How To Build A $1,000,000 Personal Brand (Detailed Breakdown)

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let's not tiptoe into the pool of controversy let's dive head first into it let's talk about the Yus himself does he have an emotional bond an irrational emotional bond with his audience in his community yes most definitely the power of influence that he has in directing capturing and leveraging attention that's one of the key components to having a personal brand he doesn't go along with a mainstream opinion which makes him a very divisive person okay so if you're picking up on all the clues that I'm giving let's put it together here I have some opinions about what a personal brand is and what it isn't and so I'd like to share some of my thoughts and see if you guys can track along with what I'm saying so if I ask you like what is a personal brand who has a really strong personal brand I think the tendency is for you to say famous people or people who have great influence in the world and then I ask you other questions about them and then it will start to unravel so let's try to like just break down systematically the things or the core components that you need to have a strong personal Brand number one is being famous a component of having a personal brand so let's examine famous people that we know or we think we know and then to ask ourselves do we really know who they are and the number one component that I keep coming back to is do we have a strong emotional connection a sense of known as person that we know the story that we can relate and identify with them such that we would be willing to go out of our way to buy their books to wait in line to see their movie or to attend a concert or Workshop that they're doing this is critical so the first person I think of is someone who's relatively famous who's a prolific content creator who is a well-respected thought leader and his name is Seth Goen Seth Goden has written over 22 books has written a blog post every single day for over a decade which is an incredible feat in itself I have great admiration for Seth Goden in fact we've had him as a podcast guest here on this channel the question is what do we know about Seth Goden outside of his subject matter expertise and the answer is very little I'll ask you a couple of questions is he married we think so what's his wife's name does he have children how many children does he have what are their names does he have a pet what are his interests and hobbies outside of observing things and writing about things that relate to Marketing in the 21st century then it becomes really opaque so Seth Goden arguably is a famous person is a sought after public figure who has lectured all over the world on some of the biggest stages in the world but the question I have for you is does he have a strong personal brand I think this is a good clue as to how we start thinking about personal Brands and why I think my perspective on this is so different than the vast majority of people who talk about having and building a personal brand let's take another person someone that you most likely know if you're watching this channel Gary vaynerchuk let's run him through the same test with Seth Goden is he famous certainly he is famous is Gary a thought leader has he published books is he a bestselling author is he a sought-after speaker and also have spoken on the biggest age of the world and I would say probably inarguably yes yes yes and yes and he has one additional thing as far as I know that might put him above a lot of other people he runs a large Enterprise a big business that does hundreds of millions of dollars in Revenue according to him does Gary vaynerchuk have a personal brand does he have this irrational emotional connection to you and I want you to pause and think about that for a second and then answer the question of why or why not and we can examine this together I think Gary has a very strong personal brand and it's going to give us our second clue he has a strong point of view on things so not only do you have to build a strong emotional connection which he has as evidenced by his collaboration with K Swiss with his launch of his nfts and anything else he's Hawking empathy wines because a person and you can test this who has a personal brand is able to take ordinary things and make them extraordinary by associating themselves with this this is really critical this is another test so by association with something that thing becomes more valuable and we we're going to borrow language from the corporate world here a t-shirt you can buy a pack of three for like a few bucks and if you're really 50 for not a whole lot but you can go to Target you can go to Costco and buy a pack of three h beefy te white t-shirts for probably 10 bucks for a pack of three maybe a little bit more than that so you're paying essentially for the raw material cost and assembly and the shipping that it takes to get it to the the market and some waste built into that you're not getting a lot above that what brands are able to do is to charge a premium above and beyond the cost of goods sold the higher that premium the stronger the brand so when Gary grabs a bottle of wine perhaps it cost him4 $5 to make he sells it for $55 you could say his brand or the premium that he adds to it is that $50 difference of intangible value and that's really really important so we we go back to Seth Goden so Seth Goden says hey here's a line of mugs here's a pair of shoes that I endorse and put my name on to the Seth Goen kicks does it command a higher premium for it if it doesn't then we're in trouble and what he's doing there Gary vaynerchuk is he's leveraging that emotional connection that you have with him I guess your desire to reciprocate the value in which you've received and you tell yourself you're supporting this artist this designer this creative this thought Leader by purchasing the things that they have endorsed or put their name behind really important he can take a piece of information and send it through the Gary vaynerchuk filter and then produce a message that in essence has the same