• Apply To Contribute To AlleyWatch
    • Write for AlleyWatch
  • Tell Us About Your Startup
  • Email Signup
  • Advertise on AlleyWatch
AlleyWatch
  • Business
  • Startups
  • Funding
  • Women in Tech
  • NYC Tech
No Result
View All Result
  • Business
  • Startups
  • Funding
  • Women in Tech
  • NYC Tech
No Result
View All Result
AlleyWatch
No Result
View All Result
Home Resources Advice

Overcoming Fear: How to Be True to Your Brand Online

Rob Villeneuve by Rob Villeneuve
Overcoming Fear: How to Be True to Your Brand Online
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

6698208975_2e9d5c8344_b

Whether you’re launching your own digital presence or building your brand, it’s a scary time to be online. The entire world is watching your every move — setting you up to be shared, captured, critiqued, challenged, and commented on. It can feel like you’re always on a stage, and stage fright is a very real thing we all need to overcome.

But there’s also momentum for greater individual authenticity in the world right now. We see everything from celebrities like former Instagram model Essena O’Neill being praised for her honesty about the photos she posts to books like Brené Brown’s “Daring Greatly,” about the power of vulnerability, hitting the New York Times Best Sellers list.

Call it authenticity, integrity, vulnerability, or any other number of words. At the end of the day, the individuals above — and many more — are winning by being real, a strategy that should apply to business, too.

There aren’t five simple steps to building an authentic brand because it isn’t simple — and there’s no universal formula. There are, however, some ideas you can arm yourself with to guide your brand’s expedition into being real online.

Here are a few that have worked for my company:

  1. Come as you are. This may sound obvious and cliché, but it takes a healthy dose of courage to show up online just as you are. Presenting yourself or your brand as you are means two daunting things: You won’t be everything to everyone, and your truth will be revealed.

That truth might show how small you are, how behind you are, or how clueless you are. But it also strips away the bullshit and allows you to connect with your audience in a meaningful way. You won’t necessarily reach everybody (you wouldn’t have, anyway), but by showing up as you are, you’ll have stronger connections with the people you do reach.

In this process of being transparent, our leaders, employees, partners, and customers have all begun to flex muscles we didn’t know we had, and that’s accelerated our growth as a company.

Try contributing to the quiet — and even the loud — conversations on social media that you understand and feel passionate about. When writing a company blog post, take a position that’s true to your values, and don’t waiver. Avoid opportunistically sharing opinions you think might be “good for business” that you don’t really agree with.

  1. Intimately know your big picture. Simon Sinek has a compelling philosophy he calls “Start With Why” that encourages leaders to understand why we’re doing what we’re doing before we get into the how and what. Defining your core reason for doing what you’re doing will help build the foundation for your brand’s authenticity.

To get started, consider a few questions: Why do you believe the problem you aim to solve is worth solving? Why are you motivated to do so? Why does what you’re doing matter, and to whom?

Once you know your purpose, don’t lose sight of it. Paint it on your walls, or tattoo it on your wrist — and use it daily as a sounding board. When you’re sharing something on social media, writing content, or launching a new product or marketing campaign, bounce your strategy off your brand’s purpose to make sure it’s on point.

  1. Stay the course online and offline. It’s easy to jump on the latest app that offers access to audiences a million strong or to shake hands on what could be a deal for a big partnership. Take a chance on new opportunities, but evaluate them against your business goals, as well as the things your brand stands for — and find the courage to walk away if they don’t line up.

For example, in interviews, we ask candidates tough questions about how their personal values align with our own. No amount of work experience will cause us to choose a candidate whose values don’t match up. We also get to know potential partners over beers and learn about what matters to them. The cheapest price or the biggest contract doesn’t win our business; people do.

It takes time, bravery, vulnerability, and conviction, but being real online is actually less work. When we stop worrying so much about political correctness (even the politicians themselves are proving this idea’s antiquated) and how we’ll be perceived, we free ourselves to bring our true value to the table. We stop holding back because of the things we aren’t and show up with our genuine strengths in hand.

Sure, funny cat videos will always trend, but it’s the honest and meaningful ideas that we’re most compelled to share with those closest to us. If you’re willing to be real, your brand will build meaningful connections that people will want to share, stand behind, and support. Sinek’s TED talk has more than 26 million views to prove it.

 

 


 

Image Credit CC by: Bart Everson

Previous Post

4 Interview Questions That Reveal More About Your Job Candidates

Next Post

How to Take Money From Friends and Still Be Friends

Next Post
How to Take Money From Friends and Still Be Friends

How to Take Money From Friends and Still Be Friends

ABOUT ALLEYWATCH

ABOUT US
ADVERTISE
EDITORIAL GUIDELINES
LEGAL
PRIVACY
TERMS OF USE

CONTACT

CONTACT US
ADVERTISE
TIPS
WRITE FOR US

CHANNELS

NYC VC
NYC TECH EVENTS
NYC TECH NEWS
NYC STARTUPS
NYC COWORKING
TECH DIRECTORY

© 2023 AlleyWatch | All Rights Reserved | Proudly Made for NYC

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Startups
  • Funding
  • AlleyTalk

© 2023 AlleyWatch | All Rights Reserved | Proudly Made for NYC

You are seconds away from signing up for the hottest list in New York Tech!

Join the millions and keep up with the stories shaping entrepreneurship. Sign up today.

Close this popup