Platform Thinking in Personal Branding

Platform Thinking The first secret trick about personal branding is that first, you have to be known for something. One thing. First. If Gary Vaynerchuk tried starting Wine Library TV and Obsessed TV at the same time, I know for a fact he’d have failed and we wouldn’t know about him. Or worse than failed, he’d have done a mediocre job.

The challenge, as it were, is to build from a base, and then quickly show the breadth of your capabilities, all tied into an easy-to-consume story.

First Step: Be Damned Good at Something

You already are damned good at something. You just might not yet be choosing to acknowledge that. My dad is really good at poker. Justin Kownacki is damned good at web video. It can be whatever, but you have to start somewhere. Madonna started at music. She became an actor, a record producer, a fashion person, etc. But she started at music.

If you start at being known for being damned good for something, everything else gets a little easier. The related problem to this, however, is becoming pigeonholed. If everyone only thought of Christopher S. Penn as a financial aid marketer, that would hamper his forward growth. Thankfully, Chris counters this quite effectively by being part of the Marketing Over Coffee team, and by presenting outside the financial sphere.

But that relates again to platform thinking as well.

Diversify With a Unified Story

Gary Vaynerchuk started with Wine Library TV, where he speaks passionately about food. He launches ObsessedTV, with Samantha Ettus as a host, where it’s a passionate show about people. Gary could be boiled down to being a passionate marketer using the new channels of the web to drive response. He could launch a food enthusiast site, a car enthusiast site, a clothing site, and we’d all see the line.

Richard Branson does it similarly in the big leagues. Virgin has launched several brands, some of them successful, and others dismal. But his passion and the unifying theme is: I can do it better. We want to get behind that. I know many VirginUSA air travel customers who swear by the service. We know what to expect at Virgin Music. It’s a package of a story that diversifies.

The Arc of Your Personal Brand

Your personal brand has phases and arcs, such that you start by being known for something, you branch into some new territories with clear bridges from where you were to where you’re going next, and such that people can start to glean where you’ll go after that second hop. The trick of that is maintaining focus, and by keeping each hop somewhat closely joined.

You can’t do it all. It doesn’t matter that you have 14 interests. What matters is building from the position of what you do damned well, and tying it to where you want to go for a next hop. Don’t plan too far past the next hop. Work on maybe two or three brand extensions tops at any time. What do I mean by that?

In the personal branding perspective, let’s say that you’re an IT professional who gets known for his enthusiasm for writing about emerging technology. He’s pretty good, gets picked up by a lot of blogs to write for them, and becomes known in his space for finding interesting things and talking about them. Writing a book about his passion for blues music might not really get that “brand transfer” benefit, because it’s far afield of what he is known for doing.

The arc of my own personal brand looks like this:

  • Known for personal media making and PodCamp.
  • Known for working with bigger companies on social media strategy and execution.
  • Known for building new marketing methodologies for others to follow.
  • Known for writing about emerging business communications and community-meets-tech.

Something like that. I’m somewhere between 2 and 3 on that list. The challenge, as always, is knowing to say no to the extraneous things that don’t build on this arc. I love comic books, and would love to write for a comic book company. I’m a reasonable guitarist. I’m a decent artist. I like lots of things that don’t fit neatly into those arcs listed above. So they go to the side. I use them as hobbies and passions instead of career. And I don’t give them as much attention as the main storyline.

Platform Thinking and You

Can you plot the arc of your brand? Did you notice that I didn’t talk about a particular job or role? Don’t ever plan your brand around your job role, least of all in this current economy. Work from the perspective of what you can do well, what you want to do next, and how you can build out from a strong core into your new spaces.

What would the arc of your brand look like? How do you think that’s reflected in your blog, your website, your LinkedIn profile, your web presence overall? Will everything I find about you on the web reinforce this arc concept?

If not, will it soon, now that we’ve talked about it?

Related posts:

  1. My Best Advice About Personal Branding
  2. Thinking About Branding
  3. The Real Power of Personal Branding
  4. 100 Personal Branding Tactics Using Social Media
  5. Personal Branding

ChrisBrogan.com runs on the Genesis Framework

Genesis Theme Framework

The Genesis Framework empowers you to quickly and easily build incredible websites with WordPress. Whether you're a novice or advanced developer, Genesis provides you with the secure and search-engine-optimized foundation that takes WordPress to places you never thought it could go.