meaning but sounds very much like a Viner ISM this is important and there's Goden isms too but this is one of those criteria so that what we can't do is we can't say things the way that other people say them and expect anyone to believe that there's any credibility that we have a personal brand we need to have a strong point of view let's not tiptoe into those pool of controversy let's dive head first into it let's talk about the genius himself the one and only yay we're talking about Kanye West here does he have a strong personal brand if we use the same metrics in which we've been looking at let's run it through and see how strong his personal brand is undoubtedly with the drop of vultures volume 1 and two his collab with Tai dollar sign his Fallout and rehab and then Fallout again with ADI Das and with the line of clothing and the shoes with Yeezy and his genius marketing plan let's kind of figure it out number one does he have an emotional bond in rational emotional bond with this audience in this community yes most definitely how do we know this how do we know that well because every time he does something we all care we care about it in the trades uh we see it in the tabloids we go to concerts we read articles about him we'll watch videos about him and there's this constant feed of Kanye West news he's lost his mind he's battling mental health he's in and out of relationships you know he's he's dabbling as some kind of o2 for with music and now with fashion so most definitely We Care there's a hyper sense of attention or focus on whatever Kanye does so clearly he has mastered personal branding because whatever he wants to talk about is what we'll be talking about that's how powerful he is put aside all the crazy stuff he said this we're not here to to judge whether or not what he's saying is is is good or bad it's just the power of influence that he has in directing capturing and leveraging attention that's one of the key components to having a personal brand does he have a strong POV clearly has emotional bond does he have a clear POV you can't get no clearer than this and I'm trying my best to speak proper English here because he has a conspiracy theory on everything about drugs about Jewish people about media about Adidas about holding back black people in slavery he has an opinion about everything and he doesn't he doesn't go along with a mainstream opinion which makes him a very divisive person so having a strong point of view means that you're going to make some friends but you also make some enemies along the way and to I think to a degree he has hurt his music part by saying I guess the relatively outlandish things that he's been saying I think he's lost over a billion dollars in sponsorships and brand deals because of the things he said about Jewish people it is seen as anti-semitic and so that's very very problematic in today's culture but he's okay with that he's accepted that I will say this I'm not going to apologize until you can challenge me with a better rational argument I'm going to believe what I'm going to believe because he has enough money now that he doesn't have to worry about this it's like it's good to be so rich you don't care if you get cancelled because it don't matter at the end of the day so I know what you're thinking Chris is talking about these celebrities so I guess it's unfair they're good-looking they're rich they're famous gosh and they have personal Brands too but here's the thing though in the world of people that are famous actors musicians uh designers whatever famous person you're thinking of Ash yourself if you have an emotional connection to them and there's a good chance that most of them do not add value to something by lending their endorsement or attachment or association with because there are a ton of actors out there that they can't sell a vodka line they can't sell a tequila line they can't raise money to start a coffee bean company or they don't move pairs of jeans if they just say like I'm associated with this because this is not how we see them and it's not the relationship we have with them so I think there's something that's going on here and it's the first thing that we need to kind of break down and I use that word very intentionally think about the wall that exists between you your content your beliefs your values your ideas your message your story and your audience how much will you let them in on that stuff will determine that connection that they have with you all right so naturally we have to talk about the queen bee herself here who am I talking about I'm not talking Beyonce I'm talking about Taylor Swift the AIS tour the most successful tour that's ever existed in the history of Tours multi-billion dollar Juggernaut and the stats are ridiculous people reporting that the swifties were shaking The Ground by jumping up and down that it registered on the RoR scale I mean you're talking about seismic activity of personal brand literally felt you can't get no better than this this is ridiculous levels of personal branding she's done a lot of beautiful things in order for her to achieve this kind of status now first of all I think there is undeniable Talent there a gift for storytelling for writing hooks that are catchy and being able to consistently produce chart topping singles what I saw in the era tour which is a 3-hour long concert film is someone who's a master at their craft she's brought you into her stories or heartaches her love stories and she is able to make women and men of all ages feel like she is their Champion that she creates space for them to be them and she invites you in on this thing that despite being a globe trotting Mega Superstar at the highest order she still gets down on one knee and looks at you and ey and says thanks for being here you mean so much to make that is super powerful and I think in terms of like the way that she designs her personal brand I would challenge you to find someone else who's playing at that level to the way in which Taylor Swift is doing it we've seen her go through all the controversial things from Kanye West stepping in and saying Beyonce