Archive for the ‘Branding’ Category
Alumni & Online Personal Branding, Part 2: Professionalize your Social Networks
In my last post, I focused on the need for college alumni to clean up their Facebook pages, Twitter feeds and blogs. In today’s highly-competitive and unpredictable job environment, you can’t afford to have potential employers come across negative or incriminating information on your social networks (particularly photos). If you haven’t done so already, it’s time to clean house.
This morning I want to write about the next step in evolving your social sites into positive and dynamic networking tools: professionalize.
What does that mean? Well, if you haven’t figured out by now that social networks play a commanding role in 21st century personal branding, it’s time to take a crash course in reality. Like it or not, Facebook matters in the business world. So do LinkedIn, blogging and a host of other “new media” channels. These are robust, highly compelling tools to use in your networking and job searching endeavors. So you must professionalize your social networks—you must develop them into qualified, focused sites that employers, coworkers, interviewers, former professors and colleagues will respect, value and share with others. However, you don’t have to turn all your social networks into stale, emotionless resumes. You can still use Facebook and Twitter for personal or social reasons…just be aware that employers and business people will see your sites. You want them to look great.
(The following suggestions are for those that already have existing social networks, like Twitter, Facebook or LinkedIn. If you currently don’t use any social networks, but want to start building your social media presence, go here.)
Upload good profile pictures. Online profile pictures can make significant first impressions on potential employers and others. You definitely don’t want a photo of your recent drunken late-night escapade greeting every visitor to your social networks. Your Facebook profile photo doesn’t have to be uber-professional, but it should be well-cropped and likable. LinkedIn profile shots can have a more professional feel, depending on your industry. Make sure your Twitter profile picture is cropped well and shows your face clearly (unless your Twitter page is based around a product or company). Remember, you’re branding yourself.
Maintain a well-written bio. Most social networks give you the option to include a small biography about yourself. Use this to your advantage! Include work and professional information about yourself on Facebook and especially LinkedIn. Bring some of the strongest parts of your resume over to your social networks. If you’re using Twitter, make your bio short, but full of key words that stand out to people searching about your industry.
Keep your blog focused. Maintaining a consistent, professional blog can be one of the most effective and rewarding online networking tools. If you do have a blog, make sure it caters to a specific industry or niche—and keep it focused! What is your expertise? Your greatest talent? Write about that, and little else. Whether its finance, politics, cooking or PR, keep your blog relevant to one industry. You’ll begin to attract readers from your field that will respect your writing and take notice of your skills. Your status as an opinion leader will grow—and that is a big deal to employers.
Fill out your LinkedIn profile. Build your summary, grow your contacts, ask for recommendations, use LinkedIn’s “Q & A” feature, etc, etc. Go here to learn how to grow and effectively utilize your LinkedIn presence. You really can use it as a great online resume.
Create a custom background on Twitter. This isn’t absolutely necessary, but it’s a nice addition to your Twitter presence, and could really impress potential employers and colleagues. Go here to learn how to get started.
Professionalize! Make your social networks attractive, interesting and, most importantly, impressive to potential employers. Remove all the childish rubbish and consistently update your profiles with genuine and professional content.
My next few posts will focus on specific social networks and how to use each one to build your personal brand. Stay tuned!
Post online content for your target market (and don’t apologize)

What is your target audience? Cater your posts to your niche.
Why do you use Twitter, Facebook or a blog? Are you trying to reach a specific niche, like business people, moms, teenagers or social media experts? Who do you want reading what you post? These are questions I recommend you ask yourself often to keep the correct perspective before posting different social messages.
Sometimes, as a social media professional, I find myself tweeting less of the things I find interesting (articles, videos, etc) because they’ve already been shared online by millions of people. For example, just look at the Mashable home page and you’ll see that hundreds and sometimes thousands of people tweet Mashable’s content regularly. I find myself less motivated to tweet this popular content because it seems like everyone has seen it already. But this is false! Just because I’ve read or seen a piece of content doesn’t mean the people who follow me have encountered it too.
