10/30/08: Personal Branding News and Recommendations

October 31, 2008 at 11:22 am | In Book Reviews, People, Personal Branding | 5 Comments

News

There is still time to get the free sample issue of Personal Branding Magazine, starring Gary Vaynerchuk, David Allen, Keith Ferrazzi and Robert Cialdini.  If you would like to subscribe to get your full issue on November 1st, it’s $12.95 per year to get 4 issues. 50% of proceeds benefit the American Cancer Society.

Free eBook

My friend Chris Ferdinandi is a Gen-Y star in the area of HR. He just released his first free eBook called “Pushing Performance.” It is a step-by-step guide to driving individual and organizational performance. In order to receive your own complimentary copy, you should go subscribe to his blog. Chris’s blog is called “Manager’s Sandbox,” which was developed to help HR professionals create a more productive and successful workforce.

As many of you already know, HR is represented as one of the 8 arms in my famous Octopus Model of Relevancy Model, which is also one of the cores concepts in my book. In Chris’s book, you will learn the basics of HR and how to get motivated and stay motivated at work!

Book review

Tribes, by Seth Godin

The best part about world recognized brands is that you don’t have to introduce them. Instead of wasting time telling you that Seth is a bestselling author many times over and that his blog is #1 on AdAge150, I’d rather tell you about a book that I feel will change your life. I do see a few synergies in my new book, Me 2.0, relative to Tribes, such as the idea of personal empowerment and leadership to be successful. Seth’s writing technique is very powerful and fun!

First, I’d like to go over how Seth marketed this book, then I’ll reveal my favorite segment of the book, which I read at midnight last night.

Seth Godin’s million dollar “relationship” marketing plan

  • Created preliminary book buzz with a few blog postings
  • Established a teaser and community dedicated to the ideas in the book
  • Asked blog community for their pictures to include on the inside cover (Picture to the right: I’m pointing to my avatar on the inside cover)
  • Send his book out, via Penguin PR (most likely), to traditional press and bloggers
  • Setup a teleseminar book tour with fellow brands Dan Pink, Keith Ferrazzi and Pam Slim.

Book excerpt – Scott Beale’s Party, Pg. 37

“Here’s a simple example of a tribe enabled by new technology. Scott Beale is an impresario with a long history of innovation and leadership. His company, Laughing Squid, does everything from Web hosting to T-shirts, from laser engraving to arts listings. In short, he leads an eclectic tribe.

At the SXSW conference in 2008, Scott got tired of waiting in line to get into the Google party. So he walked down the street, found a deserted bar , grabbed some tables in the back, and fired up his cell phone. Using Twitter, he announced: “Alta Vista Party at Ginger Man.” Within minutes, eight people showed up. Shortly thereafter, fifty. Then there was a line out the door.

. . . . It’s important to note that Twitter merely enabled the event; it didn’t cause it to occur. Unless Scott had earned the respect and permission of the tribe that follows him, he would have been all alone at the bar. The party didn’t take four minutes to organize; it took four years.”

Other book recommendations

World Wide Rave by David Meerman Scott

David seems to publish at least one book a year now and it certainly inspires me and pushes me harder to make my first book a success. His latest book sounds incredible! In World Wide Rave, David reveals the most exciting and powerful ways to build a giant audience from scratch.

A World Wide Rave is when people around the world are talking about you, your company, and your products. It’s when communities eagerly link to your stuff on the Web. It’s when online buzz drives buyers to your virtual doorstep. It’s when tons of fans visit your Web site and your blog because they genuinely want to be there.

Age of Conversation: Why Don’t They Get It?

A while ago, a few of my close friends in the blogosphere, Drew and Gavin, got a hundred bloggers to all write a chapter each of a book and then sold the book for Variety the Children’s Charity. It was called the Age of Conversation. The book was so successful that they pooled their network together, which is over twice as big now, to include 237 authors from 15 countries. The result is the Age of Conversation 2, which went on sale this week. You can go buy it right now.