should have won the Grammy and dealing with that and the latest controversy that I I think is just a brilliant genius business move in that she tried to buy back her catalog but people prevented her from doing this the Swedish Revenge was she re-recorded all of her songs and because of the strength and connection she has with her fans now that is selling like crazy and she's done such a power move by being able to do this in an unprecedented way re-recording remastering all of her songs so now you have a choice to choose to listen to her version of it or the label version of it which she doesn't have access to and this culminates in this beautiful moment that she launches into AAS tour which is a three-hour long concert that is doing billions of dollars that is quite literally shaking up the world before I get into the tactics on how we do this cuz I'm dropping Clues if you're paying careful attention you'll start to see a pattern happening here okay so if you're picking up on all the clues that I'm giving let's put it together here I think there are three essential traits that make for a very attractive character not in physicality but attractiveness like we're drawn to them like magnets were just drawn to them or as they say Moths To The Flame number number one is they have high self-awareness and on top of that they have high self-acceptance so they need to know who they are and to love the parts about them that are both good and bad the problem with some celebrities is they have selfawareness but they don't have self-acceptance they're fighting that so they're they're building a barrier that wall that keep us away from them they don't want us in there it's a close cousin but number two is this idea of self-confidence and self-confidence is not what you think it is self-confidence is a belief in your skills to solve a problem you have a process and way of looking at the world that you know you can solve most problems it's not about having a high opinion of yourself or being arrogant or treating people poorly it's not about that at all and number three probably the most important of all which is a theme you're going to see here is a degree of vulnerability you feel like they're not going to keep anything away from you so there's another word for vulnerability it's called transparency there's good things that happen in my life and there are bad things that happen in my life I'm going to Dish both out to you in equal measure so you know what's going on the opposite of which is like you're some kind of sociopath where we can see that there's a person behind the eyes but they feel dead to us like we don't understand so you need to know this if you want to build a strong personal brand the way that I'm talking about here you have to be willing to let people in into those low moments as well as the high moments we have to dance with both now I'm going to point out something here we might have mentioned in this previous video but Pixar has this rule it's the 22 rules of storytelling and they're the most successful Studio of all time with multi-million multi-billion dollar hits and they're 22 rules of Storytelling guess what rule number one is rule number one is that people admire characters more for their struggles and their failures than they do for their success this is why it's important to have a character that is working through their problems is not perfect and I think this is why characters like Superman are not relatable but characters like Bruce Wayne and Peter Parker are highly Rel we can see ourselves in some small way in these characters cuz they're just dealing with problems just like us if self-confidence selfawareness and self-acceptance and vulnerability transparency are the most important components that I'm saying about becoming an attractive character these are things you're going to have to Define in yourself if you want if you want to have a shot at developing your personal Brand This is not easy work this is the work of a lifetime and I do want to say this this is not an indicator of age cuz there are are some people who are very young like chronologically speaking maybe even in their teens who have high self-awareness high self acceptance and I can't explain how they're able to come to this place and then they conversely people that are much older in their 50s and 60s who are still wandering the Earth not knowing who they are not knowing what their beliefs are and what they stand for they haven't done that work I can't explain why but it's not an indicator of age and there's this great line because Dune is happening right there's a line from Dune that has followed me since I was first introduced to Frank Herbert's work which is this line it's very important the sleeper must awaken and we think it's a lesson from um Paul's father Duke Le trades at least it was portrayed portrayed that way in the David Lynch version but in Denny's version it's like his mom repeating this lines the sleeper must awaken and I think that's such a powerful line that I think and you've heard me say this before we're all just sleepwalking through life we're not really aware and awake in the present moment and it's a wild thing because I asked people what' you do today did you notice this thing that just happened across the street and I I do this with my children I do this with my wife I do this with my friends they like what are you talking about they're not noticing things they're not paying attention to what's going on and I think they're just sleepwalking through life so the sleeper must awaken how do you awaken I was having a debate with one of my friends uh who thought they had high self-awareness when actually they were really high on self-conscious and there's a difference between self-conscious and self-awareness okay allow me to enter this into the debate when you're self-conscious you're thinking about yourself through the lens of yourself like am I being too loud am am I important am I beautiful am I ugly right now but self-awareness is being able to perceive yourself from the eyes of other people so when somebody says I have low self-awareness it means