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Emily Ma is using Brazen Careerist to share ideas. Join now to become a member and start networking with Emily Ma and other professionals just like you. Learn more.
In my last post, I discussed how to use the techniques of narrative, being a purple cow, and understanding context to create a strong offline presence. These same principles can be used to create a powerful online presence as well and prevent incidents such as the one above from happening to you. Below is how I’ve learned to use these strategies to help differentiate my personal brand online and how you can use them to create a brand that grabs your audience’s attention and keeps it.
Whether we realize it or not, we are all creating a narrative about ourselves online.
Everything we post, comment on, or upload is contributing to the story
of who we are online – potentially to millions. And even if you don’t
make a conscious effort to create an online presence, that too is a
narrative because you are leaving your personal brand to chance.
This is why a blogsite – a hybrid of a blog and a website – is so essential to creating a strong online presence and is one of the main principles found in Me 2.0.
By having a website that allows you to both blog and provide addition
biographical information, you can take control of your online narrative
and begin telling people the unique story of who you are and what you
think within the field that interests you.
Before venturing on this personal branding journey, my blogsite
focused on personal development for young professionals. However, if
you visit my main website
you’ll see that the focus of it has shifted due to what I’ve learned on
my personal branding journey. Now my site is centered around being a Renaissance Worker, Career Adventurism, and Psychology Development for Young Professionals. And
as time goes on I will be providing more and more content that not only
benefits people within these topics, but also adds to my narrative and
makes my brand stronger.
One thing you always want to do is try to differentiate your blogsite in some way.
Common strategies are covering unique topics or through unique site
design. For example, a great title to your blog such as Matt
Cheuvront’s site Life Without Pants
can turn you into a purple cow and draw people in to ask why you named
your site a certain way. Or you can create a memorable logo and display
well known news outlets associated with your site such as the ones
found on the Personal Branding Blog home page.
Another great technique is to have a unique picture on your website. Seth Godin’s image
is a great example of this. He is well known for his bald head and if
you go to his site, he has a picture displaying the top of his head
front and center. It is not a loud or crazy image. It simple, shows his
personality, and draws you in.
In redoing my blogsite, I decided to use a simple and easy to navigate design as well as have a fun and interesting image on the sidebar. Such images
can add to your narrative by providing readers with a sense of your
personality, creativity, and display a more human side of you that can
increase interest and make visitors want to find out more about your
personal brand.
In many ways, social networks are extensions of your main
website and can fill in important details to the narrative you are
trying to create for your personal brand. For example, your
LinkedIn profile provides people with a detailed look at your
professional life and allows other to give recommendations that can add
rich information to the story of who you are. Flickr can provide a
concrete view of things you are involved in such as events, trips, or
project. And YouTube allows you to create content that gives your
narrative human elements and lets people see more of your personality.
But in thinking about each social network, it’s important to keep context in mind.
For example, you won’t want to post information that is too personal on
LinkedIn because this is where your professional network resides and
you don’t want to potentially damage your reputation. You may use
Facebook more for keeping up with friends, so will not want to inundate
them with lots of posts or updates about things happening within your
field. Or on Twitter, where everything posted is on public display, you
may not want to post highly personal information that can make you look
unprofessional or damage your brand.
When using these (or just about any strategy) in developing your personal brand, one thing to always keep in mind is that anything you post could have an impact on the narrative you are trying to create. So when forming a strategy, ask yourself, “How is this going to contribute to the story I want to tell?”
Finding answers to this question will provide you with a good guide in
developing a strong personal brand both on and offline.