I was one of those authors and my chapter is something you just can’t miss out on. It’s called “Life in the conversation lane – eBranding for the masses.” I’ll let you use your imagination or credit card to learn more ;)

Look at all the other people who wrote chapters:

A Adrian Ho, Aki Spicer, Alex Henault, Amy Jussel, Andrew Odom, Andy Nulman, Andy Sernovitz, Andy Whitlock, Angela Maiers, Ann Handley, Anna Farmery, Armando Alves, Arun Rajagopal, Asi Sharabi
B Becky Carroll, Becky McCray, Bernie Scheffler, Bill Gammell, Bob LeDrew, Brad Shorr, Brandon Murphy, Branislav Peric, Brent Dixon, Brett Macfarlane, Brian Reich
C C.C. Chapman, Cam Beck, Casper Willer, Cathleen Rittereiser, Cathryn Hrudicka, Cedric Giorgi, Charles Sipe, Chris Kieff, Chris Cree, Chris Wilson, Christina Kerley (CK), C.B. Whittemore, Chris Brown, Connie Bensen, Connie Reece, Corentin Monot, Craig Wilson
D Daniel Honigman, Dan Schawbel, Dan Sitter, Daria Radota Rasmussen, Darren Herman, Dave Davison, David Berkowitz, David Koopmans, David Meerman Scott, David Petherick, David Reich, David Weinfeld, David Zinger, Deanna Gernert, Deborah Brown, Dennis Price, Derrick Kwa, Dino Demopoulos, Doug Haslam, Doug Meacham, Doug Mitchell, Douglas Hanna, Douglas Karr, Drew McLellan, Duane Brown, Dustin Jacobsen, Dylan Viner
E Ed Brenegar, Ed Cotton, Efrain Mendicuti, Ellen Weber, Eric Peterson, Eric Nehrlich, Ernie Mosteller
F Faris Yakob, Fernanda Romano, Francis Anderson
G Gareth Kay, Gary Cohen, Gaurav Mishra, Gavin Heaton, Geert Desager, George Jenkins, G.L. Hoffman, Gianandrea Facchini, Gordon Whitehead, Greg Verdino, Gretel Going & Kathryn Fleming
H Hillel Cooperman, Hugh Weber
J J. Erik Potter, James Gordon-Macintosh, Jamey Shiels, Jasmin Tragas, Jason Oke, Jay Ehret, Jeanne Dininni, Jeff De Cagna, Jeff Gwynne & Todd Cabral, Jeff Noble, Jeff Wallace, Jennifer Warwick, Jenny Meade, Jeremy Fuksa, Jeremy Heilpern, Jeroen Verkroost, Jessica Hagy, Joanna Young, Joe Pulizzi, John Herrington, John Moore, John Rosen, John Todor, Jon Burg, Jon Swanson, Jonathan Trenn, Jordan Behan, Julie Fleischer, Justin Foster
K Karl Turley, Kate Trgovac, Katie Chatfield, Katie Konrath, Kenny Lauer, Keri Willenborg, Kevin Jessop, Kristin Gorski
L Lewis Green, Lois Kelly, Lori Magno, Louise Manning, Luc Debaisieux
M Mario Vellandi, Mark Blair, Mark Earls, Mark Goren, Mark Hancock, Mark Lewis, Mark McGuinness, Matt Dickman, Matt J. McDonald, Matt Moore, Michael Karnjanaprakorn, Michelle Lamar, Mike Arauz, Mike McAllen, Mike Sansone, Mitch Joel
N Neil Perkin, Nettie Hartsock, Nick Rice
O
Oleksandr Skorokhod, Ozgur Alaz
P
Paul Chaney, Paul Hebert, Paul Isakson, Paul McEnany, Paul Tedesco, Paul Williams, Pet Campbell, Pete Deutschman, Peter Corbett, Phil Gerbyshak, Phil Lewis, Phil Soden, Piet Wulleman
R
Rachel Steiner, Reginald Adkins, Richard Huntington, Rishi Desai, Robert Hruzek, Roberta Rosenberg, Robyn McMaster, Roger von Oech, Rohit Bhargava, Ron Shevlin, Ryan Barrett, Ryan Karpeles, Ryan Rasmussen
S
Sam Huleatt, Sandy Renshaw, Scott Goodson, Scott Monty, Scott Townsend, Scott White, Sean Howard, Sean Scott, Seni Thomas, Seth Gaffney, Shama Hyder, Sheila Scarborough, Sheryl Steadman, Simon Payn, Sonia Simone, Spike Jones, Sreeraj Menon, Stanley Johnson, Stephen Collins, Stephen Landau, Stephen Smith, Steve Bannister, Steve Hardy, Steve Portigal, Steve Roesler, Steven Verbruggen, Steve Woodruff, Sue Edworthy, Susan Bird, Susan Gunelius, Susan Heywood
T
Tammy Lenski, Terrell Meek, Thomas Clifford, Thomas Knoll, Tim Brunelle, Tim Connor, Tim Jackson, Tim Mannveille, Tim Tyler, Timothy Johnson, Tinu Abayomi-Paul, Toby Bloomberg, Todd Andrlik, Troy Rutter, Troy Worman
U
Uwe Hook
V
Valeria Maltoni, Vandana Ahuja, Vanessa DiMauro, Veronique Rabuteau
W
Wayne Buckhanan, William Azaroff
Y
Yves Van Landeghem

