Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Book Review: BrandingPays: The Five-Step System to Reinvent Your Personal Brand by Karen Kang

The author of the book has a very impressive background as she worked for Regis McKenna who did brand positioning for Apple. And who has done a better job branding than Apple? Karen Kang transfers what she learned about branding companies to the idea of personal branding. Branding yourself.



Ms. Kang uses a phrase "a cake with icing" when she talks about personal branding. The cake is your expertise, your knowledge, your experience. The icing is your personality, your image, your smile. Icing make people like you and trust you. Without the cake the person has no substance, only fluff. Both the cake and the icing are needed to do well in whatever you undertake if you want to be very successful.



The author explains why just having the core qualifications are not enough. The key to success is to let people know the qualification you have. She recommends that each person thinks of themselves as a product. And how you position "the product" is not constant, it varies depending on three key factors: target audience, your strength, and competition.



Suppose your goal is to get a promotion. To determine your target audience you would examine who can influence your promotion: obviously your direct boss, but there might be other players. Then determine the problem/opportunity that is important to the influential people and what strength you have to address that problem. As your work on addressing this issue, keep them in the loop. If you do not have all the information about the decision makers you need to do homework. For example, if you are going for an interview learn who you are interviewing with, look them up on Linked in, Google search them, learn about the company. When you describe your strength highlight those that are more relevant to that specific company or person. It is a lot more effective than having a generic pitch about yourself. Each company gets a lot of qualified candidates. Try to find something unique about your skills relevant to that specific company that will make you stand out from the competition. If you have little experience, stress you have a fresh point of view. If you are older, stress your long record of achievement. If you know foreign languages and you are interviewing with multinational company stress that skill even if it may not be immediately applicable to your job. Prove your expertise by using specific examples from the past. If you don't have enough experience build it up by volunteering, teaching, finding a way to increase experience even if you don't get paid for it. After explaining the general approach the author gives several specific examples.



An interesting concept in "Messaging" chapter is what the author calls "The elevator pitch". The elevator pitch is a set of talking points that succinctly answers "What do you do?" or "Tell me about yourself". You never know when the opportunity will arise to tell someone about yourself, and you want to think through what you would say to take advantage of this opportunity in the best possible way. The author provides a template of key points to cover in this message for 5 seconds, 30 seconds, and 60 seconds option of the pitch. Sample pitches for people with different backgrounds help to put this lesson in context. What else can you do with your Elevator pitch? Use it in your LinkedIn profile.



Speaking of LinkedIn, Ms. Kang has a whole long chapter on Social Media and branding. It contains a lot of nice tips from what should be included in your profile to why you should not change your profile photo often.



Through her book Ms. Kang stresses again and again that to help you reach your goals it helps to have influential supporters. The authors spends quite a bit of time of talking how to identify and form relationships with individuals who can advocate on behalf of your brand.



To summarize the gist of the book is that people will not take you seriously if you only have social skills, but everyone is a lot more helpful to the people they like. Ms. Kang recommends not to just focus on growing your core skills, but spending time on relating to people and cultivating relationships especially with career influencers. Her book will help you to form a plan of action.



You can find it on Amazon by following this link.





I receive a review copy of this book for an honest and unbiased review.



AshopZones review ★★★★★



Table of content:



Introduction



The Importance of Reinventing Your Personal Brand

What's Inside BrandingPays

My Story



Chapter 1



Take Charge of Your Personal Brand

Branding a Political Candidate

What Is Personal Branding?

Personal Branding Myths

What are the Benefits of Personal Branding?

Rebranding Throughout Life

Your Goal for Branding

The Branding Journey

Every Brand Needs Cake and Icing

Personal Branding Assessment Questionnaire

BrandingPays System: Five Steps to Your Cake and Icing



Chapter 2

Step 1: Positioning

Position Yourself for Opportunities

What Is Positioning and Why Do It?

What Is Your Goal?

Positioning Triangulation

Positioning Statement

Who Is Your Target Audience?

Problem or Opportunity Statement: What do they need?

Value Proposition: How can you provide the solution?

Differentiation: Why are you the best one to provide it?

Evidence: How can you prove it?

Sample Positioning Statements

Chart Your Position

Iterate to Hone Your Positioning

Chapter 2 Summary

Chapter 2 Action List



Chapter 3



Step 2: Messaging

Message for Clarity and Impact

The Elevator Pitch and Your Evidence

Sample Elevator Pitches

Different Value Messages for Different Audiences

Back Your Positioning Claims with Evidence Messages

How the Positioning Statement Can Feed Your Linkedin Profile

What Is Your Tagline?

Chapter 3 Summary

Chapter 3 Action List



Chapter 4



Step 3: Brand Strategy

How to Develop Your Brand Strategy

Brand Strategy Platform

Key Brand Descriptors

Sample Brand Strategy Platforms

Chapter 4 Summary

Chapter 4 Action List



Chapter 5



Step 4: Ecosystem

Ecosystem: Leverage Influencers to Establish Brand

Taking It to the People

What Is the Brand Ecosystem?

The 90/10 Rule

The Brand Ecosystem Model

Take Time for Relationship Building

Four Keys for Strong Ecosystem Relationships

Identifying Influencers

Managing Your Ecosystem Relationships

A Word About Networking

Chapter 5 Summary

Chapter 5 Action List



Chapter 6



Step 5: Action Plan

Build Your Brand Action Plan

A36o-Degree Brand

Brand Improvement

Brand Communication

Four Phases of Brand Communication Using the Ecosystem Model

Brand Action Example

Lessons from Rebranding an Entrepreneurial Company

A Word of Advice for Entrepreneurs

Chapter 6 Summary

Chapter 6 Action List



Chapter 7



360-Degree Branding: Vision, Symbols, Words and Dei

The Care2 Story: Rebranding from the Inside Out

Vision or Thought Leadership Branding

Your Look, Your Image: The Basics

Branding in Multimedia

Chapter 7 Summary

Chapter 7 Action List



Chapter 8



Portable Branding and Social Media: Getting Started

Why You Need to Be in Social Media

Choose Your Social Networks

Own Your Online Real Estate

Your Google Search Results

Your Avatar

To Blog or Not to Blog

Should You Promote Your Personal Brand or Your Business Brand Online?

Online Reputation Management

Do a Few Things Well

Chapter 8 Summary

Chapter 8 Action List



Conclusion



Reinvent Your Brand for New Opportunities

Four Stories on Overcoming Diversity Challenges in Personal

Branding and Life