Branding and Distinctiveness Are You Telling Me It’s Okay to Ignore You

Posted on August 18th, 2008 in Branding by admin

Let’s be honest. Are you (and your business) forgettable?

“You know what I like about you? You don’t care what anyone thinks!”

That…compliment…came from my mother-in-law when she first saw the eggplant painted walls in my living room. It’s true, we are not living our lives ready for resale here. My husband and I won’t play it safe and squelch our creativity within our own home. Our lives are not neutral statements.

Why tell you this? Frankly, I see crushing levels of mediocrity out here in suburbia and when I get out and surf the web to check out some of your businesses, things don’t look much better. So much creative inhibition in the lives and businesses of otherwise fine people! Just makes me want to scream:

For the love of God, People, Please Come Alive! You are boring me to tears!

I’m serious! I work with people every day who are brave enough to take on the challenge of finding their unique voices in the world and I see a whole lot more who would do well to follow suit.

Let’s take your brand presence for example. Don’t think you need one? That’s interesting. Good luck with that. Understand you need one but don’t really have one? Yes, I know.

If you are a self-employed person or small business owner with a website are you engaging me immediately in a compelling dialogue from the moment I find your site? Am I so clear on who you are, what makes you cool and why I definitely want to have you in my universe that I can’t help but reach out to you? Are YOU so clear on who you are that the whole concept of competition has become a meaningless and arcane concept?

If you don’t get this you are losing customers.

A lot of customers.

Real Life Example: When I enrolled in coach training, I spent some time checking out coaching websites. MANY coaching websites. Even then, not having ever thought about business or branding (I was a therapist, after all) I found myself become bored and in some cases actually turned off by 98% of what I saw there. By the time I looked at the 40th site I couldn’t remember any specific coaches, save ONE. I contacted the only coach that caught my attention just to congratulate him on being memorable. Keep in mind that I was just surfing. I wasn’t even looking to hire anyone. It hadn’t even occurred to me to consider it. Because the site engaged me, it was natural that I respond. This led to a reply and a suggestion that we talk live. I called. At the end of the hour, this coach asked me what I wanted to do. It wasn’t until that minute that I knew I wanted to hire him but I did.

Having a site that was compelling enough for me to want to know this individual when I didn’t even know I was in the market for his services put about $4,000 in that man’s pocket.

This illustration relates to my experience with a coach, but this phenomena is certainly not restricted to that industry. Regardless of the type of business you are in, go back and look at your company’s website, even if you are “just an employee”. How do you rate your site on its ability to achieve similar results with your visitors?

If you were unique this year, how will you keep from becoming a commodity next year?

Your business presence is just one manifestation of you (no matter what your position). Your physical environment is another. While I recognize it has been practical for many people to live in resale-ready homes due to frequent career moves, I also know that trend has changed and many are settling in to their homes for a far longer time than had been true in the last decade. Unfortunately, the way many people relate to their homes continues to reflect a sense of impermanence. Worse yet, having a conscious eye toward resale makes you a temporary inhabitant of someone else’s home! You have to ask yourself, who’s house are you in? The next buyer’s? Your parents’? Your boss or coworker’s? Your hired decorator’s?

If I walked in to your home, would your place engage me in an immediate dialogue about you? Hint: Yes it would…but what, exactly would it tell me? It would tell me what values you LIVE by (not the ones you say you live by, the ones you actually DO). It would tell me how you feel about yourself. It would tell me a lot about how it feels to be you. It would tell me what you ignore and what you embrace. Borrow the eyes of a stranger, if only in your mind, and walk around your environment. Open a closet or two. Look at your clothes. Notice where you feel pockets of dead energy and where you feel flow. If you have ever found yourself wondering what you stand for in the world and who you are…well, your environment has a great deal to tell you about what you have been projecting to the rest of us.

If your environment is not making a bold statement about who you are when you are at your best…if it is not clear to everyone who sees it (even if it is only you) that you are joyfully engaged with your life take a stand now to correct that.

You cannot be successful in life in any lasting and vital way if you do not have an Environment that supports you.

Yes, Big E, Environment. Who you hang out with and what you feed your body, brain and spirit are parts of your Environment as well. And consider this:

You will not attract to you the opportunities and resources you desire if what you show to the world tells us that it is okay to ignore you.

With the change of seasons, it’s a great time of year to start setting goals. Make being memorable one of them. Embrace your extraordinary uniqueness.

Laura Young, M.A. is a life coach and owner of Wellspring Coaching. A contributing author to several books including 101 Great Ways to Improve Your Life with Jack Canfield, John Gray and Bob Proctor, coming in September,
Laura specializes in working with individuals facing midlife transitions (personal and career), as well as those seeking relationship improvement, individuals coping with grief and loss and those seeking high level personal development.

With doctoral training in counseling psychology, Laura has written extensively on such topics as stress management, motivation, finding one’s life purpose, creativity,achieving life balance, cultivating a healthy lifestyle and improving communication in personal and professional relationships .Visit her website to learn more about her coaching services. Visit her blog, Adventures of a Dragon Slayer to view her extensive resource base.

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Net Branding Trends - Part I

Posted on July 23rd, 2008 in Branding by admin

Branding has always evolved from the simple to the complex, just like everything else. Evolution begets progress. Now in this Information Revolution the battle of branding is always as they put it - innovating itself and stiff competition is the name of the game. For those who don’t know what “Branding” is, simply put, its giving your product or service a Name and a Logo, or a certain jive and feel so clients, customers, or future advocates of your product/service will remember whatever your selling or offering, in exchange for whatever earnings you might get from them.