Men Are More Interested in Performance than Brand Image

October 30, 2008 at 11:24 pm | In Book Reviews, Interview, People, Personal Branding | 1 Comment

Today, I spoke with Mark Tungate, who is a UK branding expert and author.  In this interview he reveals very interesting research on how to market to men, as opposed to women.  If you’re a man reading this, some things may surprise you.  If you’re a woman, you will probably just laugh and agree with what Mark has to say.

Mark, how do you differentiate (besides the obvious) from the male and female brands when it comes to buying behavior?

Most men still dislike shopping, especially for clothes and skincare products. They do not consider it a form of entertainment. Men tend to be practical shoppers: they need a new raincoat, they go out and buy a new raincoat – and usually from the same place they got the last one. Say what you like about male consumers, but they are extremely loyal. If you keep on delivering quality, they’ll keep returning.

In fact, men are less interested in brand image than in performance. This is obviously true of cars and technology. But even when they buy an item of clothing, they want to know about the practical details: where was it made, how long will it last, is there enough room for their mobile phone, does it provide the right level of quality for the price…?

In terms of grooming products, they want to know about how they work from a scientific point of view. They like detail. With other products, men are interested in qualities like authenticity and consistency. Their main aim in life is to be respected – and above all, not to be seen buying anything that might make them look gullible or foolish. Brands know this and tend to tailor their communications accordingly.

Can you give us some background on the historical ideals of masculinity and how we can market to this group today?

Whoa, that’s a huge question – in fact, I managed to fill an entire book with the answer! But here’s something to think about: historical ideals of masculinity have always been different depending on what part of the world you come from.

For instance, it’s become clear to me that the European male has always been much more concerned with his appearance – and unashamed to be so – than the American male. The concept of the ‘dandy’ – that fragrant peacock with a fancy waistcoat and great hair – is very European. Think of the great dandies like Beau Brummell, Oscar Wilde and even David Bowie. Playing with concepts of gender and sexuality comes much more easily to us.

I would argue that the American male image is more rugged. Maybe it’s the pioneering, frontier spirit aesthetic. Look at Hollywood movies and you’re not going to find many dandies. But there are plenty of cowboys, soldiers, sportsmen and cops. Cross over to the Middle and Far East and you’ll find different archetypes again. Bodily cleanliness and purity become highly important: the rituals of bathing and grooming are linked to social status, cultural sophistication or spiritual purity.

