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Is There Buzz About You? The Power of Building a
Personal Brand
Word of mouth
is the most powerful force in business. Who doesn’t
want to have other people “buzzing” about them? If
people respect you, like you and have a good
experience with you (or hear about it from someone
else) they hire you, promote you and do business
with you. But how do you get people buzzing about
you?
Let’s look at
how big companies do it—Nike, for instance.
Everyone recognizes the famous swoosh logo on shoes,
hats, shirts and golf bags. That logo has power.
But its power was not the result of a multi-million
dollar marketing effort.
Back in 1971, a
graphic design student at Portland State University
named Carolyn Davidson was hired to “just do it” -
create a logo for the side of a running shoe. She
was paid the princely sum of $35. Carolyn had a
moment of creative genius! It resulted in a symbol
that became ubiquitous on Nike gear. Twelve years
later the company gave her a gold Swoosh ring
embedded with a diamond, along with a certificate
and an undisclosed amount of Nike stock. Today the
company reports net revenues of $13.7 billion
dollars!
You don’t need to have a big
budget or a multi-million dollar ad agency to build
a personal brand! It’s about focusing on how to
communicate effectively - using your wits. A
creative, thoughtful approach to delivering the
message will get people saying positive things about
you. If you and your message are interesting, and
if you get out and deliver that message often
enough, you are going to develop a powerful personal
brand.
Sometimes people try to make it
too complicated. A personal brand is really nothing
more than a message, and a message is a thought –
it’s what people think, when they think of you.
What comes to mind when people
see you? Or hear your name? That’s your personal
brand. It’s the sum total of what people know about
you – what they think of you after you’ve had a
conversation, given a speech, or they’ve seen you in
the public eye in some way.
So every time you speak, you
are branding yourself, and it’s important to think
strategically about what and how you are delivering
that message. Your conversations, presentations,
emails, phone calls and conversations in the hallway
all send signals. Are you talking about big ideas?
Are you clear, concise, and interesting? Do people
appear to sit up and pay attention when you
speak?
People have a feeling about
others, almost as soon as they meet and work with
them. They continue to shape that feeling with the
more interactions they have. Pretty soon, they see
them walking down the hall, and something registers,
positive or negative. It’s within your power to
make that feeling positive. What
constitutes a strong personal brand? There are 7
aspects of a powerful personal brand. A personal
brand:
-
Is instantly recognizable
-
Stands for something of value
-
Builds trust
-
Generates positive word of
mouth
-
Gives a competitive advantage
-
Creates career opportunity
-
Results in professional and
financial success
Some people
have all the tools to create a strong, personal
brand – but they just can’t get the ball rolling to
get their name out there. They’ve got great ideas,
and a semi-recognizable name, but there’s no buzz
about them. So how do you create buzz? One way is
to start speaking, in formal and informal settings.
Speaking is perhaps the single best way to establish
yourself as an expert in any business or industry.
Speaking inside and outside
your company or industry positions you as an expert
for several reasons:
-
Many of your colleagues or
competitors don’t do it
-
People assume if you are
speaking on a topic you are an expert
-
Other people promote your
talk
-
You are center stage which
automatically gives you credibility
-
If you give a valuable talk,
people remember you
-
If they remember you, you
become top of mind – you are the one they think of
when they are referring someone for new business,
promotions, other speaking engagements, etc.
Some people say, "I don’t
really have opportunities to speak." But finding
opportunities to speak is easier than you think.
Here are some tips on finding opportunities:
-
If you’re a business owner or
entrepreneur, call to ask organizations where you
are a member if you can speak
-
Ask all of your local
business and community organizations, from the
Chamber of Commerce, to the Lions Club.
-
If you’re trying to develop
your reputation inside an organization, look for
opportunities there. Many companies sponsor brown
bag lunches, panels, and have off sites where you
can present your ideas. Put your hand up to
present in team meetings; by volunteering and
putting it on your calendar you automatically
create a deadline that forces you to go into
action and prepare a great presentation
-
Start small with friendly
audiences if you haven’t done much speaking, until
you develop confidence and have a chance to test
out your presentations—figure out what a small
friendly audience is for you – it might be a team
meeting, your church group, or the Rotary Club in
town
-
As you develop confidence,
push yourself to accept bigger assignments
-
Pitch to speak at regional
conferences of professional associations and
organizations, attend events where your clients or
customers or colleagues go, get to know the
executive directors or presidents of those
organizations and ask if they are looking for
speakers
-
The more you do, the more
confident you become and the better your material
is because you have tested it out. Speaking
brings more speaking, as people hear you speak and
like you they invite you to speak for other
organizations.
The benefit of this is not only
that you are getting in front of these audiences –
you are getting other people to market for you. You
aren’t just getting exposure to the 50 people who
show up. Your name is going out on their
stationery, email newsletter or web site to the
thousands of members on their list. That’s powerful
marketing. And it doesn’t cost you anything.
Wherever you
are today in your professional life, you can start
sending strong, positive signals that will cut
through the clutter of day to day business and
create buzz about you.
Everyone has the power to
create their own positive personal brand. In fact,
you could argue, they must, if they want to succeed
in a competitive, global economy. It’s up to you to
create the strategy and messages needed to create a
buzz and a powerful brand.
For more workplace
communications and answering service - call center
related articles see
Suzanne Bates Section or
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