that you're talking but no one's interested but you just keep talking more and more you're you're not reading the audience you think you're funny charming and you're telling captivating stories but they're all falling asleep but you can't see that so you keep going like the opposite of this is people who are on the Spectrum like one of the guys that used to work for me he's a cinematographer he would literally walk in front of the crowd block the Bandon take the shot and not feel any sense of the heat that most of us would feel which would cause us to sweat he had low self-awareness how do we develop this well we can be more observant and ask people what they're thinking and feeling and we have to be able to pick up on some of the social cues that most of us are able to develop I guess in the neurotypical space can develop if you're neurod Divergent it's going to be a little bit harder but you can learn these skills as well what comes natural to people may just require a little bit more effort from you to to be able to figure this part out so when you have high self-awareness you know how you're coming across to people and you have to make certain decisions like am I okay with this knowing that sometimes I say things that can be a little bit abrasive am I okay with that and that's the next step it's because I think one of the most attractive things that a person can have outside of self-confidence is high self-acceptance do I love me for being me now I'll tell you this I was reading a book by Brian Tracy the psychology of Sals and he says one of the most important discoveries of 20th century in Psychology was the development of this concept called the self-concept who am I and what makes me me this is a tricky thing because we can spend most of our Lives not knowing who we are because we haven't taken the time to reflect on the things that we think about we just experience life without reflection and this is a really important component of it so one thing that you can do is you can probably to start journaling to start making a habit of cataloging your ideas and your experiences and then taking a break and then looking back on what you wrote two 3 weeks ago and asking yourself if those things are true is this how other people saw you or is this you leaving your own head I think that's an important first step is to be able to start to audit record and reflect on your thoughts on a daily basis they're going to be people who are born with this natural innate talent in understanding who they are who are full of self- Lov maybe they're raised a certain way but that doesn't mean that the rest of us ugly short people are just s so they don't mean that so what I've noticed is that if we study things from literature especially in fiction there are certain commonalities certain patterns that exist that allow us to fall in love with characters just think about this when we read a book a novel a work of fiction or when we watch a movie or TV show when the character is harmed we feel hurt ourselves when they're hurt emotionally we feel great sorrow for them and how is this it's because the authors the people who create these universes these narratives that we're immersed in understand how to create characters for us to fall in love with them for us to Care otherwise we would have read their books watched their shows or sat in a theater in a darken room to kind of be taken on a journey I find that there are four key components we won't have time to go through all of them in this video but let me outline for you what they are and we'll go deep into one of them number one every compelling character has an origin story this is really important and the origin story has some key components your backstory where you're born basically it's called your cultural currency they say a lot about you and who you are your beliefs and and your values they may not be true but it's what the world accepts from you and then in the origin story there's this moment an inflection point an inciting incident in their life that everything changes there's the Ordinary World that happens before if something happens to rock their world it's a car accident losing of a parent getting accepted to University being adopted something happens that radically transforms their lives and they're a whole different person it's called crossing the threshold if you're fan of Joseph Campbell and the hero's journey the mono myth and lastly there are the ongoing trials and tribulations because no one in the real world has a solution and never falls back it's like the drug addict who continues to struggle with remaining sober it's the gambling addict who struggles with not gambling again so it's referred to in the hero's journey as the relapse and the resurrection well how we fall back but we emerge a little bit stronger and that's the story for the rest of our lives you don't ever once you're an alcoholic you never become not an alcoholic you just learn to live with it now number two which is community and culture the people who support you your tribes people your village this includes your Mentor coaches your teacher Sidekicks that help you to form your beliefs your values and your Customs number three the defining attributes of who you are and your personal brand so if we look into the world of fiction I'm not going to miss on this opportunity to talk about comic books and pop culture if you think of the most enduring characters the ones that have lasted decades long from your father's father to your father to you and to your children we think of superheroes and we think of like what what is it that they have well they have a CREDO the things that they believe sometimes referred to in the modern era as a catchphrase like Simon cnic start with why or Leaders Eat Last he has so many of them people don't buy what you do they buy why you do the characters have a duality of both strengths and vulnerabilities almost in equal measure so the characters that are really relatable as we've talked about in real life have a lot of vulnerabilities things that they know aren't perfect about them and those things make the character