Home
»
Voice Lessons
A01=Alan Siegel
Age Group_Uncategorized
Age Group_Uncategorized
Author_Alan Siegel
automatic-update
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=KJS
Category=KJSC
COP=United States
Delivery_Delivery within 10-20 working days
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=0
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
forthcoming
Language_English
Price_€20 to €50
softlaunch
Product details
- ISBN 9781510765887
- Weight: 429g
- Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
- Publication Date: 09 Apr 2026
- Publisher: Skyhorse Publishing
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Hardback
- Language: English
Will Deliver When Available
Our Delivery Time Frames Explained
2-4 Working Days: Available in-stock
10-20 Working Days: On Backorder
Will Deliver When Available: On Pre-Order or Reprinting
We ship your order once all items have arrived at our warehouse and are processed. Need those 2-4 day shipping items sooner? Just place a separate order for them!
Join one of the best-known figures in branding on a journey of how to develop your brand voice in the digital age.
Sadly, the majority of brand messages fail to achieve the most essential tasks of communication. They lack clarity. They pose conflicting messages. They often don’t even pay lip service to integrated themes. The most effective brand voice is the result of a singular and powerful vision that is nurtured in environments that encourage innovation and excellence in communication. Over the last twenty years, the digital revolution has raised the din of marketing communications exponentially, radically altering the messaging environment with its speed, novelty and noise. Every marketer needs to recalibrate their brand voice to find the right pitch and tone, and the ideal volume to be heard. A fully developed voice drives all communications to project a distinct personality that reinforces customer interactions. It’s a “red thread” running through every touch-point, beyond advertising and media to embrace reputation and crisis management.
Nearly four decades ago, Alan Siegel made a presentation that captured the attention of the marketing and advertising community. The subject was Brand Voice. All too often, Brand Voice is watered down to a single page of overused words—innovative, human, and collaborative—that are supposed to drive the tone and character of the communications. So it’s not surprising that most brand Voices are predictable, uninspired, generic and often incoherent. This is especially relevant today as the focus shifts from what brands communicate to how brands communicate.
Voice Lessons explores Voice in the context of the global marketplace, focusing on how social media and the Internet make it more challenging to develop a distinctive Voice.
For corporations, political parties, candidates, doctors, or individuals, navigating the complexity of the exploding media landscape is extremely challenging. Brands must deal with massive fragmentation across the proliferation of mobile, social media platforms, pay TV services, etc.
Virtually all voice programs today are structured around three or four words that provide direction for the tone of the text in communications programs. What is needed for organizations, professions and individuals is a more robust approach to building a voice that projects identity —fusing purpose, positioning, messaging, customer interactions and visual style. The essence of an effective voice addresses WHAT you say and how you BEHAVE, not merely how you speak.
In Voice Lessons, brand expert Alan Siegel teaches that your voice is the vehicle that defines and drives how you project your organizational identity and personality, conveys your messages and follow through—whether a corporation, physician, or student writing an essay for your college application.
Sadly, the majority of brand messages fail to achieve the most essential tasks of communication. They lack clarity. They pose conflicting messages. They often don’t even pay lip service to integrated themes. The most effective brand voice is the result of a singular and powerful vision that is nurtured in environments that encourage innovation and excellence in communication. Over the last twenty years, the digital revolution has raised the din of marketing communications exponentially, radically altering the messaging environment with its speed, novelty and noise. Every marketer needs to recalibrate their brand voice to find the right pitch and tone, and the ideal volume to be heard. A fully developed voice drives all communications to project a distinct personality that reinforces customer interactions. It’s a “red thread” running through every touch-point, beyond advertising and media to embrace reputation and crisis management.
Nearly four decades ago, Alan Siegel made a presentation that captured the attention of the marketing and advertising community. The subject was Brand Voice. All too often, Brand Voice is watered down to a single page of overused words—innovative, human, and collaborative—that are supposed to drive the tone and character of the communications. So it’s not surprising that most brand Voices are predictable, uninspired, generic and often incoherent. This is especially relevant today as the focus shifts from what brands communicate to how brands communicate.
Voice Lessons explores Voice in the context of the global marketplace, focusing on how social media and the Internet make it more challenging to develop a distinctive Voice.
For corporations, political parties, candidates, doctors, or individuals, navigating the complexity of the exploding media landscape is extremely challenging. Brands must deal with massive fragmentation across the proliferation of mobile, social media platforms, pay TV services, etc.
Virtually all voice programs today are structured around three or four words that provide direction for the tone of the text in communications programs. What is needed for organizations, professions and individuals is a more robust approach to building a voice that projects identity —fusing purpose, positioning, messaging, customer interactions and visual style. The essence of an effective voice addresses WHAT you say and how you BEHAVE, not merely how you speak.
In Voice Lessons, brand expert Alan Siegel teaches that your voice is the vehicle that defines and drives how you project your organizational identity and personality, conveys your messages and follow through—whether a corporation, physician, or student writing an essay for your college application.
Alan Siegel is one of the best-known figures in branding and a driving force behind the plain English movement in the United States and abroad. Over five decades, Alan has gained the stature of both pillar of the establishment and provocative iconoclast while building Siegel+Gale, one of the leading global brand consultancies. In 2011, Alan created Siegelvision, a new company focused on solving tough branding and communications problems for purpose-driven organizations. Alan has written extensively on branding and the importance of simplicity as a competitive advantage for the New York Times, Across the Board, and the National Law Journal and has appeared nationally on Today, PBS NewsHour, CBS, ABC News, and CNN. Alan’s presentation at the TED Conference was named by Forbes as one of the top five TED talks for entrepreneurs. Alan is also a eatured columnist for the Huffington Post. He is the author of a series of bestselling personal guides for the Wall Street Journal. A graduate of Cornell University’s School of Industrial and Labor Relations, Alan also attended New York University Law School. After returning from a two year tour of duty as a 1st Lieutenant in the US Army Artillery in Germany, Alan studied at the School of Visual Arts and Alexei Brodovich’s Design Laboratory.
Qty:
