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Building Your Career Brand. A Business plan FOR Marketing you Presented by: gina m. tillis-nash. Mission Statement. enhancing your reputation as a worker combined with a promise of your potential and impact on future employers. . What is branding?.
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Building Your Career Brand A Business plan FOR Marketing you Presented by: gina m. tillis-nash
Mission Statement enhancing your reputation as a worker combined with a promise of your potential and impact on future employers.
What is branding? • Best defined as a promise of the value of the product • Combination of tangible and intangible characteristics that make a “brand” unique • Developing an image with results to match
Marketing • Why buy one product over another? • Why hire one job-seeker over another? • More specifically the power of branding.
Self-branding • Who you are • How you are great • Why you should be sought out
What goes into a brand? • Name • Reputation • Quality • Performance • Appearance • Promise of value
Strategic Marketing Plan Where have I been? Where am I now? Where will I be if I do nothing?
Strategic Marketing Plan, cont. • Where do I want my career to go? • How do I get to where I want to go? • How do I convert my plan into action steps? • How do I alter my plan if I am not getting success?
Networking to the Next Level Success can spring not just from who you know but from who knows you. • Be known for your expertise • Be visible in professional, volunteer, and civic associations • Speak in public • Offer services to universities & colleges • Write articles • Serve on advisory boards
Build Relationships • Word-of-mouth… what people say about you • Network of contacts • Friends • Colleagues • Customers • Clients • Former bosses • “Market” your skill set, education, and accomplishments
Me, Inc. • “Regardless of age, regardless of position, regardless of the business we happen to be in, all of us need to understand the importance of branding. We are the CEOs of our own companies: Me, Inc.” • “You're not defined by your job title and you're not confined by your job description.”
Foundation of your career brand • Track your past accomplishments • Gain strategically important new experiences • Ask for new, challenging assignments • Freelancing, consulting, or volunteering (e.g. Federal Executive Board) • Focus on what you want your brand to stand for… develop a strategy for gaining experience in areas of your brand in which you are weak
Education • What is the minimum amount of education necessary? • To excel, do you need additional education, training, or certification? • Seek out a mentor (someone highly respected in your filed and who has branded himself/herself well) and ask for advice
Promote yourself • If no one knows about your “brand”, how can you expect them to seek out your “product” • Who has more reasons to promote your brand? • Fine line between bragging and promoting • Career portfolio • Resume • Mission statement • Detailed accomplishment list • Samples of work • Articles and working papers • Awards and honors • Etc.
Googling • What is your on-line presence? • What does it say about your brand?
Competition • Apply key marketing principles and concepts to better position yourself on the job market, whether you are looking for a new job with a new company or a promotion within your current company. • Outline your company’s competitive advantage.
4 P’s -- Marketing Mix • Product -- YOU, including your brand positioning statement • Promotion -- job-search communications, including cover letters, resumes, interviewing • Price -- what you are worth, including salary and benefits • Place -- job-search strategy and network of contacts
Can you reinvent your brand? • Career change • Attitude change • Behavior change • Appearance change
Positioning statement • A statement that separates and differentiates a product from all competing products in such a way that it becomes the top choice of consumers. • Should identify the one or two things that make the job-seeker unique and valuable to the employer. • What is it that makes you different? • What qualities or characteristics make you distinctive? • What have you accomplished? • What is your most noteworthy personal trait? • What benefits (problems solved) do you offer?
Promoting your brand Use persuasive communications • Cover letters • Resumes • Elevator Speeches • Interviewing • Career Portfolio
Maximize Distribution Strategies • Networking • Job Posting/Recruitment • Job-hunting on the Web • Career Fairs/Job Expos • Career Services Office • Cold Contacts • Alumni
3 A’s of successful brands • Authentic Image • Advantage • Awareness
Visual Branding • Actions • Attitude • Attire – look the part 3 A’s
Verbal branding • Sound bites • dub yourself “Mr. FedEx” because you always deliver projects on time! • "the career cartographer" who helps others chart the right course that will make smooth sailing in their work lives. • "the change commando" who draws from a decorated military career to drive change that delivers off-the-chart results. • Success stories
Be a St Positioning your brand • beST • firST • moST • Are you the best at creating product marketing strategies, are you the first one to have mastered how to conduct electronic meetings for your work team, are you the most accomplished, award-winning sales professional in your company/industry?
