Personal Branding Magazine Issue 13 With Candace Cameron Bure

Personal Branding Magazine – Volume 4, Issue 1

The Philanthropy Issue

Summary

Volume 4, Issue 1 is focused on philanthropy and how you can grow your personal brand if you give back. Helping other people doesn’t only mean donating to charity; it means supporting a cause that aligns with who you are as a person. By targeting a specific nonprofit or charity, you will be more passionate about helping them out, and achieve far greater results. In this issue, we interview Candace Cameron Bure and other philanthropists that are changing the world, one person at a time.

Video promo

 

Free sample issue available today

Enjoy eleven articles in the free sample issue, which can be found on PersonalBrandingSample.com. You’ll read partial interviews with Candace Cameron Bure, Bob Costas, Richie Supa, Tory Johnson, Beth Kanter, Monica Von Neumann, and Sam Jones III. You’ll also enjoy reading articles about how to raise money for charity, how to stand up for what you believe in, and the new philanthropic world.

Full issue available May 1st (paid subscribers only)

The full issue will be out on August 1st, including complete interviews with major business celebrities and a combined 25 articles for your viewing pleasure. Be sure to subscribe before August 1st in order to receive this issue.

More information can be found at PersonalBrandingMag.com.

Features

Exclusive interviews with:

  • Candace Cameron Bure is best known for playing D. J. Tanner on the television show Full House. With an acting career that started at the age of five, Candace appeared in several national television commercials and prime-time hits such as “St. Elsewhere,”  “Growing Pains” and “Who’s the Boss”. Her philanthropic spirit has given support to the Skip1.org, Compassion International, Sheraton House and Children’s Hunger Fund. Candace serves as the National Ambassador for National House of Hope and all the while continues to travel the country speaking at various churches and women’s conferences sharing her Christian faith.
  • Bob Costas, a 19-time Emmy Award winner, and television’s most honored studio host, is the host of NBC’s “Football Night in America” studio show. Costas also serves as prime-time host of NBC’s coverage of the Olympic Games and co-hosts NBC’s coverage of the U.S. Open, Kentucky Derby and Preakness Stakes.
  • Tory Johnson is the founder of Women For Hire, and is the workplace contributor on ABC’s Good Morning America. Glamour dubbed Johnson the “raise fairy godmother.” Her fifth book, Fired To Hired, follows Will Work From Home: Earn Cash Without the Commute, which was both a New York Times and Wall Street Journal bestseller.
  • Beth Kanter is the author of Beth’s Blog, one of the longest running and most popular blogs for nonprofits and co-author of the book, The Networked Nonprofit. Beth is the CEO of Zoetica, and in 2009, she was named by Fast Company Magazine as “one of the most influential women in technology.”
  • Monica Von Neumann has lived the lives of three women. A model, a wife, as well as, businesswoman and tastemaker, she now sits on the board of her late husband’s company and oversees a multi-faceted estate and business operation here and abroad. Von Neumann is known in social circles as a high-powered philanthropist, but few know her influence extends to select interior design projects, entertaining & etiquette, and intellectual properties.
  • Sam Jones III is best known for playing Pete Ross on the first three seasons of the television series Smallville. He left the series to film Glory Road. Jones has also appeared on the television shows The Practice, ER, CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, and 7th Heaven. He appeared with former Cosby Show actress Raven-Symoné in the 2006 Lifetime movie For One Night. He returned to Smallville in 2008 for the episode “Hero”. Jones also played Craig Shilo in Spike TV’s Blue Mountain State.

Contributors

Philanthropy experts, authors, and bloggers such as:

Special thanks to the staff

 

Join our Facebook fan page

 

Thanks to our sponsors

 

 

 

Picture of Dan Schawbel

Dan Schawbel

Dan Schawbel is the Managing Partner of Millennial Branding, a Gen Y research and consulting firm. He is the New York Times and Wall Street Journal bestselling author of Promote Yourself: The New Rules For Career Success (St. Martin’s Press) and the #1 international bestselling book, Me 2.0: 4 Steps to Building Your Future (Kaplan Publishing), which combined have been translated into 15 languages.

TRENDING AROUND THE WEB

Writers who reread their own old work and physically cringe aren’t bad judges of their own quality, they’re the only kind of writer who has actually gotten better

Writers who reread their own old work and physically cringe aren’t bad judges of their own quality, they’re the only kind of writer who has actually gotten better

The Blog Herald

The Society of Authors just launched a label that goes on the back of a book jacket reading “Human Authored,” and it runs entirely on an honour code, which means the only thing standing between a reader and the truth is a writer’s word

The Society of Authors just launched a label that goes on the back of a book jacket reading “Human Authored,” and it runs entirely on an honour code, which means the only thing standing between a reader and the truth is a writer’s word

The Blog Herald

A song engineered with a sound therapist to slow your heart rate has been available since 2011 — and almost nobody who talks about anxiety has mentioned it to you

A song engineered with a sound therapist to slow your heart rate has been available since 2011 — and almost nobody who talks about anxiety has mentioned it to you

The Vessel

A Pew Research survey found 64% of American adults still choose print over e-books — and the reason has less to do with nostalgia than attention span

A Pew Research survey found 64% of American adults still choose print over e-books — and the reason has less to do with nostalgia than attention span

Global English Editing

For a while we assumed the slow cooling of a long marriage was just the price of time — until researchers found that couples who spent about seven minutes, three times a year, describing their worst fight the way a neutral outsider might see it simply stopped sliding apart

For a while we assumed the slow cooling of a long marriage was just the price of time — until researchers found that couples who spent about seven minutes, three times a year, describing their worst fight the way a neutral outsider might see it simply stopped sliding apart

The Vessel

When researchers had people confide something painful to a friend sitting right beside them, the ones whose blood pressure climbed the highest weren’t leaning on someone difficult — they were turning to a friend they genuinely love and still, just slightly, hold their breath around

When researchers had people confide something painful to a friend sitting right beside them, the ones whose blood pressure climbed the highest weren’t leaning on someone difficult — they were turning to a friend they genuinely love and still, just slightly, hold their breath around

The Vessel