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Personal branding used to be optional. Now it's close to a job requirement. Google searches for the term have climbed more than 4x in ...
5 Personal Branding Habits That Beat Chasing Followers
May 27 -
5 minutes, 0 seconds
Personal Branding Habits That Beat Chasing Followers
Personal branding used to be optional. Now it's close to a job requirement. Google searches for the term have climbed more than 4x in recent years, and on LinkedIn, everyone from new graduates to CEOs is posting, commenting, and building a following. For many professionals, the pressure to stay visible has become a second job.
But here's the truth: the professionals who benefit most from personal branding aren't necessarily the ones posting the most. They build their brand with intention, clarity, and consistency. In this article, we'll explore five personal branding habits that beat chasing followers, helping you build a reputation that earns trust and opens doors.
1. Start With a Clear Value Proposition
Most people build a personal brand by posting. They share updates, weigh in on trends, and hope something sticks. Strong personal branding starts with a clear sense of what you offer.
Jill Avery, a senior lecturer at Harvard Business School, calls this your personal value proposition. It's a four-part statement that defines your audience, the point of difference you bring, and the value you provide to your target audience. The goal is to get specific about who you serve and what makes you worth choosing—not to sound impressive.
Tip: No amount of posting creates that clarity for you. Define your value first, and every post, comment, and bio line then reinforces the same message.
2. Audit How Others See You
You don't fully control your personal brand. Other people shape it through the impressions they already hold about you. Avery's second step is to audit that gap by comparing how you want to be seen with how you're actually perceived.
She suggests taking stock of three things:
- Your credentials
- Your social capital
- The cultural capital you've built through experience
It also helps to understand how those perceptions are formed because they influence the opportunities you receive. Research underscores the stakes. A 2026 study in the International Journal of Human Resource Management found that the value others assign to your professional identity—what researchers call personal brand equity—is what drives how marketable you appear.
Tip: Ask a few trusted colleagues how they'd describe your strengths. Their answers can reveal where your intended brand and your actual one diverge.
3. Use Storytelling Instead of Self-Promotion
Self-promotion makes most people uncomfortable, so they either overdo it or avoid it entirely. Avery's third step offers a better approach: build your brand through stories rather than claims.
A story achieves what a list of accomplishments can't. Say one of your strengths is taking smart risks. You can simply state that, or tell the story of the time you backed an untested idea that paid off. The second version is more memorable because it allows people to draw their own conclusions.
Research points in the same direction. A 2026 study in Strategic Business Research found that self-expression and value consistency shaped a strong personal brand far more than sheer social interaction did. At the same time, heavy posting added little once those other factors were accounted for.
Tip: Identify the handful of stories that support what you want to be known for, and let them carry the message.
4. Reach the Right Audience
A brand means little if it reaches the wrong people. Avery's fourth step is to identify the audiences that matter most to your career goals, then focus your energy there.
She points to several groups worth paying attention to:
- Gatekeepers whose buy-in you need
- Influencers who can extend your reach
- Communities that share your interests
Think of your personal brand as a value proposition and ask which people are most connected to where you want to go. Your manager, peers, and direct reports all help shape your future, making them important audiences for your branding efforts. This is also where networking earns its reputation because the relationships you build often determine who carries your story forward.
Tip: A thousand followers you'll never work with matter less than a dozen people who can open doors. Focus your effort on the audiences with a genuine stake in where you're headed.
5. Reassess Your Brand Regularly
A personal brand is never finished. Avery's final step is revisiting yours regularly to make sure the brand you're projecting still aligns with the one you want.
Careers evolve, and the value proposition that fit you three years ago may no longer match the role you're pursuing next. Avery recommends conducting an annual audit to identify gaps to close and strengths to build on. For example, if you're being considered for a leadership role but realize colleagues still don't view you as a leader, that signal clarifies where to focus—whether that means leading a visible project or intentionally building leadership skills.
Tip: Set a reminder once a year to reassess where you stand. The professionals who remain recognizable are the ones who keep their brand aligned with where they're headed.
What Personal Branding Really Takes
A personal brand is built on clarity and substance, not on how often you post or how many followers you have. Define your value, understand how others see you, tell stories that demonstrate your strengths, reach the people who matter, and revisit the entire process as you grow.
That runs against the instinct to chase reach. The professionals who benefit most aren't necessarily the loudest ones. They're the people whose brand is clear enough that others can easily describe and remember it.
Even the experts struggle with this. Avery, who studies branding for a living, is candid about her own discomfort with personal branding. She has described herself as notoriously bad at it, which feels ironic given that she prides herself on being able to sell almost anything to anybody. If a Harvard branding expert has to work at it, the rest of us can stop chasing followers and start building something worth following.
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