
After polling several well-educated young professionals about their personal brand statement, I realized that there are still many individuals who don’t understand how to use personal branding. Your statement is not a mission statement or job title, but rather your “catchphrase” if you will about your specific expertise. If you don’t have much experience at something, then it can be about an area that you want to become an expert in so long as you don’t exaggerate. Limit yourself to only one sentence for your personal branding statement. Since there are still many people who are unaware of the need to create a personal brand regardless of the industry, then having a great one may just be the edge needed to win out over the competition.
Here are seven tips to write a winning personal brand statement.
- List your attributes. This may seem a little bit too simple, but when you are trying to find some quality or skill that only you and a few other people have it really helps a lot. The goal here is to find the one or two things that separate you from your competition and make you unique.
- Choose an audience. Creating a statement that is too broad and undirected at any particular group will most likely alienate many of your potential employers. Since the purpose of a personal brand statement is to briefly list your primary skills, it is necessary to target the industry where those skills are most useful.
- Be honest. It is tempting to exaggerate about your abilities, but this is not the place to do that. Don’t say you’re “the best” or a “leader in the field of…” unless you actually are. Keep in mind that the brand statement is only supposed to get people interested, and not say everything about your professional career. Hopefully, with a good sentence an employer will want to know about you.
- Make it memorable. Even though you want it to stand out, remember that using excessively large or technical words may alienate your audience. The statement of your brand should be something that others can remember easily since you need to be able to use it whenever a networking opportunity arises (baseball game, elevator, social function, etc). Try telling it to a friend or significant other one time and see if he or she can easily recall the entire sentence. If so, you’re off to a good start.
- Make your self-impression = other’s impression. If you have trouble brainstorming personal skills, ask close friends or co-workers what they think your strengths are. Even after you’ve decided on a statement, it is a good idea to check with a friend to make sure that your idea of yourself matches what others think of you.
- Market yourself. I cannot emphasize this fact enough, when looking for a job you have to be willing to be your own advocate. A personal brand statement will not help you much if you are not telling people what it is. Have a personal website, or at the very least use social networking sites like facebook, twitter, LinkedIn, etc to reach potential employers and use your professional statement. Make sure to keep it consistent across platforms, however, because using the same sentence every time will help others remember it and associate it with you. Having a short brand statement means that you will be able to market yourself quickly whenever a chance for networking arises (on the subway, for instance).
- Be flexible. Even though it’s time consuming, your personal branding statement should be revised at least once a year to reflect changes and advancements in your professional career. In order to be effective, it needs to stay current.
Don’t procrastinate creating your statement. Since it is such a powerful marketing tool, you are going to want to spend enough time on it to make it fantastic and ensure that it projects exactly the image of you that you want. Eventually, personal branding statements will be as common as a resume or reference list, but for now, it’s a sure way to get you noticed as a competitive applicant who is capable of keeping up with current self-marketing trends and using them to advantage.
For more articles about personal branding and personal brand statements check out these posts:
- Top 7 Must-Read Personal Branding Books
- My personal brand
- the elevator pitch – you have 6 seconds for your personal branding statement
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Bethany Stringer is a graduate of Texas A&M University (class of ‘08) and has her B.A. in English Literature with minors in History and Psychology. Writing her first story at the age of 5 (with help from Mom), Bethany still enjoys writing and researching about everything from business and history to travel and fiction. Enamored with languages, she plans to teach English in Russia in 2010 as a CELTA certified teacher. She owned her own business working horses when she was 17, and still loves riding her horse Romeo. Always appreciating a challenge, she loves sea kayaking and prefers Rachmaninov to Bach.


