Saturday, May 23, 2020
5 Ways To Exude Professionalism With Your Personal Brand - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career
5 Ways To Exude Professionalism With Your Personal Brand - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career How to give your personal brand a professional shine. In our digitally connected world, can you truly separate who you are personally and who you are professionally? No matter the privacy settings there are numerous opportunities for personal life to spill into your professional impression. Here are five ways that seepage is already happening and how you can manage it: Audio Brand Professional Communication Email Address Image Social Updates 1) Your Audio Brand I recently interviewed Colleen Fahey, U.S. Managing Director for Sixieme Son, the largest audio branding agency in the world. She shared this: Audio branding brings life and continuity â" so when you hear the brand, it sounds like the brand â" making every touch point a relationship-builder. Audio branding: Emphasizes brand differentiators Creates brand association with specific emotions Influences sales Transmits values within and without an organization As a personal brand, you also have an audio brand. Whatâs the music someone hears when they call your mobile phone? What music is playing on your personal website? When you do presentations do you have any music that you queue it up with? Or, is there music playing in the background? When people are on hold for you, are they listening to music? Music is something that weâve heard even while in the womb. It evokes emotions and reactions that can go far back into our childhood or our subconscious. For personal brands, your audio brand is exuded in every interaction someone has with you or your communication tools that has some sort of audio associated with it. It transmits the values you have or those you donât have. Today, audit what people hear when they reach out to connect with you. Does it mirror your brand or is there a disconnect? A disconnect leaves people with the feeling that somethingâs wrong with no real concrete instances except for âgut instinctsâ. 2) Your Professional Communications Think that grammar in social media doesnât matter? Your grammar matters in your LinkedIn profile and status updates. According to Brad Hoover, CEO of Grammarly [Jacob: #7JGBC Contest Sponsor!], in a recent interview he shared that good grammar in your updates shows youâre someone that âpays attention to detailsâ and youâre someone who is âdetailed oriented, shows good follow through and is very professionalâ. You might be wondering â" can that really matter in todayâs fast-paced, hyper-connected social society? Yes, it can. In a recent study conducted by Grammarly, hereâs what they found: Grammarly looked at some of the top brand battles of all-time to see if there was a correlation between the winners of famous âbrand wars,â and writing ability. They compiled LinkedIn posts from each company (an average of 400 words per company), and asked their team of proofreaders to review each update for spelling, grammar, and punctuation errors. Here is what we learned: Coke vs. Pepsi: Coke makes four times fewer writing mistakes on LinkedIn than Pepsi. Facebook vs. Google: Not only does Google dominate the Internet, but it also makes nearly four times fewer writing mistakes than Facebook on LinkedIn. Ford vs. GM: GM makes two-and-a-half times more writing errors than Ford. What can we take away from this? Brand dominance can be a fickle thing. But, writing is often a good predictor of the top brands because it demonstrates professionalism, attention to detail, and credibility. For your personal brand, look at your last ten posts on any of your social networks. Howâs your grammar? Grammarly Lite, which can be added to your browser, is a great tool to keep your updates and tweets as grammatically correct as possible. After interviewing Brad, I gave it a try and love how well and easily it works. (I do not sell or market their product). 3) Your Email Address Invest in a website for your personal brand and create an email address with that site. A domain name can express professionalism in one email. Emails from Yahoo, Hotmail, Live, etc , give an immediate first impression to the receiver or an email from these domains. For example, when you get an email from someone with an address that is name@AOL.com, what are your immediate first impressions? Even if you have an email address from the company you work with or the college you attend, spend for your own domain, even if itâs your name, it exudes much more professionalism and speaks to whether youâre âon top of your gameâ better than any free email account can. 4) Your Image You can look professional no matter your profession. Iâm certainly not saying that everyone needs to be in a âsuit and tieâ. In fact, that apparel in many professions would not be a good fit at all. What is important to any profession is cleanliness and hygiene. Even auto mechanics are assessed for their professionalism on how well they clean up. For your personal brand, this includes everything thatâs an extension of you. Your phone, your purse, briefcase and even the car you drive. Again, letâs not confuse that something has to be expensive to exude professionalism. You can drive a car thatâs twelve years old or rock a suit thatâs eight years old and as long as itâs clean and well kept, you exude professionalism. 5) Your Social Updates There have been hundreds of articles on what you should post about as a professional. Iâm more interested as to when you are posting and responding. What time you do this matters to your professionalism. In your Monday morning meeting and youâre liking Facebook posts on your phone, then anyone connected with you, in their ticker (depending on your privacy) is seeing your activity. At a meeting or event and your tweeting, that also is speaking volumes about your professionalism. If itâs a part of the meeting and event, that will reflect positively on what youâre doing and that youâre sharing/imparting knowledge from the event. If itâs you asking about when everyoneâs going to happy hour in a tweet, when youâre in a meeting, thereâs an entirely different impression thatâs exuded. I do realize that there are many tools that automate the release of updates and posts. Again, donât overuse these or youâll leave that impression that you automate everything. A mixture of auto updates and in real time updates provides a good balance for you and your brand. Look at the timing of your last social updates. To exude a professional personal brand, timing is important (not everything but important) and affects whether your first impression is worth a second look.
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