Sunday, February 1, 2009

Personal Branding is Telling Authentic Stories

Lately, Ive been attempting to come to grips with telling my personal story more effectively. I know its important to tell a good story in order to have people remember you positively. But I didnt really understand the power of story telling until I read Seth Godin's book called "All Marketers Are Liars". And before you misunderstand the title I have to tell you the subtitle is "The Power of Telling Authentic Stories in a Low-Trust World".

liars

The whole book is interesting but Im only going to relate a single story about Riedel drinking glasses. You probably know that Georg Riedel is a tenth-generation glassblower and his company produces all sorts of drinking glasses. He and his staff fervently believe that there is a perfect shape for every beverage. And according to the website "The delivery of a wine's message, its bouquet and taste, depends on the form of the glass". As it turns out, connoisseurs all will tell you that the glass makes a profound difference. In fact, I bought a couple of "special" scotch drinking glasses a few years back and always thought that they were the perfect delivery mechanisms. The funny thing is that in blind tastings - there is no difference. What does that tell you?

What it tells you is that we have a better experience because thats what we believe. The belief becomes the truth. In personal branding we want to tell people about ourselves - for career advancement, for money, for a new job - whatever. The point here is that the amazing and remarkable achievements in our career have an impact only if the listener is properly prepared to hear and accept the information. To be affective, we must talk about ourselves using authentic, engaging and believable stories. The "story" is the perfect delivery mechanism for our skills and accomplishments. Just like the glass that makes the contents better - the story makes our accomplishments better.

Living at the Nexus of Technology, Service, Marketing and Evangelism @ JeffreyBlake.com

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