Your Brand is
Exhaust Fume, not the Engine
By
Nilofer Merchant on Sep 25, 2013 10:01 am
“How do you manage your brand?” I get asked that question really
often, especially at public-venue speaking events. Typically, I sigh. It is
not that the question is silly, or the questioner shallow, but because this
question itself represents so much of what is stopping all of us from doing
work that matters.
We talk about “reinventing your brand” when in reality the goal
is to reinvent what you work on. We talk about the “brand called you” when we
talk about being able to do more of the work you love to do. We talk about
ways to “deliver on the impact equation” without asking first, “what is it you
want to impact?” We are told by marketing gurus that “everyone now owns a media company!” — as if
somehow this is, itself, the goal — rather than a means to an end. Marketing
has become the default language — the lingua franca of the day — that we use
to describe work, and it is distorting how we evaluate what matters.
Yes, it’s true that web tools can let you be known for the work
you do more easily and more cost effectively, letting you own how you present
yourself to the world. But that’s probably the least interesting thing about
these social constructs and social media tools.
The much more relevant point is that you now get to create,
share, and connect ideas with others to do work, ideally meaningful and
impactful work. As in the person who was able to accelerate scientific
research because of the online game, “Fold It.” This particular game enables
important research in the medical field, research that is usually conducted
by scientists with PhDs. But making it a game that anyone could play allowed
someone “unexpected” to help. A woman who worked as an executive assistant by
day turned out to be the best protein folder in the world at night.
As I’ve written in more depth elsewhere, connected individuals can now
achieve what once only centralized organizations could. The implications for
this are huge. It changes the basis of market power for organizations because size no longer protects competitive advantage.
It changes management because people can figure out for themselves what needs to
be done to implement the larger strategy. It changes careers because we no
longer need to belong to an organization to be able to create scale or
impact. You don’t even need to be “old enough” — five-year olds can invent consumer goods products.
Today, what matters is the ability to create, not the ability to first prove
you can.
So let’s stop using the language of marketing to talk about
meaning.
The truth is this: The brand follows the work. Your brand is the exhaust
created by the engine of your life. It is a by-product of what happens as you share what you
are creating, and with whom you are creating.
It is a sign, yes. Significant, yes. But the real signal comes
from being able to answer these two questions:
What is it you care about? It takes courage to find and follow an
individual path; finding our own path takes us off the path that others are
following, in directions that can seem distinctly alone. Each of us is
standing in a place no one else stands in as a function of our history,
experience, vision and hopes. I call this onlyness, that thing that only you can bring
to any situation. Go with it, and you end up being able to design your own
life — and maybe redesign entire industries, too. At
the very least, it lets you improve the results of any group you are a part
of. Berkeley professors Charlan Jeanne Nemeth and Jack A. Goncalo have proven
that “minority viewpoints” aid the quality of decision
making by juries, by teams, and for the purpose of innovation. In
other words, even when distinct points of view turn out to be wrong, speaking them lets
everyone think better, create more solutions, and improve creativity. But if
you don’t know what it is you care about and why, you lack the ability to
contribute meaningfully.
How will you find and work with allies? While it may be lonely to
step into your own path, once you do, you attract those with affinity. The
clearer you are in your onlyness, the strong your magnet for the right people
for you (and possibly repulsion for others.) This is a good thing. It helps
you find, filter, and formulate. It eliminates wasted effort to convince
those who will never be convinced. It lets you know what kind of workplace is
right for you, and it lets you find the right people for your projects. It
lets you align in purpose with others. Esther Dyson points out that the “trick today is not just
to find the right target (that is, a person), as social networks such as
LinkedIn and search tools can do, but to enlist
allies and manage the work to achieve a specific goal.” (Emphasis
mine.) Proximity used to reign supreme — where you lived, what school you
went to, and whom your parents knew was more of a factor in what
opportunities you had. Proximity is still one factor, but in the social era,
the other four Ps of community end up growing in importance and power.
Communities of passion
who share a common interest (photography, or food, or books) can inform new
product lines. Communities of purpose
willingly share a common task to build something (like Wikipedia) together.
Communities of practice,
who share a common career or field of business, will extend your offer if it
extends their expertise (like Intuit has with its accountant community).
Communities of providence
allow people to discover connections with others (as in Google+) and thus
enable the sharing of information, products, and ideas.
Just recently, I passed up an opportunity to serve on a Fortune
100 Board of Directors. The company has a well-known history of dysfunctional
board dynamics and it became clear to me that there was little one person
could do to change it. When a friend asked why I was still considering the
opportunity, I answered, “It would lend me legitimacy.” When I heard those
words come out of my mouth, I knew I had to turn it down. If I’d said yes, it
would have been because of “brand” — because I’d want readers like you to see
me with more esteem. But in truth, it wouldn’t have meant I was doing more
good work.
I’ve studied how actual value is created for over 10 years now,
and what I know to be true is this: While what people think of us does
matter, what matters much more is our ability to do and deliver. That’s what
makes the ultimate difference in the world. And that’s what reputations are
really built on. That’s what will draw people to you.
Yes, we are in the middle of a vast sea change in which social
can put the power of connection to work to solve meaningful problems. But in
order to do that more meaningful work, we need to recognize what is holding
us back. In a world of “personal brand” and “leadership brand” and “personal
reinvention” and so forth, we should not forget: the real signal is the work
itself, and the social signaling is just its echo.
***
As is true for all HBR related posts, please add comments there: http://bit.ly/BrandExhaust
The post Your Brand is Exhaust Fume, not the Engine
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