
Brand-Building Wisdeom from Bud Bilanich, The Common Sense Guy
As a small business owner whose brand is me, I recognize the importance of personal branding. I am a keynote speaker, executive coach, organization effectiveness consultant, and author. I am my business; therefore, my brand needs to speak for me.
When I decided to brand myself, I began by asking everybody I know a simple question. “When you think of me, what is the first thing that comes to mind?” An overwhelming number of people said, “Your common sense approach to business and life.” My first reaction was, “Uh oh, common sense doesn’t make for much of a brand.” Then I started to think about it a little more.
I’d read several very interesting books about personal branding. The best of them was Career Distinction: Standing Out by Building Your Brand, by William Arruda and Kirsten Dixson. A few things stood out in my reading:
An effective personal brand is authentic--it reflects the true character of the individual being branded.
An effective personal brand repels as many people as it attracts.
An effective personal brand is consistent.
As I started thinking about what my friends and clients said, I began to get comfortable with common sense as the driver for my brand. However, I was still unsure of a tag line for my brand. I experimented with a few things. “Common Sense Coach” was too narrow. I do things other than coaching. “Common Sense Guru” sounded too pompous and New Age all at once.
One day I was speaking with a friend and lamenting the fact that I couldn’t come up with a good tag line. I said something like, “There’s this guy who calls himself ‘The Goals Guy,’ I wish I had enough guts to call myself ‘The Common Sense Guy.’ She said, “What’s wrong with ‘The Common Sense Guy’?”
I hemmed and hawed and said things like, “It’s kind of pedestrian; it’s too informal; there’s already a goals guy.” As I heard myself speaking, I realized I was rationalizing. I have often said to people who were impressed with something I’d done--graduated from Harvard, started a business, written a book--“I’m just a guy.” And, I had already established that I approach my work in a common sense manner. So why not become The Common Sense Guy?
Anyone in business needs a solid brand. Mine is the Common Sense Guy. However, having a well thought out brand is not enough. All brands need exposure. Blogging is the best way I know to get that type of exposure. I’d urge you to learn all you can about blogging so you can put its brand-building power to work for you.
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7 Comments
Personal brand is the image how others perceive about you.
I remember how long it took me to fix my own mantra. I spent quite a lot of time to come out with my own. First I had to decide my own mission. I had to know myself what is my goal. I spent quite a lot of time trying to understand my real capabilities, my passion and prospects. Based on my mission, I drew my mantra, my tagline - "Helping Technopreneurs to excel and lead their life!". Look at the top banner in my blog - <a href="http://www.rajeshshakya.com>http://www.rajeshshakya.com</....
Whatever I am writing, it’s one of the activities I am undertaking to achieve my goal, to reflect my brand.
Rajesh Shakya
http://www.rajeshshakya.com
Helping Technopreneurs to excel and lead their life!
We will all like to have all the relevant things to come to us as much as we approach them... Relevant opportunities, relevant industries, relevant people! Getting to know relevant people become much more easier!
Charles
http://www.charleslau.com
With the goal to bring millions of dollars to oneself pushing either a product or a service, the years of preparation to launch a project goes hand in hand with the intention to have the product or service recognized favorably to the public.
For example, Gerber Foods did not have to do anything special to create the trust people have for their baby food products, though Gerber will do everything in its power to MAINTAIN the image and the trust it has with its products to the consumer.
Ditto's with any franchise, whether Starbucks, Dunkin' Donuts, or McDonalds. Opening the doors to their first store and offering their products and services was all they had to do to create the impression of what they are about, and then to have people identify their products and services to their name, in effect creating their brand image. And of course these franchises will also do everything in their power to MAINTAIN a positive perception of their product and service within the public.
Public relations and marketing strategies establish brand recognition, and should be utilized if a particular business project warrants their application, though the success of a J.K. Rowling or Steven Spielberg can't be categorized with this rhetoric of personal branding.
The blog should have focused on practical applications of branding instead of pep talking in generalities and non-specifics.
James C. Tanner
www.silent-wonder.com
www.whats-he-like.com
http://2007archive.wordpress.com
James C. Tanner is a retired entrepreneur, a former special Investigator, and a published writer, whose articles are currently enjoyed by 12.5 million readers monthly.
Your right on the money! "How to Restore Your Career after Major Setback". Excellent stuff, just excellent!
J. Elliott Pierce