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Posts tagged: brand

Brand yourself – a perfect example

By admin, April 21, 2009 3:24 pm

Don’t be afraid to discover your true identity

DIGITAL JOB SEARCH AND PERSONAL BRANDING

Installment number four

Are you Clark Kent or Superman?  Both have viable identities; each with a different niche.  How can you determine your own brand identity?

One of my more successful clients, we will call him Sam, believed his brand was, “Technology savvy product development executive.”  He was proud of his knowledge and that he was able to lead his teams to create technologically complex products with scarce resources and impossible deadlines.

While any employer would be interested in someone with a track record releasing products on time, I believed he could distinguish himself further; create a real brand.

Here are just a few questions we used to discovered his real brand:

  1. What are your long term career goals?
  2. What are you most proud of in your last four years of work?
  3. What were the obstacles?
  4. What resources did you use to over come those obstacles?
  5. What tools did you employ?
  6. What do people say about you within your department?
  7. What do people say about you in other departments?
  8. What topics are you most likely to be asked to discuss?
  9. What do other departments invite you to teach them?
  10. How did they affect the corporate bottom line?

At first, Sam was horrified at the idea he could not lead with his vast knowledge and deep technical education.  Once he understood his objective was marketing his brand for career development, he understood his brand is more effective as something employers needed but rarely found in technology executives. Sam wanted to be seen as a technology leader, not just another successful software development manager.  He aspired to “C” level responsibilities.

Ultimately, Sam’s brand is defined as, “A technology executive who builds corporate success through collaboration and unrelenting commitment to stated priorities.“  His brand identity is “Collaboration creator.’”

How does Sam promote his brand?  He is ever vigilant of his corporate presence.  As Shivonne Byrne, Director of Brand and Content for Microsoft advises, “Every encounter, every phone conversation, every meeting, every report, every PowerPoint, every email – basically every interaction – is an opportunity to build or deconstruct your personal brand.”

Sam makes a concerted effort to maintain strong connections across all departments to keep the products for which he is responsible visible and on point to meet corporate and customer goals.  Sam updates departments throughout the company and invites comment. He attends and hosts internal discussions and forums to foster communication about his department’s mission and how it relates to other departments and the corporate mission.  He demonstrates collaborative, ethical behavior, and encourages the same of his team; especially between the development staff and the quality assurance team members.

Externally, he attends networking events and conferences to learn from others.  He participates in the question and answer sessions of seminars and presentations and is never shy about contributing comments on Blogs relevant to his area of expertise.

Sam writes a Blog on Agile software development implementations (tools which facilitate collaboration between marketing, development and users to create products customers actually want), insights on the benefits of collaborative work for the SaaS/cloud computing software delivery method and general advice on managing for quality. There is no doubt of his technical expertise as expressed in the blogs and venues, and he is branded with the over-riding concept of collaborative software development.

He dresses well, attends seminars and writes white papers.  Sam uses social networking sites to engage both his internal and external networks to promote his point of view, publications and successes. He knows how to brag about relevant accomplishments without appearing braggadocios.

Sam has made managing his brand part of his every day activities.  It appears to be working.  His employer of five months invited him to create a first-of-year outlook based on Sam’s own plan plus input he was to obtain from other departments.  He has also been asked to undertake a major project that affects several departments to vet and hire a new vendor critical to the success of several product lines.  Only someone known for his collaborative successes would be invited to accomplish such a sensitive goal.   Sam is not looking for a job, but he keeps notes to incorporate examples that prove his brand for any future job interview.

He will be sure to journal and blog about how he accomplishes tasks that demonstrate collaboration and problem solving using collaborative techniqes.

Sam manages his brand well because he knows what it is. His brand informs him of where his time is best spent and with whom to expand his network.  Sam frequently searches the Internet to monitor how the world sees him and he comments on complimentary blogs to keep his name in the Agile-world radar.  He is often delighted to find himself quoted or his papers mentioned.  Sam’s brand is “Collaboration expert.”  What is yours?

Click here to learn why your brand is critical to your job search Installment One

Click here for installment two on Digital Job Search and Branding.

For discussion of how to discover how the world sees you: installment three.

Click here for installment four to discover your current identity.

Click here to start your branding efforts for your job search installment five

Click here for more resources

Branding, smranding, just tell me what to do

By admin, April 19, 2009 1:31 pm

Do you know how the world sees you?

DIGITAL JOB SEARCH AND PERSONAL BRANDING

Installment number three

Years ago, when computers were steam-driven and search engines like Google and Yahoo were not yet  household words, I searched on my name.  I had a website, an established business as a job search coach and what I assumed was a wide-spread Seattle-based reputation in the technology community.  Imagine my surprise when my name search rendered no results.

Today, that same search results in pages of entries including my website, magazine articles, blogs and even long-forgotten comments on a variety of sites.  Mixed in are various other ‘Rita Ashley’s’ but since they seem to be accomplished women, I am not embarrassed by their digital footprint.  Folks looking for me know I am neither a Raytheon employee nor serve on a the Olanthe school board.

