Stop inventing your personal brand. Start recognizing it. Most marketers think clarity comes from a brainstorm or a weekend retreat. They try to design their brand from scratch. But that's not how clarity works. Your personal brand isn't something you build. It's something you extract from the work you're already doing. Here's the exercise that actually works: the Pattern Audit. Go back through the last 12 months of your work. Pull every project, presentation, campaign, client win, internal memo, or side conversation where you felt like yourself. The moments where you didn't have to perform or put on a voice. Where the work just flowed. Now ask: What patterns show up across all of it? What problems do you keep solving? What questions do people keep asking you? What language do you use when you're not trying to sound like a marketer? Where does your point of view cut through the noise without effort? Your brand already exists in those answers. The exercise isn't invention. It's recognition. When I rebuilt my own brand, it wasn't a strategy workshop that gave me clarity. It was grief. Losing my father forced me to ask: What am I really building? That rupture burned away everything that wasn't essential. What remained was the truth I'd been living all along, just buried under performance and polish. Clarity doesn't come from adding more. It comes from stripping away what doesn't belong. Your personal brand is already there. You just have to be willing to see it.
Someone struggling to define their personal brand as a marketer should conduct an interview with five people who have worked with them in the past year. Not your manager or your team, but a client or colleague who has either employed you as a marketer or collaborated with you on projects. Ask them this question: What's the problem I'm solving differently than other marketers you've worked with? Most marketers try define their brand with an inward appearance. They create a list of the skills they believe they possess, the values that drive their behavior, and what they think they are good at. But this is an incorrect approach to developing your personal brand. Your brand is what others experience as a result of working with you. Three years ago, when I did this exercise, I expected the five people I interviewed to say that I had a unique ability to develop strategic marketing plans or create innovative and effective advertising campaigns. However, four of the five people I spoke to stated that I make difficult-to-understand marketing issues simple for those without a marketing background. At no point before conducting the interviews had I considered this to be a skill set. But this became the foundation in which I position myself in the marketplace. The patterns in their answers will tell you what is actually different about you. Write everything they say word for word. Don't interpret it yet. Then gather the data and search for the phrases that are repeated. If three people said the same thing, that is your brand. It's not what you wish to be, it's what you are already to the people that matter.
Stop trying to be everything to everyone. Your personal brand should reflect what you're genuinely best at, not what you think the market wants to hear. When I was building my agency in Phoenix, I struggled with this exact problem. I was offering SEO, paid ads, web design, social media - basically every digital marketing service possible. I was a mile wide and an inch deep, and my personal brand reflected that confusion. The exercise that gave me clarity: Write down every project or client win from the last two years. Then ask yourself: "Which of these energized me? Which produced the best results? Which could I talk about for hours without getting bored?" For me, the answer was clear - I'd pioneered Generative Engine Optimization before most marketers even knew what it was. I'd generated over $500K speaking about it across 22 cities. That wasn't just what I was good at - it was what differentiated me in a crowded market. The Phoenix advantage: Our market here is filled with generalist digital marketers. The ones who stand out are specialists who own a specific niche or methodology. You don't need to be the best marketer in Phoenix - you need to be the best at ONE thing marketers in Phoenix need. Your personal brand isn't about being impressive. It's about being memorable and specific. When someone thinks of a particular problem or opportunity, your name should be the first one that comes to mind. That only happens when you stop trying to be good at everything and start owning one thing completely.
