"You You You" is as Important as "Location Location Location"
Paul Segreto
Small Business, Franchising, Restaurants & Hospitality | Entrepreneurial Growth | Empowering Coach | Transformative Advisor | Visionary Strategist
Elan Musk has 94.8m followers on Twitter; Tesla has 15.6m. Bill Gates has 59.1m followers on Twitter; Microsoft has 10.7m. Even Mark Cuban has significantly more followers on Twitter at 8.6m than his own Dallas Mavericks at 2m. I probably could do a mic drop here to prove the point about personal branding being more front and center for entrepreneurs than the widely popular and well-known brands of which they are most associated.
Okay, I agree. Musk, Gates & Cuban are in a celebrity class and of course known to many, if not, to most anyone. But that wasn't always the case. Over the years they rose from entrepreneur status to influencer status. Think about the Kardashians or for that matter, any of the influencers today on You Tube or Tik Tok. All have built personal brands that influence people. Of course, besides associating their names with other brands, their rise in popularity significantly increases the awareness, and value of their own brands... and themselves.
“Your personal brand is a promise to your clients… a promise of quality, consistency, competency, and reliability."
– Jason Hartman
Before continuing my focus on entrepreneurs and personal branding, I'd like to make the point of how valuable a strong personal brand is for anyone in business today. In today's Digital Age, anyone - yes, anyone - can be seen as an influencer in their company, industry, or community. Sometimes, in all three.
Through social media, blogs, vlogs, videos, podcasts, e-publications and more, anyone can be visible to their target audience as well to audiences of which they might not even be aware. And influencers are often viewed as experts. Imagine interviewing for a job and the interviewer Googles your name and finds result after result that showcases your influence... and expertise?
Now let's shift back to entrepreneurs, including aspiring entrepreneurs. A strong personal brand goes a long way toward raising capital and attracting top talent. It also helps generate interest in the business or concept itself which in turn attracts customers or clients, as well as potential suitors for joint ventures, strategic partnerships... and how about private equity players?
An article at PersonalBrand.com lists seven reasons why a personal brand is important for an entrepreneur or business owner as follows:
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People want to do business with people. They buy from people. Sure, the brand may get them in the door, but it’s the person representing the brand that they want to do business with.
The bottom line is, it’s not uncommon for anyone interested in doing business with you today to perform a Google search of the brand or company AND the founder or other leaders of the brand or company. What they hope to find is information that lends to experience and expertise. (Even the banking industry is moving towards utilizing a social reputation score for business loan applicants that will rival the credit score.)
I'll use franchising as an example. I don’t think that it can be argued that a franchise organization with franchisees with strong personal branding wouldn’t be significantly stronger than a system with franchisees that just stand behind the counter.
I’m certainly not degrading the efforts of franchisees that strive for 100% customer satisfaction and are willing to put in long hours to ensure the same. But with a strong personal brand that reaches into the local community, franchisees would be more successful driving the business. I refer to this as GOYA marketing – Get Off Your Ass marketing. Here’s the great part of GOYA marketing… and again, in today’s digital world, much of the personal branding can be done online!
Personal branding is about YOU. The key to your success is YOU! Yes, I am a firm believer in location, location, location, and I always stress to not settle for a secondary location as that is a recipe for failure. But as important for me is to stress: YOU! YOU! YOU! Not doing so is more of a recipe for failure!
Have a great day. Make it happen. Make it count!
About the Author
Paul Segreto is the Founder, CEO & Visionary Entrepreneur at Acceler8Success Group, a business incubator and accelerator for current and aspiring entrepreneurs. Paul has been recognized as a Top Small Business Influencer by Fit Small Business, as a Top 100 Global Franchise Influencer by SEO Samba & 1851 Franchise Magazine, and as a Top 100 Champion Small Business Influencer by Small Business Trends & Small Biz Technology. He has achieved professional designations including Certified Franchise Executive, Certified Franchise Broker, and Certified Business Broker.
"I Came; I Saw; THEY PROFITED!"
2 年Paul, You have some good points to share, but I would like to add, "Customer, Customer, Customer," as the focus because without them, you have no business at all! In today's business management, there are too many, "Biden Brains," who have no concept of what their customers want and just make decisions that lead to disaster. Their choices are based on believing that it is not going to affect them, and their customers will just have to accept their ridiculous changes. Most other people with any common sense who work for those companies won't speak up or challenge them. They also surrender their job excitement and desire to make their companies special. So everyone loses from top-to-bottom and by the time the leader finally see what a mess their in now is usually too late to reverse the damages quickly. If you just look at today's advertising that is supposed to enhance companies and increase their loyal customers bases, you will notice how prevalent this situation is. I have a proposed campaign for a national consumer company that will make their branding stronger than it has been for many years, and deliver fast results without having to spend any more money, even save a lot,