10 Ways to Build Your Personal Brand

Sometimes the simplest things make the biggest impact. Whether you are a small business owner, or an employee of a large corporation, consistently shaping and building your personal brand is vital to career longevity and success. You do not need a complicated master plan to grow your good reputation though. There are small, easy ways to strengthen your brand with the resources you likely already have at the ready.

Take a look at 10 everyday ways to build your personal brand:

  1. Carry business cards. Digital networking is great but there is something about a physical piece of paper that is almost a novelty today. Handing out a business card is an easy way to leave a lasting impression without asking anything of the receiver in return.
  2. Join in-person networks. Handshakes and in-person conversations simply cannot be duplicated remotely. Join local business groups and industry-specific ones and then show up to scheduled events.
  3. Go to conferences. Your employer may already send you to conferences, and if that is the case, take full advantage of them to build your own reputation. If you are self-employed, find room in your budget for at least one or two conferences every year to cast a wide branding net and learn a few things too.
  4. Put videos on your website. Or do something equally personable. Photos are nice but a video, even a short one, tells viewers so much more about you.
  5. Blog. Find out if there are any constraints with your job when it comes to blogging about your career and industry. If a personal blog is out of the picture, ask to be a contributor on your company’s blog. Even if you only post once per month, your blog roll will build up quickly and you will have examples of your expertise at the ready.
  6. Post to social media. And do it consistently. Make sure you have separate business and personal accounts in order to keep your brand identity strong.
  7. Talk to people in line. Instead of looking down at your smartphone while waiting at the store or for a cup of coffee, strike up a conversation with the person next to you. If the timing feels right, hand that person a business card.
  8. Volunteer. Finding even a small window of time to dedicate to a cause you believe in not only improves your personal brand – it increases your own awareness and satisfaction with life. Choose a cause that aligns with your own belief system and the values you hope to portray in your career climb.
  9. Partner. You likely already know and admire other professionals in your field or geographical location so take advantage of those relationships to mutually build each other up. The benefits of partnering can include setting up referral programs, cross-linking on each other’s sites and working together on community outreach.
  10. Enjoy life. Positivity is contagious – and the opposite is also true. If your career appears to be a burden, you’ll lose traction with the very people you want to bring in to your circle. Find the bright side of every endeavor and watch your personal stock rise.
Picture of Chamber of Commerce

Chamber of Commerce

Megan Totka is the Chief Editor for ChamberofCommerce.com which is the largest business directory on the web. Megan also writes business news.

TRENDING AROUND THE WEB

A 16-year study of 373 couples found whether they fought in year one made no difference to whether they divorced. What predicted it was something researchers had to watch very carefully to see.

A 16-year study of 373 couples found whether they fought in year one made no difference to whether they divorced. What predicted it was something researchers had to watch very carefully to see.

The Vessel

Edison Research finds podcasts now reach 58% of Americans monthly — which helps explain why Vox’s podcast network was worth acquiring at all

Edison Research finds podcasts now reach 58% of Americans monthly — which helps explain why Vox’s podcast network was worth acquiring at all

The Blog Herald

Yes, AI might be useful in mental health. No, that still doesn’t make it therapy

Yes, AI might be useful in mental health. No, that still doesn’t make it therapy

The Vessel

There is a kind of blog with 500 readers that has more actual influence than one with 500,000 and the difference has nothing to do with content quality

There is a kind of blog with 500 readers that has more actual influence than one with 500,000 and the difference has nothing to do with content quality

The Blog Herald

People who are careful with money later in life aren’t always stingy. Sometimes they’re still living by rules they learned when security felt fragile.

People who are careful with money later in life aren’t always stingy. Sometimes they’re still living by rules they learned when security felt fragile.

The Vessel

A lot of people in their late 60s and 70s grew up in homes where feelings were inconvenient — and many of them became the most reliable, capable people in every room, which wasn’t the same thing as being known

A lot of people in their late 60s and 70s grew up in homes where feelings were inconvenient — and many of them became the most reliable, capable people in every room, which wasn’t the same thing as being known

The Vessel