If you're feeling stuck defining your personal brand as a marketer, you're not alone. Most thoughtful, high-performing marketers hit this point at some stage in their career. It usually doesn't mean you lack direction. More often, it means you have depth and experience and are trying to articulate it clearly. One of the most helpful pieces of advice I can offer is to stop trying to sound impressive and start getting clear on where you consistently create value. A strong personal brand is not built on titles, buzzwords, or borrowed opinions. It is built on patterns of impact over time. Many marketers struggle because they treat personal branding as a positioning exercise before they understand their own proof points. Absolute clarity comes from looking backward before looking forward. Pay attention to the work you are repeatedly trusted with, the problems people ask you to solve, and the moments where your perspective helps move things forward. Those signals are far more revealing than any aspirational label. One simple and effective exercise is to document your "earned credibility." Write down ten moments in your career where your contribution clearly mattered. Capture the challenge, your role, and the outcome. Then look for patterns. Are you often brought in to simplify complexity, align teams, launch initiatives, fix underperforming programs, or translate data into decisions? Those themes form the foundation of a strong personal brand. Finally, validate what you see with others. Ask a few trusted colleagues, clients, or leaders one direct question: "What do you see as the unique value I bring?" Their responses often highlight strengths you may overlook. A clear personal brand is not about being everything to everyone. It is about being known for something specific and dependable. When your brand is grounded in tangible outcomes and lived experience, confidence follows, and sharing your story becomes far more natural.
My advice is to stop trying to define your personal brand through adjectives and start defining it through impact. Personal brands are built through consistent behavior and perspective, not taglines. One exercise I often recommend is to look at the problems people consistently come to you to solve. Are you the person they trust to bring clarity, connect teams, simplify complexity, or challenge assumptions? Those patterns are usually far more revealing than any formal branding exercise. I also encourage marketers to audit their own work over time. Look at the content you create, the conversations you lead, and the decisions you influence. If there is a common thread, that is your brand taking shape. Clarity comes from doing the work and reflecting on it, not from forcing an identity. When your perspective is genuine and useful, your personal brand will follow.
Founder & MD at Tenacious Sales (Operating internationally as Tenacious AI Marketing Global)
Answered 3 months ago
I see a lot of aspiring personal brand builders trying to be magnetic and encapsulating and struggling to carry it off. What they want to say on camera often just might not engage or land with the viewer. My piece of advice would be take your phone out and record yourself talking to the camera about a subject a mock video. Firstly go back and listen to it with the sound on but don't look at the video and just focus on the audio, make notes and critique yourself and look at what is good and what's bad, then go back and turn the volume down and just watch the video and look at the body language and write down bad habits and good things etc and then look at the hook the first 10 -20 seconds and judge how captivating, intriguing, emotional is that to by yourself time and then use those notes to remove bad habits and you'll find your presence will be much better and your views will thank you.
If you're struggling to define your personal brand as a marketer, stop trying to "pick a vibe" and commit to a reputation you can prove. The fastest path is to choose a narrow lane, meaning a channel plus an audience plus an outcome, and then show consistent evidence that you deliver in that lane. Specificity is what makes you memorable. An exercise that creates clarity fast is a "10-win audit." List your last 10 projects where you drove real impact, then tag each with (1) the channels you used, (2) who you helped, including industry and stage, (3) what improved, such as pipeline, CAC, ROAS, retention, or sales velocity, and (4) the edge you brought, like testing discipline, creative strategy, stakeholder management, global market experience, or smart use of new tools. The tags that repeat are your brand: your niche, your signature approach, and the outcomes people already trust you for. Next, turn that into a public proof loop. Share one practical insight each week with a tactic and a lesson learned, collect a few specific recommendations that describe your edge in plain language, and keep your positioning consistent across LinkedIn and your portfolio so someone can understand your value in 10 seconds. Your personal brand is the clearest prediction of what happens when someone puts a problem in your hands.
Stop trying to be a generalist and instead focus on the one specific problem you solve better than anyone else. Clarity comes from identifying the intersection of your unique experiences and a persistent market gap. What's more, a great exercise is to review your past successful projects and look for a recurring theme in the results you delivered. In addition to this, defining your brand around a specific methodology makes you much more memorable than a broad title.