Just knowing that must be enough to change you views as a business owner, as Management expert “Robert Heller” puts it plainly, how you brand your product/service must change the way you view the competition As a business owner, one is suppose to be the leader of the organization, and management approval is also a must in what they want the branding is to be. Even in this High-Tech society in which information exchange is so fast- a well thought off strategy is still important and finding the right people to implement such a change is almost imperative to the task.

Pointers on being the leader of the Business is enumerated in the following statements covered in usual management books: {a} Strategy of being a market leader .who behaves like a follower is no longer viable. Leaders either lead, or lose. {b} Leaders are learning that they have to react to attack, as opposed to the time-dishonored technique of wishfully dismissing the new-fangled competition. {c}Pace of technological change has speeded up too much for ‘wait-and-see’ attitude for Leaders to be tenable.

It is easy to be caught up in every fad that comes along at the start, it’s always good to stick to the basic, and hire people who will be able to fulfill whatever strategy or goal you as a business owner have in mind. Placing an organization chart on core business activities is a must for small to medium-sized business owners much like what giant corporations have done while they were starting out. Outsourcing non-business function and non -inclusion in the organizational chart of a firm is an example of a how employees would be able to know which functions are done inside and which ones are outsourced outside.

Doing so {Placing an Org Chart} may be a way to ensure that employees are assured that non-core functions are not outsourced and they will not be removed from positions where they have been placed. Since outsourcing is one of the latest trends in medium scale to multinational corporations, it must be addressed with diplomacy and not with harshness, least some of your worker, salesperson, attendant,working people leave your company to find what they think is greener pastures.

Next is stop is surviving the Net Revolution in Branding.

Source: www.thinkingmanagers.com

www.findarticles.com

Visit http://www.staffoffshore.com

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Getting In Touch With Your Super Powers 3 Branding Lessons I Learned From The Characters Of X-Men

Posted on May 23rd, 2008 in Branding by admin

The power of Personal Branding is all around us. Recently, while
getting in touch with my inner child, I took a spin to my local theater to
catch the last part of the X-Men trilogy, “The Last Stand.”

Although the movie itself is targeted towards teens (what was I doing
there you wonder?), the message of embracing your unique gifts
applies directly to the principles of personal branding.

What makes Personal Branding different from Business branding is that
we’re connecting who you are with what you do in an
unforgettable way. This requires that we move towards positioning your
unique skills, talents, and super human traits that are unique just to you.

So how do you tap into those “special gifts” and set yourself apart in an
unforgettable way from all the rest?

Let’s take a cue from the characters of X-Men:

1. Understand, really understand, that your unique and special
talents, no matter how quirky, make you special not
unusual.
In a world filled with massive competition, the thing
that helps you stand out are the talents and unique skills that no one
else can deliver quite like you. Each X-Men possesses their own
unique gift (a super power) from lightening speed reproduction, the
ability to walk through walls, to telepathy.

What’s your super power? Go back in time, get in touch with your inner
child and remember the things you were most passionate about. Did
you enjoy organizing tea parties? Were you the performer of the
bunch? Was your home the neighborhood favorite because you always
kept everyone comfortable? Are you communicating those special
talents in your business or hiding them?

2. Know that setting yourself apart takes courage. It sounds a
little new agey but the truth is when we free ourselves from our own
limitations, we make others uncomfortable. In the world of branding,
those that are uncomfortable with your unique traits are simply not
intended to work with you.

A clear and concise personal brand not only allows you to communicate
your unique edge but you do so to your ideal clients. Your ideal clients
are those that you “get” and that “get” you. Isn’t that what we’re all
looking for?

Even in the world of Marvel comics, you find the struggle between
conforming and innovating. In life, as in comics, being unforgettably
distinctive and innovative wins! The question is, are you willing to take
the last stand?

3. As competitive as the marketplace is today, there is more than
enough room for everyone.
The key is to identify your brand
essence, communicate that clearly to your ideal target and watch the
Law of Attraction work its magic. We’ve long experienced a shift in the
economy in which traditional ways of selling are no longer effective.
Although an overused adage, it’s true that we do business with people
that we know like and trust and we’re making those judgments quickly,
within mere seconds. Therefore, we are searching for those people that
immediately relate to our needs and are in it to be of service versus sell
us.

Our super human powers come disguised in many forms. Like the
character Storm, you may share the incredible ability to enter any
environment and make it magical - changing mood and thought.
Perhaps like Wolverine, you possess that unshakable warrior-like
ability to dust yourself off and regenerate no matter what the obstacle.
Or, maybe you have the uncanny gift of laser-focused intuition and can
read people exceptionally well like Professor X.

Whatever your gift, embrace it with courage, shout it from the roof tops
and remember that like all X-Men, your super powers are what make
you more than merely normal, they make you uniquely special!

2006 Copyright, Liz Pabon. All rights reserved.

About the author: Liz Pabon, “The Branding Maven,” is
inspiring, motivating and empowering - but most importantly, she’s
effective.

A speaker and author on the topic of personal branding, Liz
delivers insights and principles that are proven to achieve WILD
SUCCESS.


Liz publishes the weekly Keys2Success ezine. If you’re ready to
ATTRACT amazing clients, set yourself apart from the pack, make a lot
more MONEY, and have a lot more FUN in your small business, get
Liz’s FREE WEEKLY TIPS by going NOW to http://www.thebrandingmaven.com!

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