How to Create Your Personal Brand
By Jack Perry
Branding
in this country has a long history, especially in the retail industry.
Giant retailers consistently invest millions to make themselves
foremost in your mind. Once they’re embedded in your mind, you’re
programmed to expect certain quality, consistency, and benefits from
their product. Then as these companies continue to expose you to their
brands and their benefits, the connection grows, until they become
synonymous with your particular needs.
A brand
promises a result and experience you can count on. Most people
understand and accept that companies and products have brands and
images, which become part of the mental picture in their clients’
minds. Additionally, individuals in certain professions develop brands
(i.e. surgeons, attorneys, authors, sales professionals) and have
built client bases around them.
What about
you – the individual in sales and sales management? Can you brand
yourself? Yes! Regardless of your chosen profession, you can establish
a strong brand for yourself as an individual. This is especially
important if you work in a big company, because you don’t want to
get lost in the crowd. By branding yourself in some way, you become
distinctive.
How can
you establish your own personal brand? Embrace the following seven
steps.
1.
Identify What You Value: Your
personal brand is ultimately a reflection of everything you value. For
example, if you value honesty, then your brand will likely reflect the
way you’re always honest with your clients and prospects. Or if you
value knowledge, then your brand will likely incorporate the way you
acquire, use, and communicate information.
So take
time to really think about the things you value in your life. List
them. Make sure the values you identify are truly your own because you
must believe in and live by them every day. These values will become
the foundation for your brand, as well as your personal mission
statement. They will help you align yourself and everything you do
with what you choose to stand for.
2.
Identify What Makes You Unique: With your
values as your foundation, the next step is to determine your specific
uniqueness. Everyone is unique and special in some way. For example,
maybe you are the only salesperson on your team with children. In this
case, you can relate to other parents on a different level than anyone
else in your company. Or maybe you are the only one with a background
in technology, so you know exactly how to meet the needs of people in
that industry.
How are
you different as an individual? How are you unique? And how are your
products and services different? Incorporate this uniqueness into your
brand.
3.
Identify How You Want To Be Perceived: Branding
is about other people’s perceptions of you. You have the power to
control most of these perceptions with your actions and presentation.
Obviously, some people simply won’t like you, and others will be
jealous of you. But you can control most perceptions.
Consider
how you want to be perceived in your clients’ and prospects’
minds. Whether you like it or not, you already have a reputation with
the people you know. Maybe you’re branded as the slob in the group,
or the big mouth; whatever it is, you have a brand. Now you need to
decide if you like that brand. Ask yourself, “Is this the brand I
want?” If not, are you willing to make the commitment and do
something about it? You have to want the prize and be willing to do
the work.
4.
Identify Your Specialty: Next,
consider what specialty you want to be known for and take action to
achieve it. If you want to be branded as a great public speaker, then
you have to pay your dues and join the National Speakers Association,
hire coaches, take constructive criticism, get up and talk, and work
you way through that crowd. If you want to be branded as the best
value-added salesperson, then you have to bring extra value to every
client or prospect meeting. Your prospects might not like the
particular idea you bring every time they meet with you, but they will
take your calls and meet with you because they know they can expect
new and valuable ideas from you. When you’re consistent with your
specialty, everyone will know you for it.
5.
Identify Your Target Market: The goal
of branding is to build customer loyalty. As you’re creating your
brand, you need to determine your target market and speak directly to
them. For example, if you sell minivans, then you might target mothers
with three or more children in your brand. But if you sell pick-up
trucks, then you will obviously need to speak to a completely
different audience.
Also, you
want your target audience to feel they really need your expertise. In
other words, you don’t want them to say, “She’s good.” Rather,
you want them to say, “I’ve got to have her as an advisor!” You
want people to think that your brand will make a difference in their
lives, so it must be meaningful to the end user. And it must create a
vivid picture in their mind of results and guaranteed satisfaction.
Essentially your brand is a trust label, and loyalty comes from that
trust.
6.
Write Your Brand: Now that
you know all the elements that form your brand, you have to actually
write the statement. A brand is a phrase that jumps out at you from
the page and grabs your emotions. Start by incorporating at least one
action verb. Then keep it short and simple. You want to make it
unique, memorable, and repeatable. You also want it to ring an
emotional bell that causes clients and prospects to focus on you, and
you alone, when they need your type of service (i.e.: Action Jackson
gets results).
7.
Visualize, Walk, and Talk Your Brand:
Finally,
once you have created your brand, you must publicize it. Start acting
your brand immediately. Tell others about it and ask them to spread
the word. Establish a group of advocates who understand you and can
publicize your brand to all the people they know. This will create a
word of mouth buzz. You don’t want to let these people go too long
without hearing from you. Keep in contact with them and keep your
brand circulating.
Also,
circulate your brand by publishing articles, collecting testimonials
from clients, and creating a tagline that goes with what you are. You
want to make yourself as visible as possible. So be able to describe
your business succinctly, speak in front of people, have a presence,
and, most important, be consistent with your brand.
Your
Brand for the Future:
Brand
takes reputation a step further. Branding means demonstrating and
aggressively promoting what you’re known for. Essentially, it takes
your reputation to a higher level of awareness and publicity.
By
branding yourself, you separate yourself from the crowd and create
greater impact – for you. When you embrace these seven steps for
establishing and publicizing your personal brand, you can build your
customer loyalty and win over new clients with the winning image you
create in their minds.
Read other articles and learn more
about
Jack
Perry.
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