I would advise auditing your calendar for the last 30 days to determine what you are spending your time doing compared to what you say you do. I did this exercise back in 2022 when I was looking to trying to figure out how to position myself. My LinkedIn said I was a "full-stack marketer" because that sounded impressive, but when I looked at my calendar, 70% of my time went into technical SEO audits and fixing crawl issues. I maybe spent 10% on social media and even less on email campaigns. So why was I calling myself a full-stack marketer when I was actually a technical SEO? That gap between your calendar and your resume is where your actual brand resides. Most marketers struggle with personal branding because they claim expertise in areas that they rarely touch and ignore the work they do every single day. But your calendar doesn't lie. If you spend three hours a week on paid ads and 15 hours on content strategy, you're a content strategist who dabbles in ads. To conduct the audit, pull out your calendar and sort all of your blocks of meetings and tasks for the past month into blocks according to skills, such as SEO, paid media, content, analytics or client management. Then add the hours of each category. Whatever takes up the most time is your actual expertise, regardless what your bio says. That's your brand. Build around that instead of trying to be everything to everyone.
One thing I see people do wrong is trying to use skills to describe a personal brand. This is where you're going to end up with something generic. A better place to start is to examine where people are already coming to you for input. This is more indicative of your brand than any bio ever could. A good exercise to help you figure out what your personal brand is is to examine your last 10 significant projects or conversations and determine what role you played in each of them. Were you the one explaining complex concepts, aligning people, or moving decisions forward? This is what your personal brand is. When you understand it, your messaging will become much simpler because you're talking about what you already do, not what you think you should be doing.
Marketing today is incredibly broad—you can dive deep into over 100 different types. If you're struggling with your personal brand and identity as a marketer, the core issue is often not knowing what you're truly good at or recognizing your strengths and weaknesses. It's essential to make a list of your skills, then identify the category you fit into. Ideally, divide marketing into key types: traditional vs. new-age internet marketing, local vs. global, and many others. To find your specialty and position yourself effectively—whether building a resume, personal site, or agency—don't define your job by an overall role. Instead, break it down into a list of tasks. Track your daily tasks for at least a week: content creation, analytics, negotiations, technical SEO, design, ideation, campaigns—whatever you do. At the week's end, review them to spot patterns and specializations. If you're just starting and not yet specialized, position yourself as a generalist with primary, secondary, and tertiary focuses based on what you enjoy, where you succeed, and the feedback you receive from businesses, employers, or clients. This advice applies if you're struggling with your personal brand, but remember: the entire marketing field is facing challenges. Many tasks marketers once handled are now automated by AI, and it's only getting worse. To elevate yourself, think ahead: What roles will exist in five years? From your task list, identify which will be replaced by AI and which won't. I predict roles like "developer marketer" will emerge—marketers who build internal or external tools and campaigns using AI. Demand for them will be huge. By analyzing your tasks this way, you can define who you are and become a great marketer in the evolving field.
Stop leading with your story. Lead with what you want to be known for. Most marketers build their personal brand like a resume: here's my background, here's what I'm good at, here's a couple things that make me interesting. But nobody remembers a resume. What sticks is a clear perspective tied to something specific. If you're not sure what your brand actually is, try this: rewrite your LinkedIn headline like you're naming a category, not listing a job title. Not "Performance Marketer @ Company X." More like "Retention-Led Growth Strategist" or "Creator Economy Search Architect." You're not describing what you do day-to-day. You're naming the lens you see the world through. Then you commit to it. This does two things. First, it forces you to get clear on what you actually care about, not just what pays the bills. Second, it makes you referable. When people can slot you into a category, they start mentioning your name in conversations you're not part of. That's when your brand starts working for you instead of the other way around.
Most people struggle with personal branding because they're trying to invent one instead of noticing the patterns that are already there. You don't need a clever tagline or a perfectly curated feed. You need clarity on what people already come to you for. If you sound like everyone else, it's usually because you're borrowing language instead of using your own. Here's a simple exercise that works. Ask 5 to 10 people you trust, clients, coworkers, even former bosses, one question: "What do you think I'm unusually good at?" Don't defend it. Don't explain it. Just collect the answers. Then look for repeated words, themes, or problems you're associated with. That's your raw brand, whether you like it or not. Once you see those patterns, lean into them. Write how you talk. Share what you've actually learned, not what you think sounds impressive. A strong personal brand isn't built by shouting louder. It's built by being consistently clear about who you help, how you think, and why people trust you in the first place.
My advice is to start by identifying your personal brand's "Archetypal DNA". Most personal brands struggle because they try to adopt a persona they think the market wants (usually "The Guru" or "The Entertainer") rather than the one they actually should because it comes naturally (and seems boring because of it). This creates a dissonance that audiences can smell a mile away. Nowadays, you can't compete on information anymore. AI has commoditized that. You can only compete on character. So, the goal isn't to be a "good something" you're NOT, it's to be the absolute "best something" you already ARE. A fun exercise I recommend is one I like to call the "Villain Trait". Just like it's difficult to read the label from inside the bottle, you ask your three closest colleagues, clients, or even family members this specific question: "If I were a movie character, what would my fatal flaw or my obsessive trait be?" It sounds counterintuitive, but your "villain trait" is actually the cornerstone of your brand. Whether it is a ruthless intolerance for inefficiency (The Ruler), a chaotic need to disrupt the status quo (The Rebel), or an obsession with data over feelings (The Sage), the villain trait is what will make you're personal brand truly YOU. So, once you identify this trait, stop apologizing for it and label it as your SUPERPOWER and go all in on it. Make it your "thing". When you align your content with your true archetype, you stop just simply creating content and start broadcasting your personality.
Hi, I hope you are having a productive week. I am writing to share my perspective on defining a personal brand for marketers, specifically focusing on the concept of "structural integrity" and intellectual honesty in an era increasingly dominated by AI-generated content. I would be glad if you could consider my comment for your upcoming piece. "Where AI can generate a "perfect" professional persona in seconds, the most dangerous thing a marketer can do is try to build a "polished" brand. My chief advice is this: Stop trying to create an image and start architecting your intellectual honesty. As a Reputation Architect, I see many talented marketers struggling because they treat their personal brand like a decorative facade. They focus on the color palette of their LinkedIn banners rather than the structural integrity of their message. In the 2026 landscape of total digital distrust, a "perfect" brand is a red flag. What people actually crave is "hard-won experience" — your scars, your specific perspective, and your "raw nerve." Your brand shouldn't be a megaphone for your successes; it should be a blueprint of your value. If you don't stand for a specific change in the industry, you're just contributing to the noise. The Clarity Exercise: The "360-Degree Structural Audit" To gain clarity, stop looking in the mirror and start looking at the foundation of your work. Perform this three-step audit: 1. The "Raw Nerve" Identification: Write down three things about current marketing trends that genuinely frustrate you. What makes you want to "fix" the industry? This is your "Big Idea." A brand built on a desire to solve a real-world problem is always more resilient than one built on vanity. 2. The Stress-Test Narrative: List three times you failed or faced a crisis. How did you navigate the "wilderness" of that situation? Reality isn't what's in the reports; it's what you do with your hands in the moment. Your brand is defined by the problems you've solved, not the titles you've held. 3. The Peer Blueprint: Ask five colleagues to describe your "professional superpower" in one word. If their words align with your "Raw Nerve," you have structural integrity. If not, you're building on sand. The Result Once you align your hard skills with your authentic "why," your brand stops being a chore and starts being an asset that cuts through "content deafness." Build a brand that is unforgettable because it is undeniably real. Best, Veronika Medvedeva PR Strategist
When it comes to marketing, start by honing in on what makes you unique. Many marketers get caught up in the latest trends instead of focusing on what truly sets them apart—like having specialized knowledge in B2B tech or running AI-driven campaigns. Build your personal brand on genuine experiences, such as specific successes from your LinkedIn growth strategies or content plans tailored for enterprise solutions. Core Advice Take the time to define your brand by evaluating your strengths, values, and what you bring to the table. Ask yourself what makes you stand out in the marketing world, like your ability to blend conversational and technical tones for PetTech audiences. This kind of self-awareness helps you avoid generic branding and fosters authenticity, much like honing in on a specific area of expertise to shine in a crowded market. Clarity Exercise Reach out to 6-12 colleagues or connections and ask them to describe you in just three words. Then, look for common themes (for example, "structured thinker"). Compare these insights with your achievements, such as your work on AI observability campaigns, to create a concise brand statement. You might even consider using a Google Form for honest, anonymous feedback. This exercise can quickly highlight what makes you different, as seen in successful branding strategies that rely on feedback.