With automatic theme updates and world-class support included, Genesis is the smart choice for your WordPress website or blog.

Become a StudioPress Affiliate

  • http://www.customerflypaper.com/word-of-mouth-magic Bolaji – CustomerFlyPaper.com

    Chris,

    Indeed. City Slickers said it best.
    The key to life is finding your one thing.

    “But what is that one thing?”

    That’s for you to find out.
    Niche selection is hard for most people. It’s like the single dating guy syndrome. “If I get settled down, the other 3 billion women in the world who want a piece of me will be deprived! I’d better play the field some more.”

    Pick a niche you’re passionate about. Go deep in that niche. Persevere through the dip. All the great success stories (including Chris Brogan) went through failure, rejection, and self-doubt. But stayed focused on a niche.

    And now you know – the rest of the story.

  • http://www.customerflypaper.com/word-of-mouth-magic Bolaji – CustomerFlyPaper.com

    Chris,

    Indeed. City Slickers said it best.
    The key to life is finding your one thing.

    “But what is that one thing?”

    That’s for you to find out.
    Niche selection is hard for most people. It’s like the single dating guy syndrome. “If I get settled down, the other 3 billion women in the world who want a piece of me will be deprived! I’d better play the field some more.”

    Pick a niche you’re passionate about. Go deep in that niche. Persevere through the dip. All the great success stories (including Chris Brogan) went through failure, rejection, and self-doubt. But stayed focused on a niche.

    And now you know – the rest of the story.

  • http://dannybrown.me Danny Brown

    Love this post Chris.

    Not just for the reason that it gives some really great perspectives and views on how you can work on your personal brand, and expand it. But also for the sheer fact that it acknowledges personal branding.

    I’ve been reading a lot of blog posts this week from people decrying the fact that there is such a thing as personal branding. They’ve been using the dictionary definition of “brand” and pointed out that this means there’s no such thing as personal branding.

    But me? I do business with people. The service and the product is important, but at the end of the day it’s whether or not I trust the person behind these two things that make me decide whether to hook up with them.

    That’s personal branding. If you convince me through your actions and persona that you’re someone I can deal with, you’ve just used personal branding to do so.

    Cheers big guy.

  • http://dannybrown.me Danny Brown

    Love this post Chris.

    Not just for the reason that it gives some really great perspectives and views on how you can work on your personal brand, and expand it. But also for the sheer fact that it acknowledges personal branding.

    I’ve been reading a lot of blog posts this week from people decrying the fact that there is such a thing as personal branding. They’ve been using the dictionary definition of “brand” and pointed out that this means there’s no such thing as personal branding.

    But me? I do business with people. The service and the product is important, but at the end of the day it’s whether or not I trust the person behind these two things that make me decide whether to hook up with them.

    That’s personal branding. If you convince me through your actions and persona that you’re someone I can deal with, you’ve just used personal branding to do so.

    Cheers big guy.

  • http://niclasstrandh.com deeped

    And the personal brand is much more important, and the importance will rise when social media and conversation marketing become mainstream way to engage with customers I believe.

  • http://niclasstrandh.com deeped

    And the personal brand is much more important, and the importance will rise when social media and conversation marketing become mainstream way to engage with customers I believe.

  • http://www.marclougee.wordpress.com Marc Lougee

    Great post, Chris!
    Brilliant, as usual. Thanks for the insight and branding wisdom. Much needed in the current scenario.

    Bolaji’s comment to Chris’ post is a great read as well; again, wonderful insight and wisdom for us all.
    Cheers, Marc

  • http://www.marclougee.wordpress.com Marc Lougee

    Great post, Chris!
    Brilliant, as usual. Thanks for the insight and branding wisdom. Much needed in the current scenario.

