Tuesday, May 19, 2020
Guilty of UnPersonal Branding - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career
Guilty of UnPersonal Branding - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career Are you guilty of relying on your companyâs name and presence and not working hard to establish your own personal brand? Unless you have an infamous past to hide, youâll do yourself and your company a big favor by relentlessly communicating a clear, consistent and compelling personal brand. Then, you may leverage your brand so it functions as a 24/7 ambassador, not just for yourself, but also for your organization. People who donât âget it,â always ask: âWhy would my firm want me to be personally recognized â" shouldnât the company brand be the be-all and end-all of my identity as an employee?â Those folks donât know that âhuman assetsâ is the new term for âhuman resources,â and has even replaced the more recent moniker âtalent,â when it comes to describing employees. Frankly, most companies donât want to spend much money on developing employees. Like getting dressed in the morning and showing up on time, your responsibility for the basics of self-management rest with you, not the company. Personal branding ranks above getting dressed and below speaking at the next TED conference, when it comes to desirable self-management. Investing in human assets Now that indentured servitude is illegal, many companies see that even paying for a skilled foreign workerâs visa is a bad investment. We used to believe that foreign workers would stay because the company took on the work and expense of getting the visa. We found out, once you get the visaâ¦well, you can pretty much go anywhere â" and you do, no reimbursement (or even a hearty thank you) required. Whatâs also come to light over the last decade of stakeholdersâ scrutiny? Most companiesâ training dollars âinvestedâ in employees disappear faster than their 401K plans did last year. As soon as you leave for the next job, the companyâs investment in you leaves as well. So, companies want their employees to be competent, respected and committed to growing their own reputations, skills, connections and career path. Maybe your firm will part with some tuition reimbursement money, but frankly most employers want you to come in and be the best you can be, and lend them all the connections, visibility and relationships you have. Your brand is part of what makes you a human asset, as opposed to a human liability. Letâs compare human assets to real assets. Most companies donât buy âreal assetsâ like property and buildings, and hope those assets will be invisible to the naked eye. Itâs true not everyone is still ideating on the Taj Mahal concept of buildings as monuments to the founderâs ego. However, most companies spend a good bit of coin to keep up the limestone, granite, wood, plastic and fiberboard based dwellings we call our headquarters or offices. Brand YOU as a mobile branding platform As you drive up, the building makes an impression, way before the sign does. In a weird way, the building has a personal brand. Even the office complex or the neighborhood is branded â" elite, modern, efficient, convenient, near the freeway, off the beaten track and âby the way we have a squash court and a company gym,â are components of the buildingâs brand. When I went to work for The Coca-Cola Company, I immediately got the âwe are on a campusâ branded land use, much like Allergan, Google and Yahoo later copied. The space communicates this brand message: âWe care about our people and our image with visiting clients and partners.â So, consider yourself a mobile branding platform for your organization, even if all the mobile youâre doing is running on a treadmill in the company T-shirt while chatting to the panting person next to you. I bet you never call a restaurant, and make a reservation for: âParty of 5 young, intelligent, happening kind of people.â Do you leave an amorphous description that could fit any group? Or, do you leave your name? Hopefully, you leave your name (and the number of guests the venue should expect). That way, the hostess doesnât give away your table to any equally hip group of five â" before you arrive. The connection to personal branding in business People donât buy from Consolidated Waste Management Assets, Houston Office. They buy from you, Bunky. That is, if youâre the hip, young and intelligent Bunky McFearson of Consolidated Waste Management Assets, Houston Office. Yes, customers write the PO to CWMA, Houston. They make the check out to the firm. But, they buy from YOU. You have to build your personal brand, even if you are in Large Company, Inc. Certainly you are the brand when youâre job hunting. Donât label your resume document: Resume.pdf. Label it: McFearson4AcmeWasteManagement.pdf And, when you open your own shop, remember that the greats have leveraged their own names â" way before they were large and famous. Parsons Northrop Morgan Stanley Ogilvy Mather Holmes and Narver OâMelveny Myers â" and every humongous law firm. Often small business owners have the misperception that using their own name makes them appear small. Itâs an unfortunate misunderstanding of business and business relationship development. What is the power of using your name? You may be the biggest point of leverage and differentiator among your competitors. Why hide that? It probably is the single best part of working with your firm â" YOU! To all my favorite personal brands, including YOU: Have a clear, consistent and compelling 2010! Author: Nance Rosen is the author of Speak Up! Succeed. She speaks to business audiences around the world and is a resource for press, including print, broadcast and online journalists and bloggers covering social media and careers. Read more at NanceRosenBlog. Twitter name: nancerosen.
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