Brands gone BAD!!! • Breach of trust • Dishonesty • Broken promises
Goals and Objectives • List five-year goals • State specific, measurable objectives for achieving your five-year goals. • List market-share objectives. • List revenue/profitability objectives.
Career Branding Tools • LikedIn profile – professional networking site • Personal Website – could hurt you • Professional Blog • Social networking profiles – e.g. Facebook and a professional career-specific site
Further Reading • Arruda, William (2007). "You Are a Brand". Career Distinction: Stand Out by Building Your Brand. J. Wiley. ISBN0470128186. http://www.amazon.com/Career-Distinction-Stand-Building-Brand/dp/0470128186/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1259592566&sr=8-1. • Schawbel, Dan (2009). "The Brand Called You". Me 2.0: Build a Powerful Brand to Achieve Career Success. Kaplan Publishing. ISBN1427798206. http://personalbrandingbook.com. • George Cheney, and Craig Carroll (1997). "The Person as Object in Discourses in and Around Organizations". Communication Research24 (6): 593–630. doi:10.1177/0093650297024006002. http://crx.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/24/6/593. • Lair, Daniel J.; Sullivan, Katie; Cheney, George (2005). "Marketization and the Recasting of the Professional Self". Management Communication Quarterly18 (3): 307–343. http://mcq.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/18/3/307. • Levine, Michael (2003). "The Celebrity brand". branded World: Adventures in Public Relations and the Creation of Superbrands. John Wiley & Sons Inc.. ISBN0471263664. • Bence, Brenda (2008). How YOU Are Like Shampoo. Las Vegas, Nev.: Global Insight Communications. ISBN978-0-9799010-2-7. http://www.globalinsightcommunications.com/books.htm. • Perez Ortega, Andres. Marca Personal. ISBN9788473565578. http://www.marcapropia.net/libro.htm. • Zara, Olivier (2009). Reussirsacarrière grace au Personal Branding. Eyrolles. ISBN9782212543186. http://www.reputation.axiopole.info/2009/03/05/reussir-sa-carriere-grace-au-personal-branding/. • Monarth, Harrison (2009). Executive Presence: The Art of Commanding Respect Like a CEO. McGraw-Hill. ISBN9780071632874. http://www.executivepresencebook.com. • Klewes, Joachim and Wreschniok, Robert (2010). Building and Maintaining Trust in the 21st Century. ISBN978-3-642-01629-5. http://www.springer.com/business/business+for+professionals/book/978-3-642-01629-5. • Nance Rosen Blog: http://www.nancerosenblog.com/2010/01/09/3rs/ • Peters, Tom (August 1997). "The brand Called You". Fast Company (Mansueto Ventures LLC.) (10): pp. 83. http://www.fastcompany.com/magazine/10/brandyou.html. • Ries, Al; Trout, Jack (1981). Positioning: The Battle for your Mind. McGraw-Hill. http://books.google.fr/books?id=3hjG01OzMGYC. • Scott Sherman , Jeffrey (2009). Creating a Truly Unique Money Making Asset the Art of Personal Branding • Wright, Colin (2009) (free electronic viewing and download). Personal Branding: the least you should know. http://exilelifestyle.com/design/free-personal-branding-ebook/.
THANK YOU Comments or feedback: Gina Tillis-Nash Gina.Tillis.Nash@noaa.gov Lower Mississippi River Forecast Center Based on the Quintessential Career Website’s Career Branding Tutorial http://quintcareers.com