Back here in the west, marketers have realized that men are beginning to reject the relatively recent idea that a concern for appearance is somehow suspect. The dandy is returning, in a more moderate guise. The ‘metrosexual’ was the first, rather obvious iteration of this development – clearly a marketing creation, but a step in the right direction. Now we have Jude Law in the Dunhill ads and Daniel Craig as a tough yet emotional Bond. By the way, it’s no coincidence that he wears Tom Ford – another modern dandy.

I‘ve always thought that it’s smarter to market to females instead of males because they have the decision power.  Is this true or false?

It’s a tactic that many brands have adopted. Market research shows that our wives and girlfriends choose our fragrance and very often our clothes. Or at least, that they have the final say. But several new trends are now at work. First of all, men are staying single for longer, so men with a high disposable income don’t always have a long-term partner to make their decisions for them. And there are men who’ve realised that it’s OK to take matters into their own hands.

This is partly due to the explosion of male interest media: there are far more men’s magazines than there were 30 years ago. For example, Men’s Health is one of the most popular magazines in the world. Men have discovered that competing is not only about what you know, but how you look. So they are shopping for fashion more frequently and buying more products to keep their skin looking younger. They are also much more educated about health and diet, partly because they do not want to repeat the mistakes of their parents, who have often suffered because of smoking and a poor diet.

Can you describe the male consumer with 3-5 attributes?

Cautious, self-conscious, analytical, demanding and loyal.

What are your tips for marketing products to the male brand? 

Well, I don’t have space to go into too many details, but here are a few teasers:

  • Focus on functionality
  • Confer status
  • Ensure that quality exceeds expectations
  • Service should be impeccable
  • Don’t be afraid of humor
  • A great soundtrack always helps

——
Mark Tungate is a writer and lecturer on international marketing and branding.  He is the author of several books, including the bestselling Fashion Brands: Branding Style from Armani to Zara (Kogan Page), now in its second hardback edition. His other books include Branded Male: Marketing to Men and Adland: A History of Advertising.  Mark lectures on advertising and luxury branding and has developed a reputation for entertaining yet informative talks. He is Paris correspondent of the trends forecasting service WGSN and writes for publications in both the UK and France. He is also the co-host of a weekly French TV show about advertising creativity.

10 Ways You Shouldn’t Brand Yourself in a Bad Economy

October 30, 2008 at 11:27 am | In Personal Branding, Success Strategies | 14 Comments

Everyone is writing posts on the economy and tips for beating it. I thought I would join in, but with a personal branding angle to it. Below is my top 10 list of ways you shouldn’t brand yourself during this economy, or at all really, but especially during this time. If you have more to add, please leave a comment.

1) Appear concerned that you are going to get laid off

If you think you might lose your job, you probably will. Most of your success and failure lies in your mental state. The more you think about losing your job, the more it will shine through to others that you might deserve to lose it. Those who are confident in their own abilities, skills, internal network and the future, will survive and thrive during a period of economic struggle.

2) Continue to do the same work everyday

The easiest way to lose your job is by not expanding your role and learning new skills. If you do the same tasks every single day, then the chance you will be eliminated is considerably high. Think about it, if a company no longer requires those tasks or projects to be done, then they don’t need you. The way to save yourself is to learn about more areas of your company, especially ones where you can lend support with your expertise. When this occurs, even if your current position is eliminated, you may have a bridge to an opportunity, where on-the-job training won’t be required.

3) Search for new jobs during your full-time job

Some people are in panic right now and may fear they are about to lose their current position. Instead of working harder after work to find a new job or to build their personal brand, people invest time at work to search for new jobs. This is a very bad move, not only because most companies monitor employees computers and web routines, but because you are wasting precious time that you need to do your current job. In a recession, you have to work harder to keep your job, so losing those hours will get you fired quicker.

4) Start asking people you’ve never met for favors

The worst way to network is when it’s forced. When you come off as “using” someone else or begging for favors, without giving first, you lose. It’s really that simple and I don’t care if it’s online or offline, the results you’ll get are the same. You need to build your network before you need it. If you’re desperately searching for a job, people might not even consider you an ideal candidate due to perception. Also, people don’t want to get harassed right now when they have their own problems. The best way to ask for favors right now is to go to your immediate, trusted network.