more complete more textured and more real and we can then see ourselves in their story as opposed to at an arms length like easy for them to say I cannot relate to you they also have a way of showing up this is their uniform the colors that they wear the symbols and the iconography that make them who they are are the lexicons that Define them Superman if you see the red cape if you see that Curly qua up front if you see Batman's just his jawline or his ears you know it's him it's makes him who he is and you can think well yeah in the world of superheroes that's pretty easy to do but you know I just had this happen to me literally today I'm sitting at a cafe I'm talking to my friend who's a professional speaker and somebody comes walking around I don't notice them until they walk right up to me and like hey are you Christo I'm like yeah and he says you know what I was sitting behind you and from the back I can recognize it's you I'm like that's pretty powerful then right you want to be able to develop your uniform your wardrobe basically how you look from your eyeglasses to your hat to your shoes such that someone can recognize who you are purely based on your silhouette or from 30 feet away they know it's you so part of this is your voice the quality the timber of your voice the tone how you speak how much energy you have transmit a signal to the world but also create what they call Sonic branding it's your signature sound it's your signature look okay and lastly it's the enemy so we have a community and culture that supports us we must be able to have an enemy Alan dib writes about this in his book the one-page marketing plan he says we have to identify the enemy in common it's like things that we hate we hate bureaucracy we hate waste we hate pollution we hate selfish people so if you can Iden this and I've mentioned before in my Adobe Max talk on personal branding I said Andrew Tate has an enemy and the enemy he labels as the Matrix Donald Trump has an enemy Lam stream media you notice what they're doing here they're labeling their enemies you're calling it something so there's a reason why I think Donald Trump is so successful in their modern political era is because he doesn't have to tell you what he believes in he just needs to tell you that we hate these things together if we hate enough things together we can rally around that so anger as well as love are two powerful emotional drivers to building your tribe so when we think you know what I'm Mr Rogers I don't want to hurt anybody I don't want to say anything negative then you don't really truly have a strong personal brand because we're not rallying against same things so the enemy can be your Nemesis the one person who represents the equal opposite version of you then there are people organizations and ideas that you're against and the big bigger the cast of characters the more people that you're trying to take down the more that we have in common the enemy in common the more powerful your personal brand is on a personal level people ask me this all the time they say Chris you're anti-education I said no I'm anti- crippling student debt I'm all for Education the problem is not the education part it's about how much it costs us to acquire some information for jobs that may or may not exist in structures that don't accom for individual learning styles that are atypical I have a problem with that and that is my enemy so that's why we see the future is like private art school without the crippling debt as soon as I say that shots are fired and I'm okay with making some enemies and you need to as well just to recap there are four key components with sub components but the four key components are your origin story the community and the culture that support you your defining attributes which includes your lexicons and icons and then the enemy oh the enemy I want to make these other videos but I want to make sure that you're enjoying this video and getting value from it and that we're not talking to the best I'm going to ask you to do two very specific things first pause like this video drop a comment so it's good for the algorithm so more people can see it apparently that's how YouTube works and number two copy the link send this to someone you know and care about who needs to see this video and tell them why they should watch this because that would do tremendous things for our Channel within the constraints of a video not to to fry your brains and make you bleed out of your eyeballs I'm going to go over the four key components to building a strong personal brand and in subsequent videos If so willing we'll go do a deep dive on each one of these four core components so now you know the four essential components to building a personal brand that connects with people and it relates to all the things we talked about before about celebrities or famous people or authors or influencers that we like and have built an emotional bond withd they have high self-awareness self-acceptance self-confidence they're willing to share publicly transparently the vulnerable things so the highs and the lows and I want you to do something pay attention now to the people that you see look up and admire and the ones that you feel a connection to and run the test with me to see if it holds true and let me know in the comments if you're like hey I found somebody that where this isn't true or I found someone where this is absolutely freaking true keep me honest and accountable thank you until next time see you in the future
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Channel: The Futur
Views: 50,211
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Keywords: the futur, mindset, pricing strategies, negotiations, sales training, branding, personal branding, brand lab, bald asian guy, logo worth, brand strategy, futur pro, accelerator, How to build a personal brand, personal brand, personal brand vs business brand, how to build a house in minecraftld a brand
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Length: 28min 3sec (1683 seconds)
Published: Tue Apr 16 2024
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