Your Personal Brand-Find The Ideal Job or Grow a Business
A personal brand is built around your knowledge or expertise, previous jobs, appearance, lifestyle, and interest. You’re going to take this Personal Brand with you everywhere you go. This is your reputation.
Your brand is a living thing—and the living thing has a personality! That’s why you need to figure out how to define your brand personality before developing a brand for yourself, your company, your organisation.
Personal Branding How-to
Step 1: Determine your unique value proposition.
Spending time to think about what makes you different from your peers is about your strengths, desires, and goals. For example, if you left your job today, what will your company and colleagues miss? Know who you are and who you’re not.
Rebranding isn’t easy, and if your strategy isn’t well thought out, you’ll end up confusing yourself and others. Start by deciding where you really want to spend your resources. Check out the industry’s related trade journals, do informational interviews, and even try some internships.
This is no longer only for college students; vocation, for example, enables people to train with professionals ranging from digital marketing gurus, beauty industry professionals, social media marketing agencies. If you’re looking to advance or move laterally within your organisation, see if there’s a shadow programme or a sabbatical—and look for a mentor to direct you.
Personal Branding How-to Step 2: Find out how others see you.
Ask trusted bosses, coworkers, and friends for four or five adjectives to describe you. What the hell are you good at? What are your qualities, huh? In which ways do they see you as “irreplaceable?” These will be the three key terms they’d use to describe you, and they also need to fit with how you’d describe yourself.
Using distinguishing characteristics to your advantage, even if they are not strictly applicable to your job. Robert Reich, former U.S. Secretary of Labor, is less than five feet tall. He knew people would be shocked to see him for the first time—and he didn’t want his height to be a nuisance. So Robert would loosen up audiences with a joke or two about his height, and, in the same vein, he’d titled his campaign book I’ll Be Short. Like it or not, “short” was part of his brand—and he shrewdly used it.
Personal Branding How-to Step 3: Identify your goals
Where would you like to be in the next six months, one year, five years, ten years, huh? Defining your goals is important to produce a message that rewards you from achieving them.
After you’ve adopted your rebrand, it’s simple to make new contacts—the new ones can take you to face value. The tougher slog is to reintroduce yourself to your current network.
The fact is, the vast majority of people don’t pay much attention to you. That means that their views are probably a few years out of date—and that’s not their fault. We are not expecting someone to remember the specifics of our lives. So, strategically, you need to re-educate your friends and acquaintances—because they will be your clients, advisers, or the drivers for the new positions you are looking for.
Personal Branding How-to Step 4: Identify your target audience – Employer or other Businesses
Just like Starbucks knows that their target audience is coffee drinkers, you want to establish clearly who you want to send your messages to on social media too. This will not only help you hone your message, but it will also help you deliver it to the right places.
Personal Branding How-to Step 5: Reorganise your priorities
You’re probably practised putting yourself behind in front of an HR company, coworkers, and clients. You still want to be loyal to these groups, but be loyal to yourself first. Then, if you develop a strong Personal Brand, you will get bought without having to sell yourself.
Personal Branding How-To Step 6: Pay attention to the details
The total sum of how you represent yourself to the world is the aspect of your public image that you can influence. So if your brand is developed, make sure that the little things—the way you dress, the body language, how you behave with your coworkers, the emails you write—are consistent with your brand message.
Personal Branding How-To Step 7: Update your LinkedIn Profile
Take a look over your resume to see if it matches your company’s brand. Ensure that your resume precisely describes who you are and is consistent with both your short-term and long-term objectives.
Personal Branding How-To Step 8: Become a social networker
Set up accounts at social networking sites such as LinkedIn, Twitter, Instagram. Ask those in your target audience to subscribe to your pages and update daily. Make sure your updates are germane to your branding message.
Personal Branding How-To Step 9: Build your own website
Your website should highlight your professional accomplishments, skills and knowledge, what you stand for, and your overall value. Make it primarily about you, not your company or clients.
Personal Branding How-To Step 10: Blogging
Platforms like Wix, WordPress make it easier than ever to promote yourself to your target audience. Commit to posting a couple of times a week on topics that your audience will find interesting and educational, highlighting your unique skills and experience.
Personal Branding How-To Step 11: Get published – Share articles on other websites.
Write a blog post for another website, contribute to industry publications, or update the content on your own website. Being published is an ideal way to promote yourself as an expert in your field.
Step 12: Go offline.
Be sure to promote your brand in person, too. Join and participate in industry groups, give talks at conferences, or offer to spearhead a large project that highlights your unique talents.
Key Takeaway’s – Sold to the highest bidder!
If you want to be very competitive and effective, you need to have a personal brand that mirrors the professional brand you want to portray. If you’re looking to get a promotion or land your dream job, creating a powerful and trustworthy brand will help you achieve your goals.
In the internet age, the signs of your old brand will never vanish completely—and as long as you think about what you’ve learned along the way, that’s okay. The challenge is to be proactive in deciding how you want to be viewed, create a convincing narrative that describes your evolution, and spread the message. Consider “search engine optimisation” for your life: the more links you create, and the more value and content you constantly add to the stream, the more likely it is that your new brand will be known, remembered, and searched for.
Audrey Anderson LinkedIn