In reality, it doesn’t matter if you post a piece of content someone may have already seen. The point is to post content that is interesting to you, and what you believe your audience will appreciate. I don’t care if some social media person sees my profile and thinks, “I’ve already read that.” Why? Because they’re not my target audience. My target audience includes the people who don’t read all of the social media blogs. They don’t have time to read the hundreds of interesting posts out there, so they come to me to read the ones I feel are the best. Why do they care? Because I consistently post things they like.
The moral of the story: no matter what industry you’re in, don’t forget that your target audience comes to you for updates. They’re not visiting all of the sites you’re visiting. They rely on you to sift through what’s good and what’s not.
Facebook and Twitter are not social media
You thought Facebook and Twitter were social media? Sorry, you’re wrong.
Social media, or as Olivier Blanchard put it, social communications (a label I like), is not a Facebook page, a Twitter account, or a blog. It’s not getting the most fans or followers. It’s not pushing a message out into the newest social network. It’s not putting little social networking logos on your web page. It’s not even posting regular content to your different accounts.
So what is social media/social communications? Here are a few ideas:
It’s being in the right spot
In order to reach your target markets you have to be where they are. Are they on Twitter? Are your markets on Facebook? Do your target markets read the newspaper? Do they respond to billboards? Do they watch television? Do they go to trade shows or congregate at certain events? Are you where your markets are? All forms of media today can be social. If you’re not communicating with your markets where your markets are located, you aren’t being social.
It’s integration
Once you know where you markets are, you need to integrate. If you aren’t convinced that Facebook is going to be around for very long then you need to click here. When it boils down to it, Facebook has over 450 million active user. There is a good chance your markets are on Facebook. Does that mean you stop pursuing traditional marketing efforts? No! It means you start using your traditional marketing efforts more effectively. Come up with ideas to use traditional methods that will point people to your different social networks. Tell people to communicate with your company on Facebook, on Twitter or on your corporate blog. As you invite them to some sort of an action, you will see more people coming to your pages to interact with you.
It’s listening
Now that your social networks are budding with activity, what are people saying? Are you listening on Twitter? Are people commenting on your blog? Are people saying things that make you uncomfortable? Are they unhappy with your product or are they raving about how amazing you are? Are you listening?
It’s changing
If you’re truly listening to people, then you’ll need to make changes. If people are saying bad things, then you obviously need to change. If they’re saying good things, then surprise people with something even better. If people aren’t saying anything, then you need to do something to get people talking. Here are a couple of great posts by Olivier you really need to read about how a company can listen and change using social media in a crisis: Greenpeace vs. Nestle part 1 and part 2.
It’s communicating
To truly use social media, you have to communicate with people. True communication is a two way dialogue. You can’t just push a message out and hope you see results. You have to find out what people want, what they’re saying and respond appropriately. We live in an age where people all over the world can be a part of a community. Regardless of the role you want to have in that community, if you’re going to be a part of it you’re going to have to communicate effectively.
If you don’t know how to communicate, how to listen, how to change, how to integrate new and traditional media, or if you don’t know where your markets are, then don’t waste time on social networks. Why? Because you’re probably going out of business.
Conan gave her a gift, but what should Sarah Killen do now?
It’s amazing the kind of power a celebrity holds. Conan O’Brien joined Twitter at the end of February and he already has over 630,000 followers. Okay, that’s no big deal. Conan is a celebrity. The real story is in what Conan has done to 19 year old Sarah Killen.
Here’s the short version of the story: On March 5th Conan decided to randomly follow one person on Twitter. He chose Sarah Killen, a.k.a. @lovelybutton. She immediately went from a few followers to almost 25,000 in six days…crazy. Click here to read more.
