What Personal Branding Really Means at Work
Personal branding isn't about being loud or self-promotional. It's about being known for something specific. The person who gets promoted isn't always the best performer β it's the best performer who is also visible.
Step 1: Define Your Professional Identity
Complete this sentence: "I want to be known as the person who ___." Examples:
- "...turns complex data into actionable insights"
- "...builds and mentors high-performing engineering teams"
- "...drives product adoption through user-centric design"
Step 2: Create Visibility Without Being Annoying
1. Share Knowledge Publicly
Write internal blog posts, run lunch-and-learns, or create documentation that helps your team. This positions you as an expert without bragging.
2. Volunteer for Cross-Functional Projects
Working with other departments exposes you to new stakeholders and decision-makers. It's the fastest way to get your name in front of leadership.
3. Have a Signature Framework
Create a repeatable approach to solving problems and give it a name. "I use the RICE framework for prioritization" sounds much more authoritative than "I prioritize stuff."
Step 3: Build Your External Presence
- Post 2-3 times per week on LinkedIn (insights, not updates)
- Write one medium-length article per month on your area of expertise
- Comment thoughtfully on 5 industry posts per day (this builds network faster than posting)
Step 4: Get Sponsors (Not Just Mentors)
Mentors give advice. Sponsors put your name in rooms you're not in. To get a sponsor:
- Deliver exceptional work on their projects
- Make their life easier (anticipate needs)
- Ask: "Is there a project where I could have more impact?"
Common Mistakes That Hurt Your Brand
- β Talking about yourself without adding value
- β Complaining publicly (in meetings, on Slack)
- β Being unreliable β missing deadlines destroys brand
- β Staying silent in meetings β invisibility is the enemy