A year of Personal Brand

About a year ago I ran across a post by David Lorenzo, author of the book Career Intensity.  The post was called Managing Your Personal Brand, and it started me thinking differently about how I presented myself to others.  There were other posts from a number of great people on the web that added to this (simply Google Personal Brand), and expanded the concept as well.

So here a year later, I’ve been practicing this philosophy to good effect.  I’ve been happy with the results that I’ve achieved over the past year, and was reminded of the post today as he linked back to the original.

Good read if you’re interested in personal improvement.

Via: Career Intensity Blog – Managing Your Personal Brand

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More on personal brands

Today I found When Brands Collide on Own Your Brand, where Mike Wagner elaborates a bit on the subject of Personal Brand. In it, he discusses how the concept of personal brand is more important, and has more impact than in previous years.
Ever since I read this post on Personal Brands by Shel Israel, I’ve been seeing more and more discussion on the topic. Not that the concept is ‘new’, but that the impact in our society is/will be huge. The implications to businesses as employees with strong personal brands could affect the bottom line. As we move into the future, and blogging continues to grow, the audiences of those blogs will continue to grow.

In our daily lives we travel in small geographical circles that are very comfortable, very well-known to us. Most of us work with the same people every day, we go to the same places, see the same things. The physical audience in our daily lives is small and well known, we know who we can be upfront with, we know who we need to handle with ‘kid gloves’. We have the ability to see another’s face when we communicate with them, and see the impact our conversation has.

When we blog, we connect with people who have similar interests, but are geographically dispersed. And because of the revolution in communications technologies, we have an audience of hundreds of millions of people. Through tagging and searching, we find each other and start conversations. Since we can’t view each other during the conversation, we tend to be more honest and open in what we say and do. The ability to have clear honest communications is at the root of blogging – and as a side effect, you can learn a lot about the blogger.

Now take the concept of personal brand and figure in that massive audience. Can you see how personal brand (a person’s reputation) can now be built to have the name recognition of a corporate brand? In the blogosphere, there are already a number of people who are approaching this kind of recognition.

So for the rest of us Z-Listers the important part is to understand what your blog says about you. What power you hold in your hands when you post to your blog. You have a powerful tool to shape your career or your life, and that massive audience that we can write to, but how do you want to use it?

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What is a Personal Brand…

Wow… I had not thought much about this previously, and its an interesting concept. Shel Israel posted on this over on the Naked Conversations blog, and it got me thinking (again).

In the post Shel uses several prominent bloggers as examples, (Steve Rubel at Edelman, Robert Scoble at Microsoft) of how blogging has created their own personal brands. And how, through personal brands, the perception of the organizations they associate with are affected.

Scoble, Rubel and a rising number of employees have personal brands that shape global brands. The impact is noticeable now as blogging starts to penetrate large traditional companies. It will be immense in coming years.

He also points out that the concept of personal brands is nothing new. Presidents, sports figures, movie stars, musicians, explorers, etc… have all had personal brands.

Personal brand is not new. When Babe Ruth was traded from the Red Sox to the Yankees back in 1918, many fans moved their loyalties from Boston to New York along with him.

The difference is that blogging gives everyone an equal footing in exchanging ideas. He says “… the blogosphere has enormously amplified the number and power of personal brands” and I agree, by providing a inexpensive worldwide inter-linking platform, blogging offers the ability to participate in any conversation. This

What this indicates to me is that each blogger has the opportunity to become what they want. That everyone has a personal brand, that every blogger can direct, shape, and nurture the perception of themselves and the organizations in which they participate.

Powerful stuff this blogging.

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