Monday, May 18, 2020
Digital Fatigue And Refreshment - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career
Digital Fatigue And Refreshment - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career Just go to my website. Iâll text you. I posted it on my FB page. I tweeted it. I found it on LinkedIn. He sent me a Branchout request. Itâs on my Pinterest. I saw your 4square check-in at the gym. Did you get my email? Noooooooo. I may have hit the wall this week. It could be the pace or magnitude of my work for the last few weeks. It could be that the sunshine blazed in Los Angeles. Maybe it was walking the dogs on the beach. Sunday was my first day where I dreaded turning on a device. Any device: laptop, iPad, iPhone, and so on. I would have cut the cord but I believe in the âbattery upâ rule (always be charging) so cords were superfluous. Typically I have a digital reflex when I read something interesting (the Sunday NY Times newspaper is a treasure trove), go somewhere inspiring or have any experience worth sharing (good or bad). I also have a digital reflex when too much time has passed (about 20 minutes) and I havenât gotten real time information from friends, bloggers, news or things you can find on the Internet. That digital reflex is a kind of perimeter check. I look for texts, scroll through email, and hit FB, Tweetdeck, Huffpo and half a dozen other places. Once my digital perimeter is secured â" do I know everything thatâs going on? â" then I can go radio silent for a while. The Internet isnât a bad habit, itâs my business. My personal brand depends on connectivity. Yours does too. And, building a personal brand really does take checking in during the day, seven days a week. It doesnât have to take a lot of time. You can be very successful on social media, if you devote just twenty minutes a day it. Thatâs if you have a strategy that youâre executing, rather than an âas it moves youâ approach. Because I have global clients and my output is web-dependent, my involvement is much heavier. Hence, I am constantly connecting. So when I took out a giant sketch pad and mind-mapped the keynote speech Iâm giving at the American Marketing Association for their 75th annual celebration in LA, I was shocked. I betrayed all my devices by just using paper and pen, and opened some books (real books!). I was pitching a shut out until I wanted a dictionary definition of persuasion. Yes, I have a real dictionary. But itâs so heavy with all the words that I didnât want to look up. Pages of them. And, I wanted to see more than one source when it came to deciding on the definition I would use. So my urgent desire for information overpowered my electronic hangover. I turned on my laptop and got what I needed: an affirmation of the power of words: spoken or typed. Persuasion, says Dictionary.com: the process by which a personâs attitude or behavior, without duress, are influenced by communication from other people. In other words, a perfect endorsement of the web. Author: Nance Rosen is the author of Speak Up! Succeed. She speaks to business audiences around the world and is a resource for press, including print, broadcast and online journalists and bloggers covering social media and careers. Read more at NanceRosenBlog. Twitter name: nancerosen
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