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Aligning Personal and Professional Goals

Aligning Personal and Professional Goals

Aligning your personal goals, with your professional goals is a remarkable way of achieving more in everything you do. Introducing this into your mode of working brings about not only professional satisfaction, but also a genuine sense of productivity in your day-to-day life. You realize that you are doing not just what you are ‘supposed’ to do, but also what you ‘want’ to do.

At times our personal and professional goals may be compatible, however, at time they may be extremely diverse by themselves. Regardless, it is possible to achieve the balance, and here is how –

1.Having a clear idea of your organisational goals

The first thing to do, before you can achieve a parallel between the organisational and personal goals, is knowing with utmost clarity what the organisational goals are. To set your own goal framework, you need to have a sound knowledge of what the larger organisational objectives are. In order to do this, you can revisit the definition of your role and the expectations from the same. It is also important to pay due attention to this fundamental step because unless your professional goals are met, it will be difficult for you to balance your personal goals.

2. Knowing what you want from the organisation

Besides having a clear idea of the organisational goals, and what the organisation expects from you, it is equally important to have your set of expectations from the organisation. Having this parameter in place is a crucial way to check the growth you envisioned for yourself, versus the actual growth you experience. This gives you a reality check every time you need it. As is only fair, you must keep reminding yourself of your objectives and reasons when you joined this organisation. This reminder serves as a way to map your path for the present and the future.

3. Building Focus

Focus is the one thing that is in extremely short supply in the present times, thanks to the myriad distractions all around us. To be able to maximize our potential in whatever we choose to do, we need to sustain our focus on one thing at a time. Building focus comes only with practice. Mostly by building an awareness of when your focus drifts, and bringing it back to where it should be.

4. Prioritizing

Not all things that are there on your to-do lists demand the same amount of priority. Understanding your priorities and building a habit of delivering accordingly is a prerequisite towards achieving compatibility between your personal and professional goals. At times your personal goals may be the priority and it is important to recognize this and act upon it. A lack of prioritization leads to an imbalance which will affect both your personal and professional growth.

5. Being Decisive

While being able to align personal and professional goals is indeed an achievement, it does not come easy. To be able to achieve this, you may have to make some tough, but important decisions along the way. Recognizing the need for this and acting upon it is not easy, but essential. Goals are dynamic, they keep changing as you grow and with the varied work-life experiences you have. Recognizing the need for change, and acting on bringing it about by being decisive is a very important factor for growth.

Aligning your personal goals with professional goals provide you direction and you begin to understand what your work is worth, and how your performance affects the organisation. This gives you a benchmark to reach the optimal level of satisfaction when it comes to achieving your goals. One of the most important advantages of aligning these goals with each other, is making your expectations from yourself (and the organization’s expectations from you) visible.

Ever tried aligning your personal and professional goals? Tell us what worked and what didn’t, right here! Wish you happy productivity, and happy in the now!

Bring in the Festive Joy – Time for a Productivity Re-set!

Bring in the Festive Joy – Time for a Productivity Re-set!

The cheer season starts now, and is here until the beginning of a brand new year. Bring in the festive tides with a mind made up for mindfulness, and a heart with conviction to achieve whatever you may desire. As you step back to take a break from your everyday routine, and celebrate everything that is good, pure, and fair, build into your subconscious a promise to be a better version of yourself, as you look towards rejuvenation. More Productivity, more happiness, more kindness and most of all, more mindfulness. Bring it all into the world of work, and here is how.

  1. Building Awareness of your habits

    A great way to be better at what you do is why building an awareness of your daily habits. Both good, and bad. You don’t have to judge yourself, or be annoyed at yourself for the habits that you may consider as bad habits, simply taking note is a great way to begin the process of change. Taking note, or noticing what you want to change is always the first and most crucial step towards positive change and growth.

  2. Breaking habits

    Once you start taking note of the habits that don’t serve you well, start diverting yourself from them. For example, is procrastination a big concern towards your productivity? Take note of why you procrastinate. It could be phone time, the internet, need for a sugar fix, just any one of the constant pulls in the form of diversions we experience in our day-to-day lives. Once you notice yourself getting pulled away, gently remind yourself that you have some place to be, and get back to what you were doing.

