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Developing Your Personal Brand

A few years ago, I helped branding guru Sally Hogshead edit her books, How the World Sees You and Fascinate: How to Make Your Brand Impossible to Resist. I’m coming around to thinking about my brand again now that I’ve got the book out on the market. Am I trying to sell Bart Leahy as a tech writing guru? As a communications consultant? As an aerospace writer? Quite frankly, I don’t fully know yet. The book is a rather elaborate business card–an attention getter. But for getting attention to do what? That’s today’s question.

Choose Your Own Adventure

When I was a kid, they used to sell–and maybe they still do–“choose your own adventure” books, where the story provided the reader with decision points for the viewpoint character–does Sally join Captain Kirk at the conn or Dr. McCoy down in sickbay?–and you would then turn to the page to read the outcome of that decision. We live like this every day, but we don’t always think of our lives as stories, unless you happen to be a geek with romantic notions about how the world works, like me. But really, you are the hero of your own, personal adventure. What choice(s) are you going to make today to move your story forward? How do you share that story with others?

This, in a fanciful way, is what branding is about.

Choose Your Words

So as the hero of my own story, I’ve got choices to make:

Honestly, I don’t know. However, if I choose any of the above, the slant/focus of this blog–and possibly the next book–would shift so that I demonstrate my expertise in one of the above subjects.

In any of these situations, the words I use here and elsewhere in my business or online interactions would have to be to be slanted to demonstrate that I am a good fit for one of the above career choices.

How I Communicate My Brand Now

Any or all of the career options above will inevitably flow from who I am as a person, and what sort of image, persona, or brand I portray online could help or hinder my pursuit of them because in the end, I’m marketing myself. On this blog, to use Sally Hogshead’s terminology, I am an “Anchor,” a person who derives his appeal from the ability to engender trust plus an air of mystique as I can use the words I write to attract the interest of others.

Image Credit: Sally Hogshead

The way I practice these behaviors is to try to be as honest with my readers as I can. This can include sharing mistakes, less-than-perfect personality traits, or honest limitations on what I’m prepared to promise. I am not promising lightning in a bottle or world-changing prose. I am not promising instant, miraculous, or life-changing results. Despite all the little bumps and warts, anyone hiring me is going to get a hard worker who will do his best to provide a good product that clearly explains a product or service.

How do you talk about your abilities or services online? That’s your brand talking.

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