4 Easy Ways to Brand Yourself as an Industry Expert

After reading Maria Elena Duron’s post, Drop the Personal and Professional – You Are One Brand, I got thinking about personal branding. I think a lot of micropreneurs struggle to create a separate identity for their companies, when, in fact, they’re better off using their personal brand to represent the company. So I wanted to look at a few ways you can brand yourself and leverage that personal brand on behalf of your company.

1. Be Yourself

brand yourself: red keyboard button reading "branding"I can’t, for the life of me, maintain a stuffy “professional” facade for very long, especially in my writing and social updates. But I’ve actually found that people respond better to my conversational style of writing and my personal shares on Facebook. I try to keep my clients on my company’s Facebook page rather than my personal profile, but I am friends with a few clients there. And they’re the first ones to like pictures of me with my kids, silly updates, and the like. It’s no surprise to me that those clients are the ones I have the best relationship with.

What I’m saying here is this: being yourself is your brand. If you don’t make a big point of separating your life from your work, people will feel like they know you better. Now, I’m not saying post on social media without a filter. Maybe no one (clients included) needs to see a picture of you hung over after New Year’s. Just sayin’.

2. Be Genuinely Eager to Help People

You have skills and knowledge in your field, and you should want to use that to help people (potential customers included) make decisions and better understand what you do. You don’t do so with the intent to instantly turn these people into customers; you do it because it’s the right thing to do. What does this help look like?

  • Sharing blog posts on topics your audience cares about
  • Answering questions on social media
  • Participating in Twitter chats or forums

3. Relate Your Personal Experience

Just like I’m doing in this post, when you color your advice or content with your own experiences, people connect. Writing “you should” or “do this” without any substantive proof that it works just turns people off. But when you speak from a place of knowing (“In my experience, this works.”), people are more willing to take that advice.

Stories are great too. Find ways to work in what your 4-year-old said. People like to know that you’re not all work and zero play (see #1).

4. Be Everywhere (You Have Time to Be)

I’m not suggesting you sign up for 50 social profiles and guest blog on 100 different sites. But expand your reach as far as is comfortable. Be on social, sharing your wisdom. Find a few sites where guest blogging makes sense to reach your audience. Speak at conferences, if you’re comfortable. Just be honest with yourself about how much you’re willing to do before you feel too spread thin.

Don’t be shy about being personal in branding yourself. It will give people more to latch on to and identify with, and it will help you find new customers.

Susan Payton is the President of Egg Marketing & Communications, an Internet marketing firm specializing in marketing communications, copywriting and blog posts for the software industry. She’s written three books: DIY Press Releases: Your Guide to Becoming Your Own PR Consultant, 101 Entrepreneur Tips and Internet Marketing Strategies for Entrepreneurs, and has blogged for several sites, including The Marketing Eggspert Blog, as well as CorpNet, Small Business Trends, Chamber of Commerce, and ScheduleBase. Follow her on Twitter @eggmarketing.

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