Brand-Yourself

Become Remarkable.

  • Home
  • About
  • Press
  • Stay Updated
  • Sign Up
  • Feed

Everything You Need to Start Building Your Personal Brand Right Now

by Pete Kistler • November 5, 2008 • View Comments

What is a Personal Brand?

Your personal brand is how other people perceive you. To make sure your self perception mirrors others’ perceptions of you, it’s important to articulate your unique value in a compelling, genuine, consistent and visible way.

Your personal brand is held in the minds of others: it is how people feel about what do you do, why do you do it, who you do it for, why you’re different. It is your single most powerful tool in attaining career success. Your personal brand should make it clear that you are THE person to go to for a specific set of people with a specific problem. Defining and communicating your personal brand applies many principles of corporate branding to you as an individual. It establishes you as the “go-to person” in your field.

The goal of developing your personal brand is to differentiate yourself from the competition, and to attract ideal opportunities that put your abilities to work in a way that gives you meaning. It is the best way to manage your career today because it makes you irreplaceable to a particular audience.

Personal branding is a journey towards a happier and more successful life that emerges from your search for your identity. It powerfully and clearly states what you want based on your values, vision and strengths. It promotes you based on who you are, what you stand for, what makes you unique, and what your purpose is. It is NOT creating and marketing a made up image – that’s the exact opposite of personal branding. Personal branding is 100% authentically YOU.

In a nutshell, your personal brand communicates:

  1. Who do you serve? What group of people is your audience?
  2. What do you do best?
  3. Why do you do what you do? What motivates you and gives you meaning?
  4. How are you different from your peers? What makes you the only choice?

How Do You Develop Your Personal Brand?

Personal branding begins with some soul-searching to ensure your brand is genuine and authentic. The first step is to identify what gives you fulfillment in life. What drives you? What are you passionate about? What kinds of activities give you meaning? What do you love to do? These questions help articulate the “what drives you,” or “why” part of your personal brand. It reveals your intentions genuinely and clearly. When people know the source of your career energy, they feel better about putting you in charge of their needs.

Next, identify what you do best. How do your passions intersect with your skills? What are you great at? What could you do all day without getting bored? What abilities do you have that consistently impress other people? These questions help articulate the “what you do” part of your personal brand. This is the need that you solve, and the reason that employers will pay you (or why clients/customers will refer you to their friends) to solve their problems.

Next, identify what makes you different from others in your field by examining your values. Do certain values drive your work ethic, such as beauty, integrity, humor, creativity or quality? Examining your values helps articulate the “what makes you different” part of your personal brand. Your values play a large role in differentiating you from your competition and provide a reason to choose you over your peers. When your values resonate with a potential employer or client, you will connect on a deeper level.

Next, identify your audience. What kind of people do you love working with? Do you prefer young children to adults, environmentally conscious people, small business owners, musicians, or the developmentally disabled? These questions help identify the “who you serve,” or audience portion of your personal brand. Personal branding is all about becoming the best at something for a certain group of people. Who will those people be?

Next, put these answers together in a compelling and genuine way. Now that you’ve done some soul-searching and laid the foundation of your brand, it’s time to show people why you’re the answer to their problems. Work on developing a polished way to talk about yourself that attracts the kinds of opportunities that bring you meaningful work. This will unify the multiple independent aspects of your brand into one clear, compelling and cohesive statement. (A future blog post will specifically address how to bring your brand together and communicate it in a compelling way, resulting in your personal brand message).

Integrate your personal brand into all aspects of your career. Your resume (here are some personal resume tips based on my hiring experience), your bio, cover letter, web presence, interview stories, business card and email signature should all reflect the values and language used in your personal brand message. This builds brand awareness with everyone you come into contact with and increases the likelihood that people come to you with opportunities related to your brand.

Create a home online for your personal brand. People immediately go to Google for a reference check, whether they just met you at a networking event or want to hire you. That means you need to establish a web presence for your brand. Your web presence should revolve around your personal website, which should ideally be www.[yourname].com. Your website acts as the online hub for your brand. It is where people searching for you in Google will get a true taste of you who are, where readers of your business card, email signature, social network profile, etc. will go to find out more about you. It is your chance to wow and emotionally connect viewers your brand. It is your first and most important impression, and your best chance to win over new visitors from the get-go.

Increase your rank in Google results when your named is searched. The technical term for this step is Search Engine Optimization. Choose the name you want to be found under online, learn how to increase the position of your site in Google search results, then make it easy to find you online and increase your visibility on the web.

Consistently communicate your personal brand through multiple channels. You should be posting comments on blogs, submitting tips on forums, answering questions on Q&A databases, writing book reviews, adding value to wiki articles, participating in social networks and posting original content (articles or media) related to your field. Go to conferences and events related to your area of expertise, meet people will similar passions and work on projects that excite you. These actions develop your brand’s presence within your niche, and demonstrate your passion and active participation in your field.

