Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Job Search
by Liz Ryan
We know that products and services are branded. We know a hundred common brands or more and
what they stand for – we’re surrounded by brands and branding messages all day long. We know
that a Volvo automobile is known for being safe and that a Jaguar is known for its cachet.
We don’t always think about ourselves as having personal brands, but we do! As professionals, we
are known by the things we say and do, and the people who know us or come in contact with us
experience our personal brands as they interact with us.
In a job search, your personal brand is critical. The most important thing to know about your
personal brand is that you’ve got one, whether you want it or not! The trick is to understand your
personal brand and to manage it effectively.
Here’s what marketers say about branding: “Your brand is what people say about you when you’re
not in the room.” Does this apply to your job search? You bet! Since we’re going to have a personal
brand whether we want one or not, we may as well examine our brand, spend some time thinking
about how we present ourselves to the professional world, and take steps to get our branding
message clear (that’s the first step!) and then to make sure it resonates across the various vehicles
that we use during a job search.
In a job search, your job-seeker brand is manifested in your LinkedIn profile, the
recommendations friends and colleagues give you, and in your presentation during phone interviews
and face-to-face interviews. Of course, your resume and your cover letters sing your branding song
to every person who receives and reads them.
Most of us don’t spend much time thinking about our personal brand during a job search. “I’m a
full-service Marketing person” is a common expression used to describe a job-seeking Marketer.
There’s only one problem: almost every Marketer we know describes him- or herself the same way.
“I’m a Marketing Strategist,” some Marketers would say. From a branding standpoint, that’s
immensely unhelpful. It’s opaque. We don’t know what sort of Marketer this job-seeker is. . “I do
collateral design and production, online marketing and trade show management,” is equally fuzzy.
We don’t get much sense of a job-seeker’s brand in these statements, because they’ve very generic.
We can do better.
You may even have wildly different ‘prongs’ in your job search. One job-seeker I know is looking
simultaneously at health-care opportunities (she’s managed a physical therapy department) and
Inventory Control management jobs (she’s done that sort of work, too!). She’ll need different
branding messages for each job-search ‘prong.’ (Her biggest problem will be her LinkedIn profile,
which will limit her to one big branding message.)
Once we have a sense of our job-search direction and any ‘prongs’ inside that direction, we can
think about our job-search brand. It’s very hard to work on our personal brands until we know
where we’d like our job searches to go!
Messages like that are not compelling and they’re not convincing.
We all have brands. In a job-search, it’s terribly important to use your resume to reinforce your
brand. A wishy-washy resume leaves the reader thinking, “Who is this person? Do I care? What
stands out about this person?” If the answer is “Nothing,” the resume screener won’t be inclined to
keep reading.
When we decide “I am going to focus on Job Search Direction A,” we gain a great deal of power
from that decision. Now we can zero in on what makes us a terrific candidate for jobs that fall into
Job Search Direction A. In my experience as a corporate HR chief, I noticed a funny thing. When a
job candidate has a compelling job-search direction and brand, he or she tends to gain confidence
from it. His or her message is no longer “Just give me a job,” but rather “I’d love to talk with you
about your [Marketing] issues, because I love to solve problems in that vein.”
Something wonderful happens when an employer meets a candidate whose confidence is high. The
employer may well consider the candidate for jobs well outside the boundaries of the candidate’s
stated job-search direction. It’s the person who is impressive, and the person is all the more
impressive because of his or her clarity in direction!
As we said before, product and service branding is all about choices. Job
search personal branding is all about choices, too. If our branding message
is “I’m a hard-working HR person,” we share virtually nothing that an
employer could use to make a hiring decision. Our failure to go right or
left, to make a strong statement about what we love and where we’re most
effective, hurts us.
If we say, instead, “I’m the type of HR person who believes that smart
employees, well led and well compensated, are an employer’s greatest
Copyright Ask Liz Ryan LLC 2009
May not be reprinted without permission
competitive advantage” we’ve made a choice. Some companies would look
at that message and say “Heck no! This is not the HR person for us.”
Good! If we settled on this branding statement, we don’t want to work for
companies like that, anyway.
About Liz Ryan
Liz Ryan is an expert on the new-millennium workplace, a former Fortune 500 Human
Resources executive and the author of Happy About Online Networking: The Virtual-ly Simple
Way to Build Professional Relationships.
As a keynote speaker, Liz travels throughout the United States and abroad, speaking to groups
ranging from Human Resources executives and entrepreneurs to the United Nations. As an
advisor to corporations on workplace and leadership issues, she has worked with Omnicom,
Tyson Foods, General Electric, NBCi and a long list of global employers. Liz's workplace-
advice, job-advice and networking columns reach millions of readers in print and online.
Liz's sharp, edgy, humorous and very current observations on the new-millennium workplace,
the role of corporate leaders, entrepreneurism and networking have been featured by TIME
magazine, Fortune magazine, The New York Times, USA Today and on CNN, CNBC and more.
Liz writes a weekly career column and a Q & A for Business Week Online and is the Yahoo!
HotJobs Networking Expert. She is a commentator for NPR's "Morning Edition" and for BBC
Radio, and a syndicated columnist on careers and the workplace.
Liz lives in Boulder, Colorado with her husband and five small children, and is a professional
opera singer.
Ask Liz Ryan is a career coaching and people strategy firm located in Boulder, Colorado and
based on the worldview of Liz Ryan, a workplace commentator and columnist. Liz is the
Corporate Provocateur for Bloomberg Business Week, a columnist for Kiplinger’s Finance and
the Huffington Post, Monster and Yahoo!, and a commentator for CNN, MSNBC, BBC Radio
and NPR. Liz was a Fortune 500 HR exec for many years and is the author of “Happy About
Online Networking: the Virtual-ly Simple Way to Build Professional Relationships,” as well as
the leader of the 25,000-member Ask Liz Ryan Online Community. Liz is a popular keynote
speaker on the changing workplace and a lecturer on personal branding and career strategy at the
Leeds School of Business at the University of Colorado-Boulder.
Ask Liz Ryan works with individuals on their career direction, branding and strategy, and with
employers on their employer branding , strategy, and communication with talent communities
and their hiring and leadership practices. Our Career Altitude Club ™ is an online resource,
toolkit and community for job-seekers, career-changers and people looking for more altitude and
control over their professional lives. Reach us at www.asklizryan.com.