Your personal brand is crucial for your next promotion and raise. Here’s how to create one

A strong work ethic, networking skills, and creativity are all necessary to get ahead in the workplace, but they may not be enough. To land that huge promotion, you may need to be more strategic about how you present yourself.

When your managers and your managers’ managers are gathered behind closed doors, your success may depend on your office image. Creating the right personal brand at work could be integral to securing big promotions for which you otherwise would’ve been overlooked.

“Personal brand is really how you portray yourself and in every interaction, whether that's in written form, how you handle your communication on social media, LinkedIn, and your emails, as well as how you handle yourself in person and the reputation of your work,” said Kathy Gersch, chief commercial officer of business strategy firm Kotter. “Be intentional and consistent with what you want to be known for.”

Voters in the meetings who decide promotions may not know your full work repertoire, but they can still act in your favor if they have a coherent image of you to latch onto. Otherwise, even if you do solid work, your lack of presence in decisionmakers’ minds could stall your career momentum.

Building your brand

The difference between a positive reputation and a personal brand is the underlying strategy and forethought. A worker may have a reputation for being friendly, but that’s different from intentionally incorporating good communication and optimism into every aspect of their work. Reputation is more amorphous and thus less credible as reasoning behind promotions or unique opportunities. A personal brand is more reliable in the minds of higher-ups because it demonstrates that you consistently and purposefully commit to certain work values.

The concept combines aspects of networking, self-promotion, and good old-fashioned ambition that are well-known and used by previous generations of workers, but is updated for the internet-age cliché of individuals being their own brands. With the rise of social media influencers and online thought leaders, making yourself into a brand and selling yourself as a specific package of skills and qualities is pitched as the new way to get ahead.

Young woman with glasses, taking a selfie smiling, while carrying her notebooks, on a red background.
(Getty Images) · Guillermo Spelucin via Getty Images

To build a personal professional brand, you should reflect on what principles you want to highlight in the workplace, be it productivity, collaboration, leadership, or other positive traits.

Be authentic because people can spot insincere colleagues, Joe Hart, CEO of professional training company Dale Carnegie, said. Reflect on which qualities you rely on most, what your values are, and what you lean on, he said. Next, come up with ways that you can highlight those principles across all your workplace interactions.