Establish credibility within your area of expertise online. The best way to gain credibility online is to create on-brand content related to your field. Starting a blog, contributing to other blogs or writing web articles/e-books/newsletters useful to members of your niche are excellent ways to establish yourself as a thought leader in your area of expertise. Offline, start a business, write a book, join professional organizations, take courses and get certified in areas that will increase the influence of your opinion.

Manage Your Personal Brand Online at Brand-Yourself.com

Sound like a lot of work? Actually, it’s a lot of fun. And we’ve built a platform for you to manage your entire personal brand online from one central hub. Create your Brand-Yourself account today and see how our tools can help you build, optimize and promote a remarkable web presence.

Pete Kistler
Author: Pete Kistler
Support me by sharing this post:

Add to Del.icio.us Add to digg Add to Facebook Add to Google Bookmarks Add to reddit Add to Stumble Upon Add to Technorati

About Us

Brand-Yourself.com is an award winning toolset that helps you proactively manage your online reputation and promote yourself effectively across the social web.

Follow Us

TwitterTechnorati Feed Feed Feed

TwitterCounter for @brandyourself

Search

Twitter

    Recent Posts

    • Personal Branding Interview: Branding and Life Coach Anthony Fisher
    • St. Patrick’s Special: We Will Help Five of You Build the Ultimate Online Presence
    • 6 Ways to Network with Your Virtual Business Card
    • From Tweet to Hired: The Definitive Guide to Land a Job with Twitter
    • How To Break The Rules And Succeed Like Conan O’Brien
    • 2 Resources to Boost Your Word Power and Personal Brand

    Topics

    • Academic (18)
    • All (217)
    • blogging (49)
    • Books (7)
    • Brand-Yourself.com (270)
    • Careers (225)
    • College (102)
    • Entrepreneurship (11)
    • facebook (24)
    • Featured Articles (24)
    • Gen Y (23)
    • Google PageRank (8)
    • Guest Post (55)
    • How To (141)
    • Internships (6)
    • interviews (39)
    • job search (80)
    • linkedin (26)
    • Networking (127)
    • Personal Branding (240)
    • Press (2)
    • Recent Events (16)
    • reputation management (104)
    • Resume (35)
    • SEO (13)
    • Skills (79)
    • slideshare (1)
    • social media (67)
    • thank you notes (3)
    • top 5 (1)
    • Twitter (35)
    • Uncategorized (27)
    • Web Identity (141)

    Blogroll

    • Brazen Careerist
    • Chris Brogan
    • Chris Perry
    • Dan Schawbel
    • Dave Saunders
    • Geoff Livingston
    • Hajj Flemings
    • Harvey Palmer
    • Jacob Share
    • Jason Alba
    • Joel Cheesman
    • Kirsten Dixson
    • Lindsey Pollak
    • Maria Elena Duron
    • Meg Guiseppi
    • Neil Patel
    • Ola Rynge
    • Resume Writing Service
    • Rob Cuesta
    • The Campus Buzz
    • Walter Feigenson
    • William Arruda
    • Your Success Network

    Recent Comments

    • Ryan Rancatore on How To Break The Rules And Succeed Like Conan O’Brien
    • Doug Caldwell on Top 5 Interview Thank You Notes
    • Doug Caldwell on Free Blog Comments advice: Your Guide to Leaving Comments on Blog Posts
    • Doug Caldwell on How To Break The Rules And Succeed Like Conan O’Brien
    • Doug Caldwell on How To Break The Rules And Succeed Like Conan O’Brien
    • Doug Caldwell on 6 Ways to Network with Your Virtual Business Card
    • dlanphear on How To Break The Rules And Succeed Like Conan O’Brien
    • Keith McIlvaine on Free Blog Comments advice: Your Guide to Leaving Comments on Blog Posts
    • Cassie Wallace on 7 Tricks To Enhance Your LinkedIn Experience
    • Richard Hostler on Free Blog Comments advice: Your Guide to Leaving Comments on Blog Posts

    Archives

    • March 2010 (22)
    • February 2010 (25)
    • January 2010 (24)
    • December 2009 (18)
    • November 2009 (16)
    • October 2009 (15)
    • September 2009 (21)
    • August 2009 (23)
    • July 2009 (27)
    • June 2009 (20)
    • May 2009 (13)
    • April 2009 (12)
    • March 2009 (7)
    • February 2009 (7)
    • January 2009 (5)
    • December 2008 (6)
    • November 2008 (10)
    • October 2008 (12)
    • September 2008 (11)
    • August 2008 (12)
    • July 2008 (13)
    • June 2008 (5)
    • May 2008 (3)
    • April 2008 (4)
    • March 2008 (5)