  3. Practicing everyday kindness

    The Dalai Lama once very truly said, “Be kind whenever it is possible. It is always possible.” Kindness is a way of living, it is an outlook which is reflected in everything you say and do. Very often, we tell ourselves that we don’t have time to go out of our way to practice extraordinary acts of kindness. That is where we are wrong. We don’t need time, and the acts of kindness need not be extraordinary. Build the practice of kindness into your every day life. Stop to help, stop to listen, stop to offer kind words. Stop, pause, and you will realize how it changes your life all for the better.

  4. Living the grateful life

    The power of gratitude is immense. It affects your personal and your professional life in myriad ways. Living the grateful life, is again an art. To receive in abundance – be it professional or personal growth, you must first appreciate in abundance what you already possess. When you start taking note of, and appreciating what you have, you will realize that you are able to create more moments in life to be grateful for. Sounds mysterious? Try it! 🙂

  5. Staying happy in the now

    There is infinite wisdom in understanding the value of the present moment, instead of dwelling on the past and being anxious about the future. A wise man once said, “Today is the tomorrow you worried about yesterday.” So let it all go, and focus on right now, right here. Stay in the now, and most importantly, stay happy in the now! Why to make ‘right now’ the best time of your life? Well, what you do right now is what defines what happens next. Sow well now, to reap beautifully soon after.

The change of seasons remind us of the principle of transience – the fact that the only constant  is change. But through these changes, good or bad, you can be your own constant by working on centering yourself. The five things we just spoke about are a great way to start with!

We wish you and all your loved ones the very best of everything this festive season!

The Power of Brand ‘You’ – Our Pick of Favorite Personal Brands

The Power of Brand ‘You’ – Our Pick of Favorite Personal Brands

If you have been reading our recent posts, you might find this post particularly interesting. As a part of our ‘personal branding’ series, we bring to you the third post on some of our favorite personal brands, through which we illustrate good practices in personal branding.

What is personal branding? Simply put, it is about “brand you”! Personal branding is nothing but using the forms of social media (which you already use) with the specific purpose of promoting your interests and outlook. If you are doing it for your homegrown business/ initiative you would have a very clear purpose. Similarly, in case you are doing it only for yourself and not a specific initiative, it would be more of your views and ideologies about things you believe in.

Personal branding done right can trigger a positive influence in a bigger way than you can imagine. What do we mean? Have a look at the following personal branding examples – some big, some small, a mix of organisations and individuals. But what is common amongst them all is the terrific value they add to the most popularly abused, and the most easily available resource – social media.

Elephant Journal  

This online platform is your gateway to mindfulness.  “It is about the mindful life”, is their tagline, and they couldn’t have described themselves more accurately. Elephant Journal started as a magazine in 2002. Through their journey they realized that the brand would survive and grow better  in the online realm (it was also a conscious, mindful decision made to save paper and ink). Through consistent efforts via the content they curate, they have been able to amplify their reach like never before.

What makes this platform a go-to place for mindfulness aspirants and practitioners is the outlook they perceive towards everyday life and things through a lens of mindfulness. “The mindful life is about yoga, organics, sustainability, conscious consumerism, enlightened education, the contemplative arts, adventure, bicycling, family…everything. But mostly it’s about this present moment, right here, right now, and how we can best be of benefit, and have a good time doing so.”

A good personal brand is one which is able to maintain a consistency in their content and also generate content which speaks whatever the current language is, yet in a tone and manner which is distinct to the personal brand. Elephant Journal is an excellent example of this rule for personal branding.

Homegrown

They describe themselves as – “India’s leading provokers of unfiltered conversation. For the urban Indian who cannot be confined.” We only need to look homeward to realize that we are living in an age of censorship. The political and social climate of our country by and large has been extremely intolerant, and one that gags (quite literally) any voice of dissent. Platforms such as Homegrown are a challenge to such intolerance by generating media which is unafraid to speak up, and speak out.

