The best brands always try to do the right thing, so that their
reputations will remain unsullied. But beyond that they grow,
evolve and get better with time, while maintaining their special
qualities from the past.
We all have a personal brand with social, cultural,
intellectual, and personal needs that may not necessarily be
addressed in our daily work. Address these needs and you begin
to improve your brand. Here is my agenda for building your brand.
* Join and participate in community and professional
organizations * Generate media coverage about your brand * Stay
in touch, or renew old ties with friends, family and business
associates
Let’s examine how each one improves your brand.
Join and participate in professional and community organizations
The best brands grow, evolve and get better with time, while
maintaining their special qualities from the past.
Professional and community organizations provide ample
opportunity to learn and grow.
They provide professional development opportunities. They allow
you to network with peers as well as with people you would not
necessarily ever meet in the normal course of your workday.
For instance, I am a member and served on the board of our local
International Association of Business Communicators chapter.
This allowed me to broaden my contacts in the corporate
communications world, as well as form a number of friendships I
probably never would have developed. I’m also a member of the
North Carolina Citizens For Business and Industry. Here I meet
people from all walks of life and all work disciplines. Finally,
I am involved with Charlotte Reads, a local non-profit that
focuses on literacy issues. This allows me to use my
communication experience in support of an issue I feel very
strongly about.
But it’s not enough to just join groups: you must participate to
benefit fully. As a participant you have the opportunity to
stretch, to gain confidence in yourself. Learn to lead by
involvement on the board or in a special project.
If you are a communicator by trade, try being treasurer for the
group to exercise the other side of your brain, or take on a
special project about which you feel strongly.
Generate media coverage about your brand All that professional
and community involvement will certainly lead to opportunities
to leverage that involvement into news about the brand called
you. And, of course, there will be promotions, new assignments,
and awards at work, too. More opportunities to make headlines.
Your achievements are of interest to local print, broadcast, and
online media, particularly the business pages. In Charlotte, the
Observer has a weekly feature called On The Move spotlighting
someone in a new position. The Charlotte Business Journal has a
similar feature called Moving Up. If it is a big enough move and
your company won’t do it, pay the estimated $150 to place it on
BusinessWire or PR Newswire. Consider it an investment in your
future. Don’t forget trade publications serving your industry
and alumni publications.
Seek out speaking engagements and write guest articles, too.
This is yet another way to publicize your brand. And don’t
forget to do news releases when you make a speech or write an
article. It’s all about merchandising.
To stay top of mind, you might even want to develop your own
monthly e-newsletter like Think, the Hoover ink publication.
Keep it mostly informational and limit the commercial material.
Stay in touch, or renew old ties with friends, family and
business associates Everyone you know can be a brand ambassador
for you, so stay in touch or reach out to those you haven’t
talked with for a while.
Yet another reason for having a monthly newsletter that shares
your expertise.
The network of contacts you have built over your lifetime will
be instrumental if you decide to start your own business, or
change jobs.
So, heed this word of advice: always deal fairly with people.
One bad experience with your brand can negate 10 positive ones.
Now, get out there and start branding.
About Author :
Harry Hoover is managing principal of Hoover ink PR,
http://www.hoover-ink.com. He has 26 years of experience in
crafting and delivering bottom line messages that ensure success
for serious businesses like Brent Dees Financial Planning, Duke
Energy, Levolor, New World Mortgage, North Carolina Tourism,
VELUX and Verbatim.