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]]>I recently wrote a series of short blogs on creating my personal brand. The stimulus for that was a magnificent photo shoot with Juanita Broderick. The links to each post are below, along with an infographic that I created on the process.
Post One My Experience of Personal Branding – the first in a series
Post Two Finding My Personal Brand – part 2 in a series
Post Three My Personal Brand – The Next Level – part three in a series
Post Four Upping the Public part of the Personal Brand – Part 4 in a series
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]]>The post Upping the Public part of the Personal Brand – Part 4 in a series appeared first on Agility Communications.
]]>My decision to be photographed by Juanita required me to think about my physicality – how I appeared and how I was seen and assessed.
Not something I hadn’t thought about, but not something that I had seriously considered doing anything about. Authentic is very important both to me and to my clients. With me, what you see is what you get. Outdoors woman madly in love with animals, any animals, but particularly my pigs, horses, cows and of course Issy.
But all the same on a stinking hot day I arrived at Juanita’s studio, suitcases and business props such as my banner in tow.
First part of the transformation was hair and makeup. I loved every moment of this experience and wished that it was a skill I possessed, although even if it was, it is more likely that I would be found mucking out the pig’s yards than adjusting my makeup.
Several changes of clothes and we are off.
Given some of the anxiety that I felt, I think that it is worthwhile to mention some of the things that helped me on this journey and on this day:
Trust – I was putting myself in the hands of an expert, actually two experts, a hair and makeup expert and a stunning photographer, they were going to do their best with me and if it all went pear shaped I didn’t have to use the photos. But I trusted that they would be great and they were much better than great.
Trust that Juanita wasn’t worrying about how she could possibly get a good shot.
Prepare – Juanita suggested that I bring some business props – no brainer, but I would not have thought of it. I brought my banner, an easel that I sometimes use in workshops and pens, laptop etc. I am so glad that I did. Fantastic, immediately useable shots.
Plan – I spent time thinking about what I brought to my work and therefore to the work of my clients and what I wanted the photos to portray:
I have a wealth of experience and learned wisdom
My communications’ background helps me to plan and deliver engaging strategies
I have empathy for older business owners – many have a fear of this changing world of technology, I can help them to come to grips with it painlessly
Quick to come up with solutions
Transparent values and ethics
Sense of humour
Clothes – I brought every piece of clothing that I liked, I didn’t expect to use them all and I did not, but as the artistic director, Juanita chose with my input and she made great decisions.
If you would like to refresh your personal brand and want some new photos, you cannot go wrong. The photos, I hope, speak for themselves. Contact us for help with your strategy
Meet Juanita at Broderick Photography:
https://www.facebook.com/broderickphotography.com.au/
https://www.linkedin.com/in/juanita-broderick-9aa856100/
https://www.instagram.com/broderickphotography/?hl=en
The next post will be about important strategies in developing your personal brand.
The post Upping the Public part of the Personal Brand – Part 4 in a series appeared first on Agility Communications.
]]>The post My Personal Brand Experience – the next level – Part 3 in a series appeared first on Agility Communications.
]]>I was walking around Lake Daylesford with my rescued greyhound Issy. Lorne was doing the same with his rescued greyhound Evie. Peas in a pod in appearance, night and day in temperament. Both beautiful, gentle animals, they facilitated a chat that resulted in a meeting with Lorne’s partner Juanita. Lorne and Juanita are two of the nicest people in the world and both incredibly clever at what they do.
However, it’s Juanita’s skill I want to highlight in this post.
Lorne mentioned that his partner liked to photograph women. And by God is she good at it.
But Juanita is not just a good photographer, she is brilliant. She brings out the essence of the person that she is shooting. Their strength, their vulnerability, the different ways that they want to be seen in the world.
Recently I was surprised and flattered to be asked if I would like a shoot. YES!
Then came concerns and fears that I am oh so familiar with… I can’t do this I’m too old too fat too unattractive. I don’t have anything nice to wear… I don’t think that I can do this…
I am not surprised that a whole lot of unhealthy emotions arose, but I didn’t really expect them either. When I think about my ‘personal brand’ I can’t help but ask myself “how did I end up in public relations?”
It was an odd career choice for someone who grew up with a mother who freely admits that she doesn’t like people. Therefore, our family had little to do with people. Few visits and fewer visitors and less than brilliant social skills.