What distinguishes Homegrown as an exceptional personal brand is their passion to bring out content that is not mainstream – across genres of culture, politics, fashion, food or lifestyle. Homegrown is also a great example of how networking makes all the difference for the success of personal brands. A lot of their content is based on collaborations with other artists / brands/ individuals in the form of features. The brand focuses on constantly diversifying and playing with the content that it generates, yet keeping its core values and principles in tact.

Humans of New York

Probably one of the best examples of how personal branding makes a big difference even at a micro level. It started as a humble project by New York photographer Brandon Stanton in 2010, with the aim of photographing 10000 New Yorkers, to create an “exhaustive catalog of the city’s inhabitants.” Today, seven years down the line, the Humans of New York team (yes, from an individual to a team!), is bringing to us deeply moving stories from 20 different countries, and has published 2 best selling books!

The HONY story is a goal as far as personal branding goes. One of the golden rules of personal branding is bringing out a story  through the brand. To remember that what you are marketing should be seen as an extension of you. And that itself becomes the unique selling point (USP) for the service or product you are putting out. Your branding strategy should have a voice, which should be no one else’s but yours. It should speak about what you believe in, and what you don’t believe in. And how these ideologies connect with whatever you are trying to sell. While that sure may be a challenge, the HONY example has shown us how it is to be done.

Idalia Candelas

Idalia Candelas is an illustrator from Mexico. The series she is most famous for is the A Solas series of illustrations, in which she captures through strikingly beautiful art, how living alone can be an empowering and enabling experience for women. Her art goes against the popular notion of how heartbreaking it is for a woman to be on her own, and the popular characterization of “lonely”. Her art expresses beautifully without any words, that there is a difference between loneliness and solitude. “I like to show women who exist in solitude but do not suffer”, is how she describes these illustrations.

Though you can’t call this a very mainstream example of personal branding, the reason why we have this on our list is to make that exact point. Don’t worry about your personal brand making it to the mainstream. Focus more on your unique reason to have the brand you want, and have it reflect through the work you put out. While it may take a bit longer to gain traction than the other seemingly ‘more popular’ brands, your uniqueness will contribute to building a solid foundation for your brand in the longer run.

What helps these personal brands get the reach they have today? It is their focus on building a story through building a brand, but more than that, the focus that personal branding is really brand “you”. While each of these examples are under the category of personal brands, it is still apparent how very different they are from one another. Another commendable quality for all these brands above is the essence of responsibility they carry through their voice. What also makes these brands successful is their adherence to the five golden rules of personal branding:

  1. Remember it is not just about the product, it is also about you.
  2. Being responsible in the kind of content you curate and generate.
  3. Utilizing the maximum potential of social media.
  4. Networking
  5. Investing
    (To know more, read here)

Personal branding is one of the most powerful forms of marketing that exists in the modern time and day. It is an opportunity to create a visibility and a unique identity for ideas, principles and and values you believe in – in whatever way you choose to put it out there.

Need more reasons why personal branding is so powerful? We leave you with these statistics on the value of personal branding:

  • “When brand messages are shared by employees on social media, they get 561 percent more reach than the same messages shared by the brand’s social media channels.
  • Brand messages are re-shared 24 times more frequently when posted by an employee versus the brand’s social media channels.
  • On average, employees have 10 times more followers than their company’s social media accounts.
  • Content shared by employees receives 8 times more engagement than content shared by brand channels.

The bottom line is that we trust people more than we trust brands, and we engage with people more than we engage with brands.” And in that lies the power of ‘personal branding’, no matter who you are, or what your objective may be.

What they Say about Personal Branding – 10 Best Quotes

What they Say about Personal Branding – 10 Best Quotes

This week, we have introduced to you our series of posts on Personal Branding. If you haven’t already read our introductory post, which also serves as a crash course on personal branding, you can read it here – Personal Branding: Why it Matters and How you Can Get There. While our previous post was more on the fundamental and technical know hows of personal branding, today’s is to fetch you some inspiration. Wondering if other people felt the same things you may have felt at different points in time, regarding personal branding? Only one way to find out! Here are the 10 best Quotes on Personal Branding by some very successful personalities.