The real win when you set your alert is you can qualify which John Smith you want to find.  Employers know to use alerts such as John Smith, teacher, Tucson to find exactly the person they want to vet.  You can do the same.

Is it vanity to check my on-line presences?  Not one bit.  It is a smart business decision to monitor what the world sees.  And if you are a $100,000+ professional, it is your business to monitor and maintain your brand and appear to the world as an expert in your domain.

But is a search engine enough? There are many entries hidden in blogs or articles where my name may be used by others.  A small group of irate recruiters, for example, took umbrage at a blog I wrote warning candidates about traps set by recruiters.  They say horrible things about me.  Since I know, I can do some damage control.

How did I find out?  I set search engine alerts for my name, my company and a few key words associated with job search coaching for executives and technology leaders.  Most of the entries I receive are irrelevant but there are often a few tidbits that are very useful.  In addition to monitoring my brand, I often find new blogs where my advice or comments will be seen by folks in need and sometimes, I meet like-minded contributors with whom I can establish a common bond.

Setting alerts is a simple first-step in creating your on-going personal branding monitoring program; an important component of building a healthy personal brand.   To learn more about your digital presence, choose a few tools from this comprehensive list created by JobMob.  No need to use them all, but pay special attention to those that look for blogs and social networking comments.

Time for some clean-up?  Here’s a few tips for starters.  Return to this blog frequently as the Digital Job Search Branding series continues.

Click here to learn why your brand is critical to your job search Installment One

Click here for installment two on Digital Job Search and Branding.

For discussion of how to discover how the world sees you: installment three.

Click here for installment four to discover your current identity.

Click here to start your branding efforts for your job search installment five

Click here for more resources

For a step-by-step guide to networking that understands networking can be hard.

Personal Brand – Step one in a digital job search

By admin, April 11, 2009 1:25 pm


DIGITAL JOB SEARCH AND  PERSONAL BRANDING

Installment number one


“Your personal brand happens whether you shape it or not. If you are out in the world at all, you are known for the qualities you project and the qualities external audiences believe are true of you. Your choice is simple: own your brand, or let the external audiences own it for you.” Shivonne Byrne, Director of Brand and Content at Microsoft.

Exposure is the lynchpin of your search: If you are a six figure executive or technology leader, your job search is a massive marketing campaign.  The more people who know about you and your talents, the higher the probability you will be invited to compete for jobs.  Exposure is what your digital job search is all about:  Maximum exposure for your brand.

Your brand is what you want hiring authorities to know about you distinguishes you from the competition.  Your job is to ascertain what your brand is currently and what it should be to attract the attention of employers.

In their book, Career Distinction William Arruda and Kirsten Dixson state, “Personal Branding is so powerful the Fortune 500 Companies-firms single-mindedly focused on their corporate brands-are helping employees build their personal brands.”

Personal branding is not a fad or an option.  People make hiring decisions based on many factors but their preconceived notions and expectations often determine who they will even consider.  Mark Lindstrom, author of the New York Times and Wall Street Journal best selling book, Buyology summarizes, “We make hundreds of snap decisions each and every day. Yet so many of them happen deep within our subconscious, so fast and far below the surface we’re barely aware of them.   …companies plant instant shortcuts-or brand bookmarks-in our subconscious to help us decide what to (or what not to) buy. And yes, your brain too holds some of them and they’ve probably influenced everything from the make of the last car you decided to buy to the brand of coffee you brewed this morning.”

Here’s how personal branding works for you. While personal branding is unavoidable, the more control you assert over it, the more likely your personal brand will be an asset in your career.  People  automatically form mental associations and create labels to recognize you. Labeling happens automatically because that is the way our brains are wired.  Take control over those labels and you create a personal brand.

The more you advertise, the more people know about your special expertise.  It behooves you to create a marketing plan to accomplish your branding program.

What is Your Brand? Your personal brand is how others define you in the workforce.   Are you a Ferrari, built for speed or a Volvo, built for safety?  It is unlikely you are both.  How do you describe yourself?   How do others describe you?  What does your performance review consistently point out?  How do others introduce you?  Your answers to these questions are keys to your brand attributes.

“If you’re really smart, you figure out how to distinguish yourself from all the other very smart people walking around with $1,500 suits, high-powered laptops, and well-polished resumes. Along the way, if you’re really smart, you figure out what it takes to create a distinctive role for yourself — you create a message and a strategy to promote the brand called ‘You’” Tom Peters writing for Fast Company.

Know what distinguishes you from your peers. When you define your peers and their attributes and how you are different from them, you can rise above the competition.  The competition is defined as anyone who might be hired for a given position that precludes your being hired.  Competition, therefore, includes hiring no one and leaving the job undone or shared by current employees.  To rise above all competition, you must articulate what you can do or provide that no one else can.  Your band must be so compelling that it precedes you, introduces you and annihilates the competition.

Click here to learn why your brand is critical to your job search Installment One

Click here for installment two on Digital Job Search and Branding.

For discussion of how to discover how the world sees you: installment three.

Click here for installment four to discover your current identity.

Click here to start your branding efforts for your job search installment five

For a step-by-step guide to improve your job search networking:

For a complete guide to a job search tune-up:


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