Downtown DC is at a crossroads and we can influence the path it takes in profound ways through branding.
Branding used to be understood solely as a communication package. Today, we view it as a way of looking at a set of relationships between a customer and a product or service, which takes into consideration all aspects of the relationship.
Branding aspires to establish an emotional connection. It goes beyond communication related issues and includes the ways in which a product or service is delivered. It helps to define how this particular set of relationships is distinguished from others so as to create a competitive advantage.
Once the brand is created, organizations or businesses are required to manage all aspects of its activities so as to further strengthen and enhance the relationship and guarantee the promised experience.
The Downtown DC Business Improvement District set out on a mission to uncover the attributes that make our Downtown unique. The brand addresses those who have the influence, opportunity and drive to have a positive impact on the shape and character of Downtown. The benefits accrue to everyone that gains from a strong, diverse and sustainable Downtown.
When the Downtown BID began operating in 1997, we focused on bringing order and strategically managing Downtown’s physical appearance with “clean, safe and friendly” services to support the neighborhood’s revitalization. At that point in time, Downtown could have been branded as “dull, dirty and dangerous” – crime rates were high, public and private investments were lacking and, with few activities to compel office workers to stay beyond normal business hours, there was no excitement.
But much has changed since then. By 2006, both the Downtown area and the BID had grown and taken on new attributes. Both had begun to convey very different values that required redefinition. Downtown had become a hot market without a clearly defined identity. The Downtown BID took on the challenge of uncovering Downtown’s brand essence and developing value statements to create a template for telling the area’s and our organization’s story.
Presentation: Places that Matter>
Downtown DC has always been a place that matters. In that sense, it has always had a brand – as a center of national and local government, a center of commerce and a central gathering place for the region.
Our task was not so much to brand Downtown DC, but to “rebrand” it in order to bring long held public perceptions into congruence with the area’s transformation into a commercial, cultural and entertainment hub, as well as to plan for future economic growth and vitality.
Our advisory committee consisted of:
Michael Altman, former Director of Marketing, Smithsonian Business Ventures
Richard Bradley, Executive Director, Downtown BID
Angela Fox, Executive Director, Crystal City BID (former Director,Cultural Tourism DC )
Vicky Isley, Vice President for Marketing, Destination DC
Steve Moore, CEO, Washington, DC Economic Partnership
Howard Riker, Vice President of Hines and Downtown BID Board Chairman
David Feehan, Executive Director, International Downtown Association
Karen Sibert, Director of Marketing and Communications, Downtown BID