1. Because you represent brand ‘You’.

All of us need to understand the importance of branding. We are CEOs of our own companies: Me Inc. To be in business today, our most important job is to be head marketer for the brand called You. – Tom Peters in Fast Company

2. Whether it’s a blind date, or a job interview, remember you live in the Age of Google.

Personal branding is about managing your name—even if you don’t own a business—in a world of misinformation, disinformation, and semi-permanent Google records. Going on a date? Chances are that your “blind” date has Googled your name. Going to a job interview? Ditto.– Tim Ferriss

3. One of the golden rules for personal branding is getting to know your audience.

Focus on identifying your target audience, communicating an authentic message that they want and need and project yourself as an “expert” within your niche.– Kim Garst

4. The basics of starting well, when it comes to personal branding.

Start by knowing what you want and who you are, build credibility around it and deliver it online in a compelling way. – Krista Neher

5. The greatest promise you can ever make to yourself is to work hard, and work true – for the brand called ‘You’.

Your brand is a gateway to your true work. You know you are here to do something—to create something or help others in some way. The question is, how can you set up your life and work so that you can do it? The answer lies in your brand. When you create a compelling brand you attract people who want the promise of your brand – which you deliver.– Dave Buck

6. …And the greatest promise to your clients is your Brand!

Your personal brand is a promise to your clients… a promise of quality, consistency, competency, and reliability.– Jason Hartman

7. All good things take time. Including establishing solid foundations for your personal brand.

Building a profitable personal brand online is not a sprint, and something that happens over night. Don’t aim for perfection early on. Instead allow your brand to evolve naturally over time and focus on providing massive value and over deliver to your target audience. Then you will get more clear over your message and brand as well. Always remember that!– Navid Moazzez

8. Regardless of what background you come from, and where you aim on going, your personal branding matters!

Even individuals need to develop a brand for themselves …. Whatever your area of expertise, you can take steps to make people think of YOU when they think of your field.Accelepoint Webzine

9. Maintaining transparency about your brand is what contributes to the reputation of your brand.

It’s important to build a personal brand because it’s the only thing you’re going to have.Your reputation online, and in the new business world is pretty much the game, so you’ve got to be a good person. You can’t hide anything, and more importantly, you’ve got to be out there at some level.– Gary Vaynerchuk

10. And our favorite from the literary genius. This one goes out to every body out there regardless of whether or not you are interested in personal branding!

Be Yourself, Everyone Else is Already Taken. – Oscar Wilde

Have some favorite personal branding quotes? Bring them up here!

Personal Branding – Why it Matters and How you Can Get There

Personal Branding – Why it Matters and How you Can Get There

Today, personal branding matters more than it ever did not only because of the significant market value it carries with it, but also because of the opportunities it offers. Personal branding done right can open more doors for you than you ever imagined.

The business dictionary defines branding as: “The process involved in creating a unique name and image for a product in the consumers’ mind, mainly through advertising campaigns with a consistent theme.”

And for a long time, that’s exactly what branding entailed. However, with the advent of social media, branding has become everybody’s business. Today, we’re all acting as our own ambassadors. Whether you are an entrepreneur, an artist, a social worker, a writer, or even a job seeker, paying attention to and working on your own personal brand can be rewarding in multiple ways.

In the age of social media, it matters to be visible. Whether it is you, or your homegrown business, without visibility it is impossible to gain traction. Personal branding is a method of making yourself visible. Of putting out there your unique, authentic self through the work you do. It is true that the stiff competition might act as a deterrent, but your mode of personal branding should be aligned with your personality and belief – and that is how competition will not really matter in the long run.

Personal branding is nothing but using the forms of social media (which you already use) with the specific purpose of promoting your interests and outlook. If you are doing it for your homegrown business/ initiative you would have a very clear purpose. Similarly, in case you are doing it only for yourself and not a specific initiative, it would be more of your views and ideologies about things you believe in. For example, if your personal branding is for a small organic pickle business, your marketing strategies and ‘posts’ would have to include how and why you believe that these small businesses are important. You could speak about how this generates employment for women from several villages who would otherwise be unemployed. Or how it brings back the focus to local, hand-made produce. It could even be simply about the difference in the taste of something packaged with love rather than in a factory.

