4 Brands Entrepreneurs Need to Build

Entrepreneurs need branding advice more than ever before. I recently wrote a very popular article for Entrepreneur Magazine that received over eight hundred shares on social networks. It was an introduction to personal branding specifically for entrepreneurs. Most entrepreneurs focus on building their corporate brands, and forget about their own. The issue with this is that if you neglect to build your personal brand, and your company fails like most companies do (in the first two years), then you die with it. In order to increase your long-term success rate as an entrepreneur, you need to focus on four types of brands: yourself, your company, your concept, and your community. By thinking about all of these types of brands, you will start to realize how they are all interconnected, and that each can support one another.

1. Yourself

What are you an expert in? What do you want to be known for? Entrepreneurs need to align their brand with that of their company. For instance, I’m a personal branding expert, and my company specializes in helping individuals achieve career success through personal branding. It’s a fairly obvious connection that makes sense to my audience. This also works if you’re into personal finance, or human resources, or if you’re a doctor, lawyer, or any other type of profession. By building your personal brand as the go-to expert in your industry, it will be much easier for you to promote your company. An expert can be interviewed by radio, TV, magazines, blogs, etc, but a company can’t be interviewed. A corporate spokesperson is extremely important because the media, and your customers, want to hear your story and opinions.

2. Your company

As an individual, you can’t scale, but your company can. By getting your name out there, you have the opportunity to cite your company’s name. When you’re on TV, you can use your company to identify who you are. For example “Dan Schawbel, Founder of Millennial Branding.” The more your company gets recognized, or just cited, in the media the more brand awareness it will have. Your company, whether you have two or two hundred employees, can scale because your employees can become evangelists and spread your corporate gospel to a global audience using the internet.

3. Your concept

If you want to grow your business, as well as yourself as an expert in your industry, then you need to build your concept. By developing primary demand for your offerings, you will become more successful in the long-term. If more people understand and enjoy the concept of personal branding, it will help both myself and my company survive and thrive. If you’re in an industry where the concept has been around forever, then try and take a different approach than your competitors to create a brand new concept that you can own, but share. A well-known concept will help the top experts in that field more than anyone else, so it’s critical that you position yourself as the leader.

4. Your community

Your community is a group of people that support you and your company. There’s also an obvious connection between your community and your concept because the community is gathering together to talk about and spread your concept to more people. You need to activate members in your community, and engage with them, in order to keep your concept in the spotlight, and therefore your company, and yourself. You have to feed your community content and interact with them if you want them to remain because there are too many other choices that could divert their attention now.

Picture of Dan Schawbel

Dan Schawbel

Dan Schawbel is the Managing Partner of Millennial Branding, a Gen Y research and consulting firm. He is the New York Times and Wall Street Journal bestselling author of Promote Yourself: The New Rules For Career Success (St. Martin’s Press) and the #1 international bestselling book, Me 2.0: 4 Steps to Building Your Future (Kaplan Publishing), which combined have been translated into 15 languages.

TRENDING AROUND THE WEB

We treat being alone with our own thoughts as the easiest thing in the world, but when researchers left people in a bare room with nothing to do but think, many found it so unpleasant that some chose to give themselves a small electric shock rather than sit quietly with their minds

We treat being alone with our own thoughts as the easiest thing in the world, but when researchers left people in a bare room with nothing to do but think, many found it so unpleasant that some chose to give themselves a small electric shock rather than sit quietly with their minds

The Vessel

8 things nearly every 1970s house contained that quietly shaped how a whole generation handles love

8 things nearly every 1970s house contained that quietly shaped how a whole generation handles love

The Blog Herald

The Substack model was built on the idea that writers could own their audiences by moving them off platforms, and the writers who did it are now discovering that the email inbox is a platform with its own rules, its own deliverability decisions, and its own terms of service

The Substack model was built on the idea that writers could own their audiences by moving them off platforms, and the writers who did it are now discovering that the email inbox is a platform with its own rules, its own deliverability decisions, and its own terms of service

The Blog Herald

Saying sorry in person can be uncomfortable, but at least both people are in the discomfort together — online, one person is typing alone, and the other is reading alone, and for some that asymmetry may be the hardest part of all

Saying sorry in person can be uncomfortable, but at least both people are in the discomfort together — online, one person is typing alone, and the other is reading alone, and for some that asymmetry may be the hardest part of all

The Vessel

Your parents carry a version of the day you left home for good that they’ve never told you, and it is tender in ways the version you remember never was

Your parents carry a version of the day you left home for good that they’ve never told you, and it is tender in ways the version you remember never was

The Blog Herald

We brace before admitting a mistake or asking for help, sure it will look like weakness, but the very thing we are dreading tends to read to other people as courage — and it is mostly ourselves we are judging so harshly

We brace before admitting a mistake or asking for help, sure it will look like weakness, but the very thing we are dreading tends to read to other people as courage — and it is mostly ourselves we are judging so harshly

The Vessel