    Bolaji’s comment to Chris’ post is a great read as well; again, wonderful insight and wisdom for us all.
    Cheers, Marc

  • http://sergetheconcierge.com Serge Lescouarnec

    Chris
    Can you give me your take on what strenghts and weaknesses the ‘serge the concierge’ brand has in your eyes
    Thanks
    Serge

  • http://sergetheconcierge.com Serge Lescouarnec

    Chris
    Can you give me your take on what strenghts and weaknesses the ‘serge the concierge’ brand has in your eyes
    Thanks
    Serge

  • Jenifer Olson

    You always give me something interesting to think about, and this post is no exception. It’s a great reminder to focus on my key strengths — those things I am good at and passionate about — when building/communicating my personal brand. Thank you!

  • Jenifer Olson

    You always give me something interesting to think about, and this post is no exception. It’s a great reminder to focus on my key strengths — those things I am good at and passionate about — when building/communicating my personal brand. Thank you!

  • http://brainsonfire.com/blog/ geno

    Chris, I think I really struggle with the personal brand thing… I’ve actually discussed this with John Moore about what I want to write about on our blog. Your take makes me re-think a bit about my mashed-up arc of passions and not playing up what I’m damn good at. Thanks for an insightful, and motivating post!

  • http://brainsonfire.com/blog/ geno

    Chris, I think I really struggle with the personal brand thing… I’ve actually discussed this with John Moore about what I want to write about on our blog. Your take makes me re-think a bit about my mashed-up arc of passions and not playing up what I’m damn good at. Thanks for an insightful, and motivating post!

  • http://www.toysoldiergames.com Mick Galuski

    Chris, fantastic post! Thank you.

    “The Power of a Brand is inversely related to the Breadth of a Brand.”

  • http://www.toysoldiergames.com Mick Galuski

    Chris, fantastic post! Thank you.

    “The Power of a Brand is inversely related to the Breadth of a Brand.”

  • http://www.susanhare.com Susan Hare

    Chris:
    I work with a lot of not-on-the-new-york-times-bestselling-list authors and it’s challenging to get them to wrap their arms around personal branding. They’d rather I ask them to drink curdled milk. Thanks for putting the issue in author-speak. We all love a good story arc. Now please come up with a synonym for branding that does not remind the uninitiated of cattle.

  • http://www.susanhare.com Susan Hare

    Chris:
    I work with a lot of not-on-the-new-york-times-bestselling-list authors and it’s challenging to get them to wrap their arms around personal branding. They’d rather I ask them to drink curdled milk. Thanks for putting the issue in author-speak. We all love a good story arc. Now please come up with a synonym for branding that does not remind the uninitiated of cattle.

  • http://www.matthewrayscott.com Matthew Ray Scott

    Chris, my favorite blog post year to date.

    I don’t have a ton to contribute beyond the great comments already mentioned, other than the visual metaphor of “The Arc of Personal Branding” helped me to visualize the evolution & confirmation of one’s personal brand.

  • http://www.matthewrayscott.com Matthew Ray Scott

    Chris, my favorite blog post year to date.

    I don’t have a ton to contribute beyond the great comments already mentioned, other than the visual metaphor of “The Arc of Personal Branding” helped me to visualize the evolution & confirmation of one’s personal brand.

  • brian

    first time I really dug into your blog and wow – black gold & Texas tea all spoutin’ with the first big dig. love the arc storyline – especially as it applies to constructing a personal narrative to focus, capture and hold attention. and even better, in service of getting more meaning out of our lives.
    love it and look fwd to being a collaborator on this energyline.

  • brian

    first time I really dug into your blog and wow – black gold & Texas tea all spoutin’ with the first big dig. love the arc storyline – especially as it applies to constructing a personal narrative to focus, capture and hold attention. and even better, in service of getting more meaning out of our lives.
    love it and look fwd to being a collaborator on this energyline.

  • http://www.softwarebloat.com Robert Boyd

    Great post Christ. So much value in this.

  • http://www.softwarebloat.com Robert Boyd

    Chris* too. woops =)

  • http://www.softwarebloat.com Robert Boyd

    Great post Christ. So much value in this.

  • http://www.softwarebloat.com Robert Boyd

    Chris* too. woops =)

  • http://www.theseboots.travel Julie Ovenell-Carter

    Trying to walk this timely talk right now in the course of reinventing myself from a print-based travel writer to a web-based travel writer. Had to learn the “focus, focus, focus” part on my own–wish I’d read this post first! But you’re absolutely right: when you allow yourself to be “damned good at something,” that reputation will carry you through many professional iterations. Love your tips and thanks!

