I was at the Midway Airport in Chicago a while back, waiting for a flight out. A young guy walks from another gate to approach me and asks, “are you the Branding Diva?”
“Yes, I am.”
“Wow, that’s so cool. I have your book and read your columns in Fast Company.”
“How did you know it was me?”
“I know I’ve seen your photo in the magazine, but can’t really remember what you look like. But, from your writing, I feel like I know you. When you were at Starbucks and I saw that red leather band on your wrist covered with rhinestone bling and letters spelling out the word brand, I knew it was you.”
Well, that little branded red bracelet opened the conversation that led to my getting booked by his company to deliver a speech.
That’s selling without selling.
And it happens to a lot of people in many industries every day. People become magnets for their products and services based on their personal branding.
Chester Elton works with O.C. Tanner, an international employee recognition company. He and fellow consultant Adrian Gostick created The Carrot Culture, a collection of programs and books including “The 24-Carrot Manager” and “Managing with Carrots.”
When you meet Chester, he’ll be sporting a bright orange shirt, a very orange-faced watch, and maybe orange boxers—he won’t say. His business card is fresh and, yes, it has a carrot. He’s a walking brand.
If you work for a company, people will partly brand you by that association, and if you sell a certain line of products or services, they may tag that to your brand also, but by far, whether you work with a corporation or own your firm like I do, your personal brand is 95% of your selling arsenal.
Think about Donald Trump. Way before his TV show, he had a very defined brand. His visual style, his high profile, and his bad hair paved the way for many of his recent opportunities. His TV success with the Apprentice spawned many brand extensions, and office business developments called Trump Towers are popping up everywhere.
People buy from people.
The more distinct you are, the higher your awareness is, the more contact points you have that communicate who you are and why you’re the expert in your field—the more people will seek you out, buy your wares, and become loyal followers.
Is your voice mail phone message branded with your personality?
Does your email signature communicate your expertise?
Does your wardrobe reflect who you are?
Brands are mental imprints and market perceptions. They are derived by a sum of actions. Branding is not just a logo or some catchy tagline. Branding is a behavior that reflects the values of what’s being sold, your product, company, or YOU. A brand is the end result of all one’s efforts. It’s what buyers and prospects carry around in their heads when they think of you, your offering, or your company.
Creating a personal brand starts with a written plan.
Set your accountable career and personal goals, create an action plan, and then stick with it. Building brands for anything takes consistent messaging and actions.
Focus on how you are different and leverage the heck out of it. Is it your name? Your niche? Your style? Your background or some metaphoric symbol like Chester’s carrot?
• Have a current photo of yourself.
• Start a victory file with accolades from clients and friends.
• Send thank-you notes and holidays cards that represent you, not some catalog generic version.
“It’s not who you know—it’s who knows you.”
My good pal, Jeffrey Gitomer, international sales guru, confirms, “Branding is not rocket science, but it does take an awareness and brand on the brain thinking.”
“People don’t like to be sold, but they love to buy.”
It could be your killer product, your awesome service or fabulous self—a great brand lubes the sales process and if you get it right, they will be back for more.
Gitomer sells a lot of stuff. He is also a branding machine. He was not born a high profile guy. He started his career peddling T-shirts, but today he sure enjoys the benefits of his brand.
In his best-selling book, The Little Red Book of Selling, he suggests:
• Establish yourself as an expert. Why just be in a field when you can be perceived on top of it?
• Build your image and the image of your company—by being a consistent, positive performer. By associating with quality things and people. By delivering what you promise. Get talked about.
• Separate from your competition; get creative with how you touch and communicate with the marketplace.
Walk the brand talk.
Gitomer does. His brand is bold and in your face. His web address is his brand name: Gitomer.com. His style is always consistent and he stands out. He uses creative methods to tell his story, from custom minted coin business cards, to his speaker wardrobe, which symbolizes his hard-working persona, a red mechanic’s uniform.
Everyone can brand themselves. And it doesn’t mean you are an egomaniac. It means you’re a smart businessperson.
Besides, it’s a lot more fun being hunted down by interested buyers than selling and trying to find takers. Brand On!