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Wednesday, April 3, 2024

Three Steps to Evaluate Your Personal Brand

Three Steps to Evaluate Your Personal Brand

During a recent webinar with a speaker’s group, one question I was asked that created a lot of discussion, was how can we reinvent, rebrand and stay relevant in an ever changing marketplace.

Change and growth is an inevitable part of working life and often we need to reassess our position and our offering to see if it is interesting to us and interesting and needed by others.

A brand whether it is your own personal brand or that of your business – is always evolving.

Perhaps there are reasons for you to review your situation. Have you noticed new competitors coming on to the scene or market shifts in any way? Maybe you’re facing a job redundancy, exploring new opportunities or looking at a rebrand. Whatever the case for you, it is wise to keep a careful watch on what is going on and re-evaluate your brand and its position.

Even large corporations are mindful of this. Meta with Instagram reinvented from just people posting static images to preferring the use of entertaining reels. No doubt to compete with the meteoric rise of TikTok.

My suggestion is to set some time aside and do an audit to uncover where you currently stand with your personal or business brand. Armed with that information you can decide what may need re-invigorating and put a brand communication action plan in place.

1. ASK

Getting feedback from others will help you identify any issues and problems you may have and, on the flipside, open up potential solutions and opportunities.

A survey of your clients or community will elicit some great information. You can do this with an online system like Survey Monkey via your website or sending an email. Pick up the telephone and talk to clients to find out what works, what doesn’t and what could be improved on. Find out their challenges and what current needs are.

Question them across various categories such as your product or service offering, your website and communication collateral. Do the same with suppliers and staff if you have them. Are there any other key people you could talk to? Perhaps partners, your financial advisor, mentors or coaches. Journalists, if you deal with them regularly and even a few friends or colleagues may help you compile feedback.

2. BRAND

Once you have this feedback information you may get an insight into how your brand is being perceived. Is the perception of your personal or business brand what you hope for or does it need work? Delve a little deeper with this analysis and do a SWOT audit.

Strengths – what is working well
Weaknesses – areas you need to improve on
Opportunities – where can you see potential for growth or change
Threats – what is not working and needs fixing

Your brand is also your packaging and visual identity. What does the outside and inside of your physical place of business look like? As an example, I drove past a training academy situated on a major busy highway. Good looking building and the signage caught my eye. But! Outside the landscaped gardens were overgrown, full of weeds and what could be a grand entrance, failed to make a good first impression.

Do your customers see this or any other signage such as logos or business cards? What about your desk – is that reflecting your brand qualities? Do you have brand consistency across your website and other social media sites? You also are a walking talking business card for your brand – what does your dress or image say about you?

3. COMMUNICATION

Take an inventory of all your various communication pieces and PR materials. Look at brochures, proposals, newsletters, press clippings, photographs, videos, advertisements, anything at all that is either hard copy or on your website or social media sites. What does that information across the board reveal? Is there a consistent feel or philosophy of your brand coming across? Do your key messages and values consistently shine through?

Google yourself. Are you first on the page when people search? What other websites do you appear on and do you want to be on those? Have you checked social images lately – are they looking good?

With your analytics what information can you extract that will aid the audit of your business or personal brand. What blogs do people read? What links seem to get the most attention? Scan your social media and again look at what gets likes and comments.

Once you have a basic understanding of where your brand is situated now, you can craft a strategic brand and communications campaign to take you to that next level of brand success.

To learn more about personal branding , Get Your Free eBook Now!


Sue Currie is an image entrepreneur who guides and empowers business leaders and entrepreneurs to have “Spotlight Confidence”. She is passionate about helping professionals elevate their personal and professional brand through her speaking, coaching and training programs on Brand image, Style and Speaking Skills, providing a multi-faceted approach to gain high transformation for her clients.

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