1-2-3
Success! Three Steps to Building Your Brand and Expanding Your Career Success
Whether
you are a senior executive, the president of your own business, or an
employee of a company of any size, managing your brand is critical to
achieving your professional goals. Learn the three steps to successful
personal branding.
by William Aruda
Contributing Author
Gone are the days where your value as an employee or vendor was linked to
your loyalty and seniority. Today, companies are in a constant state of
reorganization in response to the rapidly changing demands of the market.
This modifies the way you behave as employees or vendors. On a constant
basis, you are working with different project teams, managers, and
employees. In a sense, you are functioning like your own personal
corporation. And that means that you have the same need to differentiate
yourself and build demand for your services among your target markets.
(article continued below ...)
Just as with corporate brands, your personal brand is your promise of
value. It separates you from your peers, your colleagues, and your
competitors. And it allows you to expand your success. Personal branding is
not about building a special image for the outside world; it is about
understanding your unique combination of rational and emotional attributes -
your strengths, skills, values and passions - and using these attributes to
differentiate yourself and guide your career decisions.
So, whether you are a senior executive, the president of your own
business, or an employee of a company of any size, managing your brand is
critical to achieving your professional goals. When you have built and
nurtured a winning brand, you'll reap the many benefits, including:
Understanding yourself better, Increasing your confidence,
Increasing
your visibility and presence,
Differentiating yourself from your peers,
Increasing your compensation,
Thriving during downturns in the economy,
Expanding into new business areas, and
Having better, more interesting jobs
and assignments.
Here are three steps to successful personal branding:
Step 1: Unearth Your Brand.
Give your brand context. Before you can clearly describe your
personal brand, you need to look at the big picture: your vision, and
purpose. Your vision is external. It is the essence of what you see possible
for the world. Your purpose is internal. It is the role you play in
supporting that vision. As Gandhi said, "We must be the change we wish to
see in the world." Additionally, your personal brand needs to be tied to
your goals. Spend some time thinking about how you would like your life to
look in a year. Two years? Five years? Be sure to document your answers.
With your goals set down, and with a real understanding of your vision and
purpose, you can begin the assessment process required to understand and
develop your brand.
Know Yourself. A successful personal brand is authentic. Thus, you
need to know yourself before you can build a successful brand. If you are
creative, dynamic, outgoing, and whimsical, you will not succeed by
communicating the attributes of predictable, steady, and focused. Much the
same as Volvo is known for being safe, not for being a speedy sports car.
Know Your Competitors. How can you stand out unless you know those
among whom you're standing? In other words, who are you really competing
against? Your current colleagues? A larger group at your current workplace?
Others within your industry? Take another look at your goals, and take a
closer look at your competition. If you see yourself making major career
changes, your competitors are not likely to be your current colleagues. If
you are planning a straight-ahead trajectory to a more senior position, it
may be easier to identify the competition and their brand attributes.
Know Your Target. To be successful, it's not enough just to have a
personal brand. You need to communicate it to the right people. It would
exhaust your resources to aim for the world at large. The key to successful
personal branding is focus!
Barbara Bix, founder of the business development and marketing firm BB
Marketing Plus, has defined her target as follows: executives in firms, or
business unit directors, who sell advice, data, or technology, have fewer
than 50 employees, earn between $1 million and $10 million in revenue,
command an average sales price of at least $30,000, and depend on senior
managers, or perhaps a single salesperson, to get new business.
Now, you may not be able to define your target as narrowly as Barbara,
but you should at least be able to identify specific people or
characteristics of your target audience to help you define your messages.
Just like Mattel knows that their target audience is glued to the television
on Saturday morning, you too must understand how and where you can reach
your audience.
Step 2: Express Yourself.
Describe the essence of your brand. From the results of Step 1
above, start to create a personal brand profile. List your brand attributes,
create a brand statement and even your personal brand tagline. This will
help you as you develop a plan to communicate your brand.
Find the Right Mix. Once you know yourself, your competitors, and
your target, you can identify the ideal combination of communications tools
that reach your audience effectively. This can vary widely depending on your
goals, but maybe you will want to write articles or contribute to your
internal newsletter. Maybe regular speaking gigs are more appropriate for
your brand. You need to evaluate all possible communications tools and
select the right combination to reach your target audience.
Mark Everything You Do with Your Brand. Whether you're giving a
presentation, participating in a meeting, or writing a report, you never
have to leave your brand behind. Always ask yourself how you can connect
your brand to every given situation. Every meeting, every project, every
business trip every business meal!
Live and Breathe Your Brand. Live in a state of inquiry for two
weeks to start. Question everything you do, every tool you use, every
article of clothing you wear. Are they consistent with your brand? Do you
have a WAP phone but use a printed calendar or a handwritten to-do list? Do
you carry a briefcase? Make sure everything communicates the essence of your
brand. Get used to living in the inquiry. It's a tool that will help you
keep your brand clear, consistent, and constant.
Step 3: Evaluate and Evolve.
You've identified your brand. You've developed communications tools to
reach your target audience. But how do you measure your brand success?
Evaluate The key is putting metrics in up front. If you are an
employee of a company, you can use performance evaluations, and informal
feedback from managers and peers. Find a group of people to use as your
focus group: trusted people who will provide truly honest feedback, perhaps
your mentor or a performance coach. If you are a consultant, provide your
clients with feedback forms after every project. Request feedback on your
web site. Get as much INput as you can, to make your OUTput as strong as it
can be.
Evolve. To remain relevant to their target audiences, all strong
brands evolve with the times. This could mean line extensions (Starbucks is
now serving teas; McDonald's is offering salads). It could be modifying the
ways you communicate your brand (moving from a printed resume to a resume on
CD). It could mean augmenting brand attributes as you continue to grow in
your career (much like Volvo has been adding style to safety in the design
of their cars). Whatever course you take, make sure your brand continues to
be authentic, differentiated, and consistent. In a world where cities, wars,
CEOs, politicians and highways are branded, you need to think about yourself
in the same terms. So build and nurture your brand. There are three simple
steps. Leading you along one clear path to success.
About the Author:
William Arruda, dubbed the ‘Personal Branding Guru’, by the media and
clients alike, works with individuals and organizations to build strong,
memorable brands. Combining his 20 years of international branding expertise
with his passion for people, he founded Reach ( http://www.reachcc.com ), the
world’s first branding consultancy focused on the human side of branding.