My choice of career became clearer to me when a friend asked “How come you’re not in the media? Isn’t that your job? “I explained that it wasn’t about me, it was about helping my clients to get stories in the media (or stay out of the media). I loved the strategy, the liaison, the facilitating others into the media, while I stayed clear of the public eye.
So now, my personal brand was starting to take on a much more public hue.
Key Learnings
Post 4 in the series is what I learned from my photo shoot experience
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]]>The post Finding my Brand – Part 2 in a series appeared first on Agility Communications.
]]>This was new for everyone and there was no-one else in my community working with social media the way I was. It was becoming something that I was known for. However, once again, that was happening without any conscious intent from me. Having only recently learnt my lesson, I spent some time trying to decide if this was something that I wanted to do or if it was just a distraction.
I worked in media and media was changing at an incredible rate. My journalist contacts were losing their jobs and becoming PR consultants themselves. Writing for business was still required but more and more, this was writing for digital mediums and online audiences.
I had just decided that this was the direction that I wanted to go in when I was asked to become a social media facilitator and mentor for Federation University. A new 3 year federally funded program, Digibiz wanted small to medium business to be using the Internet for business when the NBN came to their neighbourhood.
I went on to deliver many workshops on social media in my community, but also to another four local government areas in the region. I mentored many small businesses in strategy, practical uses and application of social media and met many of the local businesses that I had not until now known.
I was in front of businesses, I was becoming known, I was successful and I decided that yes, social media was on the ascendancy and so important to the goals my clients had, that I would continue to do this work that I loved, was good at and could become part of my personal brand.
Not the only thing I did, not the only thing that I wanted to do, but something that I was passionate about and that I enjoyed.
Key learnings
Thank you to Helen Thompson and
This is part two in a four part series on developing my personal brand.Part three will be available shortly.
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]]>The post My experience of Personal Branding -The first in a series appeared first on Agility Communications.
]]>Personal brand is something that has excited my thinking for a few years now. I have worked with entrepreneurs, artists and business people on their personal brand and I love that it is one of the services that I offer.
But it wasn’t always thus.
Seventeen years ago I moved from Melbourne to a small farm just outside a busy tourist town 100 or so km’s away. For a few years, I commuted to my job as PR Manager for a national organisation creating and implementing strategies along with my team of five.
After a while, I realised that although I had moved to paradise, I spent very little time there and knew few people, because the bulk of my time was travelling to or from my Melbourne job. So, I took a plunge, left a well-paid job to start up on my own. Something that I had never considered doing before.
Ascend Public Relations and Communications was the result and for a while my previous employer kept giving me work that I could do from home so I was in a good position while I started the planning and marketing process.
My business moved forward very slowly. So slowly, sometimes it felt like I was going backwards. I was unknown in an industry where word of mouth is very important and where, at least in the immediate area, most businesses were small and on tight budgets.
My major concern was income. I had a mortgage, 20 acres, cows, and horses – and they are expensive!
This was the background to my first BIG mistake in personal branding. I was encouraged to tender for some community consultation work for the local Shire. It was work that I was skilled at from a long and varied career, I jumped at the opportunity – a chance to meet the community, a chance to earn some income. I loved the project and soon after tendered to do the same thing in another town in the Shire.
What had not occurred to me was that this was the work the public were seeing. This is what they thought that I did. They had no way of knowing that this was a stopgap for me. Good honest work, but not what I did.
The next mistake was that while looking for work, I offered my services for little or no cost to community organisations. I still do this, it is very much a part of my ‘brand’ but I am more discriminating about where my effort will have the greatest impact and how much I can do without compromising my paid work or undervaluing the work that I do.
None of these things occurred to me when I was thinking of my brand.
I was to go on and create a second business, same services, different audience about 5 years later, potentially very confusing to my audience. But I had learned from these experiences and mitigated the confusion wherever possible. And, I built a much stronger personal brand in the process.
My Key Learnings:
This is the first of the series in my own personal brand process you can see the next three posts here
Meet Juanita at Broderick Photography
https://www.facebook.com/broderickphotography.com.au/
https://www.linkedin.com/in/juanita-broderick-9aa856100/
https://www.instagram.com/broderickphotography/?hl=en
The post My experience of Personal Branding -The first in a series appeared first on Agility Communications.
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