How to Create Your Personal Brand | Part 4

The first three posts in this series, explored how you can begin creating your personal brand through having a few great brainstorm sessions, organizing your thoughts by creating a web diagram, showed you how to create your own self-hosted blog with some great how-to videos and then gave some tips on how to promote your personal brand.

This week’s post will give some quick tips on how you can monitor your personal brand and see the conversations taking place about you on the web.

Monitor the conversations

First, it’s important to understand that conversations are taking place all over the web. Everyday, millions of people read blogs, comment on them, write their own blog posts, tweet about content on Twitter, post links on Facebook and update their status. What is being said about you on the web is important because it helps to build or break down your personal brand. If you don’t know the conversations taking place about you on the web, you’re flying in the dark and missing out on critical information.

If you don’t know what’s being said about you on the web don’t fret. Remember, creating your personal brand is a process that you should continuously strive to improve. Monitoring your personal brand is just the next step in your brand’s evolution.

Two great personal brand monitoring tools

Google Alert: Allows you to set up an alert for any search term you desire. Make sure you set up a Google alert for your name. You will then be able to see anything that is said about you on the web. If you have a popular name, it’s even more important to begin building your personal brand so Google can start to index you and push you up its page rankings.

Twitter Search: Allows you to set up an alert for any search term you desire on Twitter. Again, make sure you set up an Twitter alert for your name. Now you will be notified anytime somebody tweets about your name or any other search term you’re interested in. If your going to monitor your name on Twitter make sure you add the @ in front of your account name.

From using these two monitoring tools, you will be able to see the conversations taking place about you on the web and in social networks. You can reach out to people who share the same interests or who like your work. You can also counter anything harmful being said about you that could have a negative impact on your personal brand. The key is that you will be in the know and have access to vital information to promote and protect your personal brand.

This is the last post in How To Create Your Personal Brand series and I hope you’ve found them helpful! For some more in depth tips on this series I highly recommend you read Dan’s new book Me 2.0: Build a Powerful Personal Brand to Achieve Career Success.

Next week, I will take a look out how the power of positive thinking can help build your personal brand.

Picture of Chad Levitt

Chad Levitt

Chad Levitt is the author of the New Sales Economy blog, which focuses on how Sales 2.0 & Social Media can help you connect, create more opportunities and increase your business. Chad is also the featured Sales 2.0 blogger at Sales Gravy, the number one web portal for sales pros, the professional athletes of the business world. During the day, Chad is an inside sales associate with EMC Corp., the global leader in information infrastructure technology & solutions, in their award winning sales development program. Chad attended the University of Central Florida for his undergraduate degree and Nova Southeastern University for his MBA with a concentration in finance.

TRENDING AROUND THE WEB

The childhood of the 60s and 70s had its own music: lawn mowers, ice cream trucks, transistor radios, bicycle spokes, and parents calling names into the evening

The childhood of the 60s and 70s had its own music: lawn mowers, ice cream trucks, transistor radios, bicycle spokes, and parents calling names into the evening

The Vessel

People raised in the 60s and 70s didn’t need a notification to know where their friends were — they just followed the sound of bicycles, screen doors, and someone’s mother calling from the porch

People raised in the 60s and 70s didn’t need a notification to know where their friends were — they just followed the sound of bicycles, screen doors, and someone’s mother calling from the porch

The Blog Herald

Neuroscientists studying silence found that noise degrades the brain in ways writers have always felt but never had a word for — and the mechanism is more specific than anyone expected

Neuroscientists studying silence found that noise degrades the brain in ways writers have always felt but never had a word for — and the mechanism is more specific than anyone expected

The Blog Herald

53% of Gen Z say becoming a creator is a viable career and the industry that used to mock that idea is now paying attention

53% of Gen Z say becoming a creator is a viable career and the industry that used to mock that idea is now paying attention

The Blog Herald

A 16-year study of 373 couples found whether they fought in year one made no difference to whether they divorced. What predicted it was something researchers had to watch very carefully to see.

A 16-year study of 373 couples found whether they fought in year one made no difference to whether they divorced. What predicted it was something researchers had to watch very carefully to see.

The Vessel

Edison Research finds podcasts now reach 58% of Americans monthly — which helps explain why Vox’s podcast network was worth acquiring at all

Edison Research finds podcasts now reach 58% of Americans monthly — which helps explain why Vox’s podcast network was worth acquiring at all

The Blog Herald