I've built and exited multiple brands and worked with everyone from Marcus Lemonis to Jake Paul, so I've seen this struggle from both sides--as the person building their own brand and helping others find theirs. Here's what actually works: **Stop trying to define your brand and start documenting what you're already doing.** Record a voice memo every time you give advice that makes someone say "wow, I never thought of that." After two weeks, listen back. The thing you keep saying that feels obvious to you but surprises others? That's your brand position. When I was building Flex Watches, I kept talking about "purposeful commerce" before it was trendy--combining product with social impact. It felt basic to me, but people kept asking me to speak about it. I leaned into that instead of trying to be the "watch expert" I thought I should be. That authentic angle is what got us into Forbes and on The Profit, and eventually led to our exit. The fastest clarity comes from repetition, not reflection. Track what you naturally talk about for two weeks, find the pattern, then double down on it. Your brand is already there--you're just not paying attention to it yet.
I've spent 30+ years investigating people--executives, politicians, business owners--and here's what I've learned: your personal brand already exists. The problem is you're not controlling it. Instead of sitting with a journal asking "who am I?", Google yourself in an incognito browser right now. Screenshot page one. That's your current brand whether you like it or not. When I founded Reputation911 in 2010, I realized most professionals spend zero time looking at what actually shows up when someone searches their name--then they're shocked when a client ghosts them or an opportunity disappears. Here's the exercise that works: Set up Google Alerts for your name today, then spend 30 days fixing what's broken. Got an outdated LinkedIn? Update it this week. No personal website? Buy YourName.com and put up a one-pager by Friday. Old news articles ranking? Publish fresh content that pushes them down. I've helped thousands of clients do this--the ones who take action in month one see different search results by month three. Your brand isn't what you think about yourself. It's what Google shows a hiring manager at 11pm when they're deciding between you and someone else. Control that, and the clarity follows.
I spent 11 years in cosmetics at Estee Lauder and Chanel before joining EMRG Media, and honestly? My personal brand didn't click until I stopped trying to define it and started asking *my clients* what moment made them want to work with me. Here's the exercise that changed everything: I went back through my emails and notes from the past year and found every single compliment or "thank you" message where someone was *specific* about what I did for them. Not generic stuff like "great job"--I mean the messages where they said exactly what problem I solved. For me, it kept coming up: "You made this feel possible when it felt overwhelming" and "You connected the dots I couldn't see." That's when I realized my brand wasn't about event planning expertise--it was about being the person who translates chaos into clarity for people juggling massive corporate events. The pattern you find in those specific thank-yous? That's your brand talking back to you. I've shared stages with Gary Vaynerchuk and Martha Stewart, and the one thing they all have in common is they're not trying to be everything--they own the *one thing* people repeatedly thank them for. Your clients are already telling you who you are to them; you just need to actually listen to what they're saying when they're grateful.
"For marketers struggling with personal brand clarity, I recommend the FAILURE ANALYSIS exercise where you examine projects or clients that didn't work well. What kinds of work drain your energy? What clients do you dread working with? What topics bore you even though they're lucrative? Your personal brand should actively EXCLUDE these areas to attract the right opportunities and repel the wrong ones. I gained clarity by recognizing I hated working with enterprise clients who required endless approval layers and corporate politics. That realization helped me brand specifically for small business owners who make quick decisions and value direct communication. Defining who I DON'T serve clarified who I DO serve and made my positioning authentic instead of trying to appeal to everyone. The specific exercise: list your 5 most frustrating or unsuccessful projects. Identify common patterns in what made them difficult—industry, client size, project type, communication style, or topic area. Your personal brand should signal to similar prospects that you're NOT their fit, protecting your time and energy for work you genuinely enjoy. One consultant realized through this exercise that she hated tactical execution but loved strategic planning—her brand repositioned from ""marketing doer"" to ""marketing strategist"" specifically excluding implementation work, which attracted better-fit clients and eliminated draining projects."