5) Focus on monetary equity and not social equity

During a recession, many people choose to focus on every penny they have. They save money, instead of spend it (of course). The issue is that you come off as “cheap,” which will hurt your brand image. Also, people divest or don’t put much energy into building social equity (relationships/strong network), but rather monetary equity. This is a problem because money can’t really get you another job if you’re laid off, but your network can.

6) Convince yourself that you have job security

No one has job security. There are just people who are better off than others. In fact, the only insurance policy you have is your network! You may even be getting laid off while you read this. The people who feel like they have job security are poorly positioned because they aren’t taking the steps needed to protect themselves and invest in their personal brands.

7) Laugh at social media and concentrate solely on your current position

Please don’t ignore the social media explosion on the internet. It is at your own peril! I know if you’re reading this you are actively engaged with social media at some level, either as a content creator or producer. Lacking social media knowledge, passion and having assets (a blog) will actually count against you in many ways.

  • First, you will lose a vital channel by which you can communicate your personal brand for free.
  • Second, you won’t have any web 2.0 personal brand equity that you can parlay into another job, transferring your brand from position A to position B.
  • Third, you won’t have an additional revenue stream to get you through the hard times.
  • Fourth, you won’t be discovered for the next big opportunity.

8 ) Work shorter hours, knowing you won’t be getting a raise

The economy is hurting everyone and really depressing people, but to try and get revenge on your company by working fewer ours is crazy. There is a 120% chance you won’t get a raise if you work shorter hours. Also, you will feel a lot less satisfied with your work and life. Your boss will notice and you will be added to the long list of people to get laid off. Don’t worry about a raise; worry about keeping your job!

9) Speak to your coworkers about how much you hate your job

You can’t trust anyone, trust me ;) . People talk and at work, where a lot of people are talking about the economy and are trying to get watch their own back, a “rat” or “unhappy worker,” will be heard and fired pretty quickly. Work environments are quite harsh, so it’s better to be quiet and let everyone else screw things up for themselves. When the pressure is on and people feel threatened, anything goes and that is VERY scary. Be smart about your interactions and let your communication work for you, rather than against.

10) Use social networks as a microphone for complaints

The worst thing you can do is vent through social networks. Social networks cater to all audiences now, so everything you share could be seen by your parents, teachers, coworkers, manager, etc. Just knowing this should make you smarter about how you participate online. If people see you as negative or annoying, they aren’t going to offer you a job and you might even lose your job because of it.

How to Master Search Engines for Personal Branding Prosperity

October 29, 2008 at 11:23 pm | In Book Reviews, Interview, Personal Branding, SEO, Success Strategies, social media | 3 Comments

Today, I spoke with Mike Moran, who is a SEO/SEM expert, author, speaker and employee.  As many of you know, through my posts on Google being the centerpiece for your personal brand, this topic is extremely important.  In the interview, we go over some basic fundamentals, key terms, and strategies for success, so that you rank high for your name and maintain it.  In the age of Google, if you don’t show up for your name, someone else can.  It’s time to learn more about marketing your personal brand in bits and bytes, with the goal of showing up first!

A lot of people don’t know the difference between SEO (search engine optimization) and SEM (search engine marketing). What are your definitions and how do they differ?

I call SEO the techniques you use to influence organic (natural) search rankings, while SEM covers both organic and paid search. To me, any company with a Web site should be working on SEO. If you are spending time and money to create and maintain your site, why wouldn’t you make the effort for more people to see what you did? Paid search is a different matter–many companies can return more than they spend with paid search, but many others can’t.

In our book, Bill Hunt and I show search marketers how to place a monetary value on each visitor that search brings the their Web sites, so that they can tell whether the money spent on paid search brings a return worth the investment.

How can you use social media to impact search results?

Organic search results depends on strong content–content that appeals to search engines and searchers alike. Social media depends on content that customers find so compelling that they pass it along to others. You can see how creating interesting or entertaining content that meets a need of your customer is the key to both search marketing and social media, so they reinforce each other.

