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While the Iron is Hot
I've built my videography business around what you where talking about. When I shoot I don't try to do things that only a studio and a million dollars can do. It's a waste of time and you never fool anyone. I stick to what I do well and people think a crew of ten shot my videos when it was only two of us.
Well done!
Thanks Chris.
Thanks for your posts Chris.
I'm passing this on to others. I don't know if you know what you do, yet, in this venue! Great thinking, elucidating (is that a word? Just came to me - ) and always appreciated, Chris.
To add to Michael Carrasquillo's comment, i think he touched on a brilliant insight. Consistency that carries both offline and online. So taking the time to create a signature look that you push out to all your client touch points ensures that your brand message is reinforced at every level. :)
I've built the foundation of my online brand and hope to build a community of like minds to participate with.
Thanks for doing what you do best Chris!
Frankly, I find the whole branding exercise to be faintly odious, as if I were being ask to construct myself as a new line of dish detergent ("now with ajax cleaning power"). I'm afraid that you are leading down a path toward manufactured authenticity, of calculated improvisation, of making yourself be easily digested into 140 characters and translated into HTML. I'm sorry, personal identity is a lot more complex than that.
One trick? No. But being consistent isn't saying to be one thing for the rest of your life. Apple is consistently focused on innovative design and seamless integration. No matter the platform or product, that's where they aim their firepower.
Jack Welch aimed his consistency along the lines of excellence and best-in-class. Lots of things were moving parts, but the goal was the same.
The trick is finding which part of your very core to stay pegged to, and let the rest revolve around that.
I got alot from your series on personal branding. The "why" is very important. In order to attract the right clients, customers and contacts, we need to define, why we do what we do and what we believe. It's law of attraction. The people that have the same belief system will connect with you. Not because they think you are the best thing since sliced bread, but because their belief system matches up with yours and they do it, because it makes them feel good and that they are making a difference. That is how I find the ideal clients and contacts.
I have passed your information onto a networking group that I meet with every week and I believe they will find it valuable.
Ciao
Right now, I'm too spread out, so I'm evaluating which sites help me the most, plus which ones are fun...........:)
Thanks for the great info and direction, especially you, Connie.
the important points I got out of your article are: Concentrate on your strenghts and not your weaknesses, and: the importance of confidence. It sounds simple, but for me it is not, so I have to work on that. Blogging three times a week might be not enough, but to keep it up regularly is good for me; there are a lot of better and more professionally done photographs on the web; but mine are not bad (some people say, they are quite okay) and so on and so forth. Thanks for sharing this article!
Thanks for providing me with some new insight.
Here's what I think is a big part of my secret to gaining the confidence, professionally, in-person and online, to be successful...
I'm a bit of a geek in my interests. Geeks generally aren't considered to be confident people. But one of my niche interests is live-roleplaying. In which I started to roleplay characters who were...well...more confident than I was as a person.
Effectively I faked it until I made it. And I found that doing it in a fictional setting transfers perfectly well to a real life setting. If I can pretend to be confident and carry it off successfully, then there's no reason why I shouldn't just *be* confident in myself. :)
We are all storytellers, which is perhaps what draws the lot of us to social media in the first place. Defining one's own story is essential, not just in this space but in all aspects of life (business, relationships, family).
I too have learned to focus on my strengths. Perhaps that is why my business partner and I work so well. We balance out each other's weaknesses. And we each have our own stories, which, when combined, creates our brand.
You should do more of these types of series, it's an excellent format.
Great focus and wisdom!
Thanks!
I agree, move on from fixing ourselves!
Growing up with Asperger’s and dyslexia I desperately tried to do it the right way, but no amount of effort and determination could make it happen. After a couple of decades of not succeeding, I began to discover my strengths. Now I lead at whatever I do because I do it my unique way. I am getting good at asking for help at the many things I don’t do well. You are right, others want to contribute – my needs allow them a way to help.
It's all about confidence. Consistency, knowledge, style, feeling good about yourself, etc. all gets easier when you have confidence and understand your passion (overused but valid). No matter what you do, if you aren't confident about what you are and what you offer, it won't work. Being authentic and comfortable in yourself is what makes your personal brand real. Owen found his strength and confidence. Robin figured out how to find her confidence. You and many others have it. Other folks I know have it but don't realize it yet. They hopefully will discover their authentic person and realize the confidence they have when they do. Others will continue to look for it.
It's all there to be had - you just have to have the confidence to find it.
Great series of posts, Chris.
I completely agree on both the value of focusing on your strengths and accepting your weaknesses while at the same time working hard to build both internal and external confidence in yourself. Truly knowing and accepting yourself is the first step to becoming a confident person.
I just discovered your blog and your story today, and I'm glad I did.
When I first heard seminar presenters talking about "branding" a few years ago, I was not quite clear what they meant--not really. But after hearing various explanations and now yours, I can say branding makes sense to me.
All that you've shared in this article boils down to being authentic, being true to your inner vision for yourself and your company. I'm easily distracted by many new ideas, techniques and gadgets, but what keeps me on track is asking myself does this fit and advance my story. Can I do this and remain authentic? These questions help keep me on track.
Thanks for sharing this.