How To Use Personal Branding To Turn Your Failure Into Opportunities
Blessing Okebe
?? Corporate Event Host, Panel Moderator & Red Carpet Host ?? Presenter ?? Enabling brands to build thought leadership, boost visibility, and shape perceptions through communications
We often hear about the? importance of showcasing our strength and accomplishment while building our personal brand but what about our mistake? What about the times when we failed, the times we wanted to give up or give in,? Why don’t we share these moments as well?
The truth is most mistakes can be frustrating, embarrassing, and even painful, but they are also an integral part of life. We all make mistakes, in our businesses, careers and personal lives, and while they can be difficult to navigate, they can also present opportunities for growth for us and inspiration for others.
Contrary to what some people think, sharing your mistakes and past failures actually shows how strong you are. They show what you’ve been through and make your journey a source of motivation to everyone going through a rough patch. With your failures, people can easily connect with your brand and this makes you relatable which is the spice of every brand that desires to stand out.
Before you go sharing your mistakes, there are a couple of things you must know? to protect yourself, inspire your audience and attract your desired opportunities.
They are:
Embrace Your Mistake
The first step in leveraging mistakes for your personal brand is to embrace them. Don’t beat yourself up about them but recognize that they? are a natural part of the learning process and that they can be a source of valuable lessons. Believe that they are only in your past to push you forward. Accept them and embrace them by doing this, you demonstrate vulnerability and authenticity, which can help to build trust and connection with your audience.
Acknowledge The Lessons
The second step is to learn from your mistakes. This involves reflecting on what went wrong, what you could have done differently, and what you can do to prevent similar mistakes in the future. If they are mistakes in your business or career, recognize the cost of it and adopt a growth mindset approach to see how you can turn them into opportunities for improvement, which can help to build your brand as a resilient professional or entrepreneur who learns from the past and moves on.
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Share The Lessons Not The Mistake
When you do the first two, this part becomes easier but must be done focusing on the outcome of your failure and not the failure itself.
Create content around the lessons you learned from that mistake or failure and how you are applying these lessons. If the application of these lessons have led to a win, use that to your advantage. This way you are not talking from a place of pity but of strength. You are using that mistake of yours to prevent others from making it, inspire people who have made it and teach them how to push through after making it.
The goal is to brand yourself based on what you learned from the failure? –? not the failure itself.
While sharing this you should focus on:
This way, you are:
Most importantly, it is coming from a place of strength and you don’t feel bad about your mistakes anymore because you’ve learnt from it and are now leveraging it to attract opportunities and connect with your audience. You are flipping the coin on failure and taking advantage of it.
In a world where perfection is often expected and mistakes are viewed as failures, it can be difficult to imagine how making mistakes can actually be a good thing. But with this article I have shown you that it is possible.? I have shown you that by leveraging the power of personal branding, you can turn your failures to opportunities.
I help brands, small businesses, and startups communicate with their audience effectively, converting them.
11 个月Thanks for sharing this.
Helping brands communicate their message COMPELLINGLY | Christian | Founder at I5ers | Brand Strategist
11 个月This article delivered on its promise. I gleaned valuable insights from it. Plus, the rendering was apt, simple, and relatable. Thanks for sharing Blessing.