What’s more, the use of good search marketing techniques helps searchers find your social media, and social media techniques pass along your content to others, so that they link to you. Those links then improve your search results. If you’re doing it right, search marketing and social media should reinforce each other. That’s why we added a new chapter in the second edition around social media.

Does Google own our personal brands? Should we even care about Ask.com and Yahoo! anymore?

I don’t think anyone owns brands anymore. The Internet has, more than ever, forced everyone to rethink how they are portrayed in public, whether you are talking about personal brands or a bottle of Coca-Cola. But it’s far more than Google.

All social media platforms give people a place to provide opinions on people, brands, or anything else–the public owns your brand and you can merely engage in conversation to influence that perception. And certainly you should care about search engines beyond Google–Google isn’t #1 in every country, and even in countries like the U.S., where it is #1, it has just 70% of the market. Who among us can afford to ignore 30% of our potential audience?

What are 5 tips to having a successful SEM campaign (paid/natural search) for individuals or companies?

  • 1) Know what searchers are looking for. If you don’t know what words people search for when they should find you, you can’t do much else with the rest of these tips. Whether for organic or paid, you start by understanding the language of the searcher.
  • 2) See where you stand. Understand the conversation going on out there, through reputation monitoring tools, Google Alert, current search rankings, and other methods. If you don’t know where you are now, you won’t know whether what you are doing is making things better or worse.
  • 3) Know how to keep score. It’s not enough to get high search rankings–you need to know your purpose for getting high rankings. Is it to further your career? Get a job? Sell more product? Get more customer leads? You need to know how you’ll track your success. Once you know that, you’re ready to try some things to see how they work. With paid search, especially, you must know what the return is for what you invest–that’s the only way you know your paid search tactics are profitable.
  • 4) Make sure you are in the game. For organic search, your content must be in the search index. For paid search, you must have your ads running–not just in Google but in every major search engine. If the search engines don’t have your content, then you’ll never be found.
  • 5) Make sure your content is worth finding. Ensure that your content appeals to both search engines and searchers. Yes, optimize your organic search titles and content so that it is found, and make sure your ad copy is well-crafted to garner clicks from searchers, but remember that you have a larger goal, too. Don’t stop with search success, but instead test that you are selling more or generating more leads or getting called for more interviews. What those searchers do after they find you is just as important as finding you in the first place.

What are some tactics you recommend to ranking high for your name and subject matter on Google?

All tactics flow from your strategy to make yourself an expert. If you are clear on what you want to be found for, then you should do everything around creating content that the right people will be looking for. Write a blog, do podcasts, videos and anything else that you can. Write articles for your own Web site, but for other sites, too, always with a link back to yours. Attract a following of people and the search engines will notice. Use social media or any other tactics you want, but most of all, do the things that mark you as an expert. If you don’t think you’re an expert on anything, that’s the place to start.

Don’t be afraid to narrow your expertise if necessary. When I first started working in search marketing, I emphasized that I was an expert on search marketing for large companies, based on my IBM experience. Later, people didn’t need to modify my expertise as pertaining only to large companies, but it was helpful to get attention for a more limited expertise at the start. And don’t worry that it might take awhile—if you keep at it, you’ll find your place in the sun.

—–
Mike Moran is an expert in Internet marketing, search technology, Web personalization, and Web metrics. Mike’s previous appearances include Search Engine Strategies, ad:tech, DM Days, the Internet Strategy Forum Summit, and the Enterprise Search Summit.Mike is the co-author of the best-selling 2005 book Search Engine Marketing, Inc. (along with fellow search marketing expert Bill Hunt), which is now in its Second Edition (2008).

Mike is a freelance consultant and public speaker who also serves as Chief Strategist for Converseon, a leading digital media marketing agency based in New York City. Prior to this position, Mike spent 30 years at IBM, rising to Distinguished Engineer, an executive-level technical position.

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