Personal Branding. Do those words make you cringe? Let’s choose something else like, Name Equity. Whatever term you use, it’s really all the same thing. Mitch Joel posted a great article today on his blog that clearly illustrates the current need to take control of your online persona. No matter who you are, or what you do, with today’s technology there is no excuse for not having a good handle on your personal brand, and a substantial contact network to back it up. I’m not just talking about people in the technology industry, or in marketing, or any of the industries you might associate with social media, networking, etc. I am talking about you: manager, college student, stay at home mom or dad, accountant, fireman.
Can you conceive of a situation where you might actually have to ask people for help? Or want to promote something? Anything? Garage sale? Sell your house? Help your spouse or kid find a job? Raise money for a sick friend or relative? You can certainly get on the phone and call people, or send out a group email to all your friends and contacts. But most people, without the benefit of a social network, don’t have the network power to make the kind of difference that can be made with a healthy group of online contacts.
If you have an established brand that people can find on Google, your chances of building a substantial network, getting a better job, getting venture capital, whatever, are increased exponentially. People online will network with people they can “check out”. Employers will hire or recruit people who “check out” in a Google search. People will offer assistance to you if you are active on social networks and have a trustworthy “brand”. But if someone goes online to Google you and all they turn up are some old high school photos that someone posted of you on MySpace or Facebook, well…
Here is a quick tip. It’s sort of the essence of branding. Many of us have common names, or names that would compete with more famous or prominent folks of the same name online. So find your niche (a word, or two words) and associate it with your name wherever you choose to place your brand. My name, for instance, is pretty common. There are hundreds or maybe thousands of people online with the same name, many of whom are more famous or more public a figure than I. So everywhere I put my name online, every social media spot, blog post, directory, whatever, I always put what I do and list my web sites.
Many people don’t like to write anything about their work on social media sites because it is supposed to be social, right? Wrong. If you don’t associate your name with the things you want to be known for, something that is specific and not too generic, you are doing yourself a disservice. Google Craig Fisher and you will find me. But I’m not right up there at the top. However I’m in the recruiting business. And I help companies and people to brand themselves better online so that I can more easily match them up together. And my web sites where I write about all this are Fishdogs.com and AListSolutions.com. So Google Craig Fisher and Recruiting, or Craig Fisher and branding, or Craig Fisher and Fishdogs or Craig fisher and A-List, and the results are much more satisfactory.
This exercise is not only an ingenious way to get people to Google me, it also demonstrates that if you, Jane Jones of knitting fame, pair your name continuously with something online that you would like to be known for, you are well on your way to creating a brand for yourself. Now don’t forget to be consistent, and genuine, and helpful, and informative, and creative, and knowledgeable…
Personal Branding Is Not An Option – It’s Crucial To Success
March 26, 2009 5:58 AM
Posted by Mitch Joel
More layoffs. Giving back bonuses. Fewer work days to save the company from firing people. Doing the job of the three people that were let go in your department. Not hiring the five people you were thinking about hiring. Trying to find a job in this climate.
Whether you are an employee in a big, medium or small business, or an entrepreneur, or about to enter the workforce, never has it been more important to understand the power of having, maintaining and developing a strong personal brand. Never before has there been more ways for you to connect and build your personal brand through digital channels.
Never has a simple search on Google been able to tell us more about a person, who they are, what they do, and why they matter.
What does Google say about you?
If brands matter more than ever (and they do, just ask Apple, Starbucks and Twitter), then the ability for individuals to build a personal brand has never been more important. Maybe the idea of “branding yourself” seems ridiculous. It’s not. It’s a subject that famed management guru and author of the best-selling business book, In Search of Excellence, Tom Peters, first tackled in 1997 for an article in Fast Company magazine titled, The Brand Called You.
“Regardless of age, regardless of position, regardless of the business we happen to be in, all of us need to understand the importance of branding. We are CEOs of our own companies: Me Inc. To be in business today, our most important job is to be head marketer for the brand called You. … You’re every bit as much a brand as Nike, Coke, Pepsi, or the Body Shop. To start thinking like your own favourite brand manager, ask yourself the same question the brand managers at Nike, Coke, Pepsi, or the Body Shop ask themselves: What
is it that my product or service does that makes it different? Give yourself the traditional 15-words-or-less contest challenge. Take the time to write down your answer. And then take the time to read it. Several times.”Peters gave us the beginning of an insight: like big corporate brands, all of the people we connect with have some kind of similar emotions and thoughts when they think about us as people. That mental tattoo that our personas and reputations create in their mind’s eye is the essence of our personal brand.
But Peters wrote this in a world where individuals were limited by how they could spread their personal brands – the Internet was just taking its commercial shape in 1997. Now, in a world of Blogs, Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn, our personal brands are resonating 24-hours-a-day, and the content we put in there and link to says more about who we are, as individuals than any one-page resum� ever could.
There’s a small caution.
People working on their personal brand sometimes seem a little snake-oil salesy-like. They would state that they were working on their personal brand in a way that made it look like they were trying too hard. They were the same kind of people who manoeuvred through the local chamber of commerce event dumping business cards in any available and open hand No need to be that person.
The amazing thing about developing your personal brand online in social networks and by blogging, is that you can hone in on connecting with those that have shared values and similar interests.
One of the best places to get started is a search engine. Start looking for blogs in your industry, and start following some of the more notable people on Twitter. After you get a feel for the type of content people are publishing, you can dip you toes into the personal branding waters by leaving comments on those blogs or spaces. You can even go neck deep and start your own blog to demonstrate your own, unique, perspective.
Personal branding and the new media space creates a unique and mutually beneficial relationship. Anyone can express who they are to the world. And, if you’re not sure what you have to say that is unique and different, just remember the immortal words of Oscar Wilde: “Be yourself, everyone else is already taken.”
I'm on board! Valid points for all to consider.