Introduction
What is a Brand Avatar and What Makes a Great Brand?
“What does your attitude proclaim
to the world about you today?
It is never too late to change your story, start by changing your thoughts, and pay attention to your attitude.”
– Bob Proctor
Standing out in a professional setting is key to helping people remember who you are, and to increasing your level of influence. In the professional realm of your office, there are multiple settings where you have the opportunity to make a mark. The question is, what kind of mark are you leaving? Are you that individual everyone wants on their team because of the qualities and skills that you bring, or are you the one that everyone hopes is assigned somewhere else?
Just a heads up, if you don’t know anyone who everyone tends to avoid working with, you are probably that person. It is possible to change that, but like anything else, it is going to involve making an effort to change your presentation, and thereby alter the perception that people have of you.
Think about your favorite online game or social media site. In those virtual worlds, where you can decide who you are, what you look like, and how you want to present yourself, your avatar becomes an extension of who you are and what you want to achieve. Now I want you to apply those same principles to your career. Building a brand avatar is about making conscious choices regarding how you want to present yourself, and the perception that you want to create. Online, you might be able to fake it, but in real life, you can’t fake it. Building a brand avatar is about being what they want online and offline, even if your true offline self does not exactly align with what they want.
When it comes to your career and professional advancement, you cannot ignore how they impact each other. Simply put, there is no divide between the aspects of your personal and professional lives. One will always reflect on the other. With that in mind, it is important to address who you are online and offline, and brand yourself, not only as you want to be perceived, but also based on what you want to achieve.
Whether you know it or not, everything is branding. From the clothes you wear, how you react to situations, and even what you eat, everything is a statement about your brand. In other books, I have said the same thing about marketing, but after working in marketing and branding for over 15 years in numerous industries, I can say the statement is correct for marketing and branding alike.
Marketing is to branding what an artist is to art. Marketing is all the combined efforts to solidify, maintain, or enhance your brand. Branding is the by-product of all those efforts. Many people think branding is limited to products or services, but remember, everything is branding. If everything is branding, then the way you market yourself for success is no exception. The way prospects, colleagues, clients, and competitors perceive you is a direct function of branding.
Misty was talented, and she had plenty of good ideas that would have created many opportunities for her company to expand their business. But Misty was also not a talker. In fact, most people thought she was standoffish, and so she wasn’t making the connections that she needed to advance in the company. Her company was full of loud and direct individuals who shared their ideas, and meetings included multiple points of view before decisions were made. Except one voice was rarely heard. You guessed it: Misty’s!
Now, do you think that her career was heading up like she planned? No, it wasn’t, simply because she was falling below the radar. Her company’s culture didn’t match up to parts of her personality and, instead of adapting, Misty was falling behind, and not feeling empowered to take the reins in her career.
Then Misty decided to make some changes. She was ready to take her career to a new place, but she realized that if she didn’t start sharing her ideas, that was never going to happen. It meant a change in mindset for Misty. Creating her brand avatar was about changing the perception that she didn’t have ideas, by being more vocal during meetings. She took the time to share and, once she did, her ideas started to get acknowledged. Her voice grew in the company, and it translated into a promotion. It wasn’t that Misty gained new skills or suddenly got better at her job. She just met the company culture where it was, and the result was that she contributed to her own success.
The problem with many people who fall short of their professional or personal goals is they overlook how others perceive them. Sometimes people view themselves in a light that the world does not see. Right or wrong, positive or negative, perception is reality; and how the outside world views you is your brand to them. Even as I entered the marketing industry, I at times also missed the importance and power of personal branding.
When I was in university, I had a chip on my shoulder, being one of the only people of color in the class. I would not network much with others, and usually stayed by myself and studied alone. For me, I thought everyone felt I was not worthy to be there. The reality was my personal brand was perceived as closed off, unfriendly, and a loner. It wasn’t until I had to work in groups that other students saw the real me. I was someone who enjoyed taking a lead in presentations, and I loved the marketing process.
During my career, I have missed out on countless opportunities because I had either discounted, dismissed, or plum forgot that 100% of my conduct, couture, and concepts should be branded consciously. I can remember when I was a marketing manager for a multimillion-dollar company that did not have a dress code. I loved it because I could come to work in jeans, and the company was focused on my output and not so much on my appearance. The mistake in that thinking was illustrated by the fact that even though the VP allowed for casual dress code, he wore suits every day. When he walked in the room, people noticed he was present, because he stood out. He dressed for success (and was a success), so the question was, what was I dressing for?
Truth be told, when I am home alone, there is nothing more comfortable than wearing a pair of jogging pants and a V-neck shirt. Now, I do own suits, but my comfort clothing is sports gear. On top of that, I love my hip-hop music. When I am driving home from almost any place in my car, you better believe I have old school hip hop playing (semi-loud I may add), with me nodding my head to the tunes coming out of the stereo. At the time, I worked at one of Canada’s top telecommunication companies, and if they had known the full extent of the true me, I am pretty sure they would not have hired me. To some degree, I was already a brand avatar.
For some, the idea of re-inventing themselves, or not being faithful to their true selves, seems almost impossible given their life’s reality. Well, the great news I bring to you today is this book should help provide you with the guidance and resources to become successful in any industry and, at the same time, allow you to be true to yourself. This is possible through the concept of creating your own avatar to be the vessel to your personal branding requirements. This book is for anyone who is looking for a change in the way they view themselves, or the way people view them.
Are you one of those people who can’t seem to understand why you never get that promotion when you are the most qualified?
Or maybe you are one of those people who feels like you never seem to fit into the cookie cutter mold that society or your profession has for you?
Lastly, you may be that person who has no interest in “selling out”, or not being yourself in the world. I find many individuals I have coached usually fall into one of those categories. Then there is another segment of people I coach, who have always played by the rules, who get promotions but look to supercharge their career and stand out within their respective industry. Whichever segment you best identify with, the ability to craft that perfect perception to display to the world will be your greatest asset in your quest for success in everything you do. Owning your brand avatar will accomplish just that for anyone willing to follow the instructions embedded on these pages.
What is an avatar? More importantly, what is a brand avatar? If you have not had the chance to watch the blockbuster movie, Avatar, by James Cameron, I urge you to do so to gain some more context on the topic of an Avatar. The premise of the movie was the ability of a soldier to transport his mind into the body of a genetically engineered host body, in order to blend in and interact with the natives of a foreign land.
A more detailed version is a soldier who lost the ability of his legs, but he used his ability to think and act like the enemy, as the main weapon to defeat the natives of a foreign land. This was accomplished by transporting the mind of the soldier into a body the army created to resemble the natives. Once his mind was in this vessel, he was able to walk, talk, look, and act like the natives, which allowed the army to gain intelligence on what would be required to defeat them and claim their land. By no means am I suggesting an avatar with negative connotations. Instead, I was highlighting that the ability to utilize an avatar is how someone was able to transform their reality and become a new person—one who...