brand that connects seamlessly in-store and online, without losing what makes you unique.[/tk_text_row]