  • http://www.theseboots.travel Julie Ovenell-Carter

    Trying to walk this timely talk right now in the course of reinventing myself from a print-based travel writer to a web-based travel writer. Had to learn the “focus, focus, focus” part on my own–wish I’d read this post first! But you’re absolutely right: when you allow yourself to be “damned good at something,” that reputation will carry you through many professional iterations. Love your tips and thanks!

  • http://www.theviewfromoutsidemytinywindow.blogspot.com Reggie Greene / The Logisticia

    People frequently ask me why I call myself “The Logistician.” I want to be known as someone who can get things done. No matter the conflicting views and positions taken the parties, through the application of common sense, I can always find a solution to a dispute. With the possible exception of the Isreali-Palestinian issue. That’s my brand.

    I am sure that it could use further refinement, but that is my starting point. Thanks for making me think about some other aspects to personal branding.

  • http://www.theviewfromoutsidemytinywindow.blogspot.com Reggie Greene / The Logistician

    People frequently ask me why I call myself “The Logistician.” I want to be known as someone who can get things done. No matter the conflicting views and positions taken the parties, through the application of common sense, I can always find a solution to a dispute. With the possible exception of the Isreali-Palestinian issue. That’s my brand.

    I am sure that it could use further refinement, but that is my starting point. Thanks for making me think about some other aspects to personal branding.

  • http://timandren.com Tim Andren

    Seems the way things are trending that we’re moving to a culture of personal brands even for non-entrepeneurs. I spent years working out what I wanted to stand for only to have it right smack dab in front of my face.

    If you haven’t figured out your niche, don’t be discouraged. Sometimes we have to turn over every rock to make sure. It’s certainly worth it.

  • http://timandren.com Tim Andren

    Seems the way things are trending that we’re moving to a culture of personal brands even for non-entrepeneurs. I spent years working out what I wanted to stand for only to have it right smack dab in front of my face.

    If you haven’t figured out your niche, don’t be discouraged. Sometimes we have to turn over every rock to make sure. It’s certainly worth it.

  • http://encourageachild.org Karol Hansen

    When your driving in the fog, it helps to follow the red tail lights in front of you. Thanks, Chris, for blazing the trail and leaving your lights on for us to follow.

  • http://www.qureshimedia.com adam

    the post is a bit confusing to me ? its clearly written , it’s the application of “how to” apply it to me ? i’ve started my own company and now i want to start a blog i’ve got so many interest and i’m really passionate about them !! branding , identity , web design , interenet marketing ! social media marketing , entrepreneurship ! what do i write about ? i guess i write about what ever makes me excited ? would that be it ?

  • http://encourageachild.org Karol Hansen

    When your driving in the fog, it helps to follow the red tail lights in front of you. Thanks, Chris, for blazing the trail and leaving your lights on for us to follow.

  • http://www.qureshimedia.com adam

    the post is a bit confusing to me ? its clearly written , it’s the application of “how to” apply it to me ? i’ve started my own company and now i want to start a blog i’ve got so many interest and i’m really passionate about them !! branding , identity , web design , interenet marketing ! social media marketing , entrepreneurship ! what do i write about ? i guess i write about what ever makes me excited ? would that be it ?

  • http://justinkownacki.blogspot.com/ Justin Kownacki

    So THAT’S what I’m known for! And here I thought it was my astounding inability to never grow a full beard…

    Kidding aside, my appendix to your post: what YOU think you’re known for isn’t always what you ARE known for. It helps to know which aspects of your multifaceted personhood are resonating with which audiences.

  • http://justinkownacki.blogspot.com/ Justin Kownacki

    So THAT’S what I’m known for! And here I thought it was my astounding inability to never grow a full beard…

    Kidding aside, my appendix to your post: what YOU think you’re known for isn’t always what you ARE known for. It helps to know which aspects of your multifaceted personhood are resonating with which audiences.