How would your personal branding strategy differ if you were doing it just for yourself? And not for any entrepreneurial purposes? Not very different. Except in this case, your personal branding is for “you”. Which means, in this case things like your ideologies, your views, what you associate yourself with, who you associate yourself with – all of this becomes central to your personal branding. In which case, LinkedIn is a great platform for you.

How are we able to distinguish between most famous personalities we may be aware of, without ever having met them? Because of their personal branding. Because we are constantly reading about them. Today though, one doesn’t need a PR person to fix this for them. All you need is a platform, and a voice – both of which you have free access to. Like all opportunities, this is one that gives you a lot of power, and along with it a lot of responsibility. How you choose to use it is up to your discretion.

The 5 Golden Rules for Personal Branding

1. Remember it is not about the product, it is about you

Or rather, not just  about the product. Above, we gave examples of two kinds of personal branding – one for specific initiatives and the second for yourself. However, even if it is the first kind of personal branding you are aiming for, remember what you are marketing should be seen as an extension of you. And that itself becomes the unique selling point (USP) for the service or product you are putting out. Your branding strategy should have a voice, which should be no one else’s but yours. It should speak about what you believe in, and what you don’t believe in. And how these ideologies connect with whatever you are trying to sell. Sounds like a challenge? Well, nothing comes easy!

2. Be responsible

Your constitution entitles you to a number of rights which includes freedom to speech. Being able to use your own, authentic voice which promotes the ideas and ideologies you harbor is a benefit of that right. Being responsible about what you speak and choose to put out is a ground rule for not just personal branding, but any form of social media interaction (and otherwise!). Remember that when you put out or say certain things on interactive platforms, people listen to it and engage with it in a conscious as well as subconscious manner. That is the power of personal branding and social media. In the recent times however, we know of way too many examples where these liberties have been abused. With power comes responsibility – it serves well to always remember this!

3. Social media is everything for you

Personal branding demands a judicious use of any and all resources that are available for free or minimum cost. The most powerful resource at your disposal is social media. Teach yourself as much as you can about all forms of social media, and mark the differences between each. How would your interaction/ voice vary on Facebook from LinkedIn? Understand the kind of audience that uses specific platforms, and mould your strategies accordingly. You can’t ever learn enough about the ever evolving forms of social media. Being in ‘sync’ and ‘updated’ (pun intended!) about how each form of social media works is a huge advantage for personal branding. Find out how stories make a difference to your brand on Instagram, how you can use Facebook live, and what’s new on Twitter. Learning and evolving with the market is a strategy that will always come in handy.

4. Network

Always a big bonus. Reach out and network with others who are doing personal branding. Take note of what works and doesn’t work with these brands. Learn from their mistakes and their success stories. Even short collaborations where there is a match of sensibilities is a fantastic way to go about personal branding. Networking allows you to step beyond narrow frameworks and visions and brings you a far greater reach and exposure. Being active on platforms such as LinkedIn, and creating valuable content is a great way to go about networking. Organizing, or being a part of meetups which discuss the concept and forms of personal branding is also a dependable way for meeting like minded people and making connections.

5. Invest

Wherever there is a need for growth, there needs to be investment. In the case of personal branding, even though you may have a very limited budget, make space for investments. Take up courses on specific marketing strategies that might add to your knowledge pool. Maybe one on understanding the forms and functions of social media better? Here is a great course on Coursera to help you get started with – “Introduction to Personal Branding”. If you have a small team, consider investing in sessions for them on how they can adopt and adapt to the vision for your brand better. Most importantly, invest “time”, into understanding how you envision your brand to grow, and what you see it standing for. Focusing on change helps you keep away the fear of being stagnant. And being stagnant in any business or career – big, or small,  is toxic.

Creating and nurturing a personal brand for yourself can be truly empowering. Besides all the factors we have mentioned above, consistency is also a keyword for personal brand. Your efforts and your vision need to be consistent, which in turn reflects in your strategies. One way of making sure of this is always reminding yourself to keep in mind who your audience is.

All of us need to understand the importance of branding. We are CEOs of our own companies: Me Inc. To be in business today, our most important job is to be head marketer for the brand called You. 

Tom Peters, Fast Company

Have a personal brand and want to share the ups and downs of working on it? We are all ears!