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Brand Me: Defining Yourself |
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| Articles - Business Strategies | |
| Written by Brad Hess | |
| Tuesday, 13 July 2010 | |
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Define yourself. When beginning, this is the first step in branding yourself. You need to realize that you are very good, even an expert, at what you do. You surround yourself, either in your job or in your circle of friends, with others who are experts in what you know. Then, you begin to believe that everyone knows what you know and you see yourself as average and begin making mental statements such as, “What do I have to offer that is different or unique? Everyone knows what I know.” WRONG! You have friends, neighbors, and associates that come to you asking for your help and advice. Or perhaps asking, “Can you teach me how to do that?” What kinds of questions do they ask you? Ask yourself this powerful question:
“What sort of things are people asking me when they ask ‘Can I pick your brain for a minute?’”
They go on to suggest you ask yourself the following questions:
Be known as the expert in one thing - stand for something! Find your niche, something you are passionate about. Create a signature look. Something people will recognize immediately. I’ve often told people if you were to find a piece of product literature on the ground and the brand or logo had been torn off, would you know who created the piece? If it came from Apple Computer you would. They have their signature look to everything they create. You can too. This could be your unique name or a unique nick name. A friend of mine has a very common name and has become an expert in social media. He created a signature and calls himself “SocialSam”. Laurie Pehar Borsh from “Laurie Pehar Borsh Personal PR Productions” has a simple logo she always associates with her name. Maybe your signature look is a tagline. My son has a tagline or mantra of “No food, only music the doctor says!” Yes, he is a musician. For others, their signature look is their attire or hair. For others it is a greeting. An Irishman I know always answers the phone or greets people in the morning with “Top of the mornin!” This is his signature. Maybe it is as simple as a unique business card. A good friend of mine just handed me his new business card that looked and felt like a circuit board! Just ask youself, “What is unique about what I do, what I love, what I know?”
Step back from yourself and ask yourself, how do others see me? Your “who” and “do what” statement is a very simple thought about yourself. Keep it simple and easy to understand. It answers the question “who are you and what do you do?” concisely and in a fashion that is memorable. For example, which says more and has more impact: “My name is Jack and I am a business consultant.” Or “I’m Jack. I help business owners and sales professionals grow their clientele.” Simple, yet powerful. You answer the question of whom you help and what you help them get or do. Depending on what type of professional you are, your “who” and “do what” statement should include the following elements:
Here is another example. “Telecom Senior Executive who took a startup to $120MM annual sales with $28MM EBITDA in less than three years.” This directly speaks to a potential client or employer and says who you are and what you can do for them backed up by a history of success. Now tell me, why do you do it anyway? Why do you get up every day to help them get what they want? My favorite interview question is “What gets you out of bed every morning?” An alarm clock is the wrong answer! I’m not looking for a specific answer but rather to discover the passion driving someone’s life. Your “why” not only drives the choices you make, but it also affects how others connect emotionally to what you do for them. The why is reflected in everything you do. It completes your personal brand. Michael Port, ‘Entrepreneur Magazine’ has this why statement: “Because I want to help people think bigger about who they are and what they offer the world.” He goes on to say, “I can go one step further and turn my why statement into a tag line to spread my personal brand and increase my sales potential, ‘The guy to call when you are tired of thinking small.’ This expresses the most fundamental, deepest part of my character.” (Michael Port, Entrepreneur Magazine - January 2010) Guy Kawasaki, ‘The Art of the Start’, inspired by John Doerr, says: “The best reason to start an organization is to make meaning – to create a product or service that makes the world a better place. Does the product or service you are pursuing change lives for the better? Change the world we live in for the better? Offer something incredible and previously out of reach of the average person?” If what you are doing provides one of these benefits or similar benefits and fits your personal “why”, you are on the road to success. Your brand is beginning to take shape. Your personal brand is built on a solid foundation. With your “who”, “do what”, and “why” statements in hand and in your – go forth and “make meaning”!
Brad Hess has other articles available at: www.mymark.com/articles. MyMark, LLC is a media rich professional social networking website that gives you the tools to use social media optimization to enhance your search engine optimization and generate revenue. Visit www.mymark.com
today to set up your free account!
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