So what? Good for Sarah, no big deal right? Wrong. If Sarah is smart she will do something with this unexpected fame. If you watch this ABC report, you’ll see that she got a few things for her wedding. She is even encouraging people to donate to a cancer fund. That’s wonderful, but she needs to do something more. This is an amazing opportunity!
So Sarah, here are a few ideas on what you could do with your new-found fame:
- Start a blog: You already have thousands of people who are listening to what you’re saying on Twitter. As a result, you would get thousands of hits on your blog. You already have people sending you free stuff for your wedding, just think of how many people would pay you to have an ad in the sidebar of your blog. You could generate a pretty good income just from advertisements. Make sure your blog has focus and isn’t just a diary of your life. Make it about something of worth and it will grow instead of fading out when all of the hype dies down. If you’re not a good writer then take a writing class ASAP!
- Start a business: What do you like to do? What are you good at? Start a business and use your audience to help it grow.
- Become an unofficial spokesperson for a good cause: Pick a topic or cause that you’re passionate about. Maybe it’s helping to cure cancer. I’m sure the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation would love your help and support, and may even pay you to be an official spokesperson for them.
- Connect with other celebrities: You could try to connect with other comedians or celebrities. They may be interested in getting in on the joke. As they connect with you more people will follow you, which would increase your ability to influence.
Please be smart, Sarah! Do something more than just tweeting random stuff. You could do so much. Of course if you want more advice let me know!
Alumni & Online Personal Branding, Part 1: How spotless are your social networks?

It's finally time to clean up your social networks.
Over the last few years, two remarkably surprising and unpredictable phenomena have radically changed the way most Americans spend their time and lives. One is the rise of social media. The other is the Great Recession.
First, social media is quickly altering the way humans communicate and interact with one another. Don’t believe me? 95% of employers polled in a recent business survey say they use LinkedIn to attract job candidates. The United States government just eased sanctions on Iran and Cuba to encourage social media use among their citizens. CNN now sees Facebook as a bigger competitor than FOX News. And on and on it goes.
In the mean time, the economic recession has paralyzed millions of businesses, families and nations. It’s harder now for a recent college graduate to find a good job than it’s been in decades.
So what do these two changes have in common? It’s simple: College graduates must use social media to foster personal branding in order to beat the recession. But how?
I was going to spill out a half-dozen suggestions in this blog post today, but my wise business colleague suggested I create a series of posts that address this important issue, step by step. I gladly took his advice, and I’ll focus this morning on the importance of keeping your social networks clean and appropriate.
Clean up your social networks: A study last year revealed that 45% of employers use social networks like Facebook and MySpace to screen potential job candidates. That number is bound to increase as social media becomes even more widely used. What does that mean for you?
- Learn about privacy features on Facebook. I cannot tell you how many people I come across that have no idea that all their Facebook information, including phone numbers, private notes and embarrassing pictures, are public online. Educate yourself and make invisible sensitive information on Facebook.
- If you’re smart, you’ll simply erase any negative or compromising material on Facebook, especially photos. If your friends occasionally post inappropriate comments or pictures on your Facebook wall, see the link in the point above.
- If you have a blog, that is very good. But, like Facebook, make sure your blog is appropriate for all to see, including potential or current employers.
- Make sure spammers aren’t following you on Twitter. Block them. Oftentimes, spammers will use pornographic images in their profile pictures which are visible to someone looking at your Twitter followers.
- Abandon MySpace. It’s filthy and chaotic and ridden with 13-year-olds. It will do little, if anything, to further your career. Say goodbye and walk away.
In short, remember to make your social networks clean and don’t ever post anything online that could come back to embarrass or hurt you.
Over the next couple years, social media will become even more mainstream and will evolve and grow in ways we can’t yet predict. The recession will (hopefully) wither away into oblivion, like the Wicked Witch of the West slowly melting in a pool of oozy water. Those transformations are good, but it highlights the point that the time to use social media to establish your personal brand is now. The world, as it recovers from the economic downturn, will not wait for you to catch up.
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