  • http://www.qureshimedia.com adam

    Justin, i thank you for the clarification! your appendix makes sense ! so i put it out there and start to listen to what get’s buzz ! then i can find my niche ! and drill down the core and with time become and or be viewed as an expert . Very interesting

  • http://www.qureshimedia.com adam

    Justin, i thank you for the clarification! your appendix makes sense ! so i put it out there and start to listen to what get’s buzz ! then i can find my niche ! and drill down the core and with time become and or be viewed as an expert . Very interesting

  • http://www.gosmart4u.com/ Candis Hidalgo

    Chris, I love this post. I love it because people are not one dimensional… how boring and uninteresting would that be? How boring and uninteresting would I be, would you be?! You see an opportunity that would build on your brand, expand your business, and increase your profits? Take it!

  • http://www.gosmart4u.com/ Candis Hidalgo

    Chris, I love this post. I love it because people are not one dimensional… how boring and uninteresting would that be? How boring and uninteresting would I be, would you be?! You see an opportunity that would build on your brand, expand your business, and increase your profits? Take it!

  • http://www.ryancmiller.com ryancmiller

    Chris,
    Again, great post. Just as an aside, earlier in the week I was thinking about this same thing and penned a quick post on my own blog about Gary’s diversification. He responded to that post on his own blog via video using it as a platform to talk about monetizing, and how more eyeballs just show your true colors.

    Here’s the original post: http://bit.ly/8RR1f

    And here’s a link to a post with an Embed of Gary’s Response: http://bit.ly/ixjsp

    It may give your readers some additional information, but in either case I think his response was a great example of knowing and monitoring your brand.

    @ryancmiller

  • http://www.ryancmiller.com Ryan Miller

    Chris,
    Again, great post. Just as an aside, earlier in the week I was thinking about this same thing and penned a quick post on my own blog about Gary’s diversification. He responded to that post on his own blog via video using it as a platform to talk about monetizing, and how more eyeballs just show your true colors.

    Here’s the original post: http://bit.ly/8RR1f

    And here’s a link to a post with an Embed of Gary’s Response: http://bit.ly/ixjsp

    It may give your readers some additional information, but in either case I think his response was a great example of knowing and monitoring your brand.

    @ryancmiller

  • samantha myers

    chris, sounds a little self serving, like building your brand by talking about building brands

  • samantha myers

    chris, sounds a little self serving, like building your brand by talking about building brands

  • http://www.timjahn.com/blog Tim Jahn

    This is something that’s always on my mind because I love so many different activities and skills, it’s hard to focus. I like your approach though. Concentrate on one aspect at a time and transition from one to the next.

    Thanks for the insight into your arc. I’m still working on mine :)

  • http://www.timjahn.com/blog Tim Jahn

    This is something that’s always on my mind because I love so many different activities and skills, it’s hard to focus. I like your approach though. Concentrate on one aspect at a time and transition from one to the next.

    Thanks for the insight into your arc. I’m still working on mine :)

  • http://www.thepersonalbrandcoach.com the personal brand coach™

    Chris – This was forwarded to me by a client and I must say I definitely agree with you. One thing that people don’t realize is that creating a niche doesn’t mean you have to stay small. There are times where it’s important to focus on a smaller audience and yet creating a niche can actually serve to expand your audience. In either case, you’re going to benefit. I’m also a big believer in finding your authentic brand. If you focus on who you are authentically, the success will actually sustain itself. Trust me – I helped a celebrity build a hugely successful brand that wasn’t authentic and it worked for a few years until it crashed. That was the turning point in my career and how I found my authentic brand!

    Thanks, Chris, for how well you articulated everything. Great stuff.

    Wendy Newman, M.A.
    the personal brand coach™

  • http://www.thepersonalbrandcoach.com the personal brand coach™

    Chris – This was forwarded to me by a client and I must say I definitely agree with you. One thing that people don’t realize is that creating a niche doesn’t mean you have to stay small. There are times where it’s important to focus on a smaller audience and yet creating a niche can actually serve to expand your audience. In either case, you’re going to benefit. I’m also a big believer in finding your authentic brand. If you focus on who you are authentically, the success will actually sustain itself. Trust me – I helped a celebrity build a hugely successful brand that wasn’t authentic and it worked for a few years until it crashed. That was the turning point in my career and how I found my authentic brand!

    Thanks, Chris, for how well you articulated everything. Great stuff.

    Wendy Newman, M.A.
    the personal brand coach™