Saturday, May 23, 2020
Maintaining Your Personal Brand During Illness or Injury - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career
Maintaining Your Personal Brand During Illness or Injury - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career Until 2009, I hadnât been to a primary care physician in I donât know how long. Iâm typically very healthy â" exercise daily, eat right, all of that good stuff. Unfortunately, âall of that good stuffâ hasnât kept me completely out of doctorsâ offices over the years. In the last decade, Iâve had a cancer scare, chronic migraines and an accident that resulted in major surgery and ultimately lead to a severe nerve disorder. The first two resulted in my personal brand being severely damaged, but I was ready the third time around. Plan ahead How creepy is it to plan for a possible long-term injury or illness? To me, itâs like picking out your funeral plot. But, creepy factor aside, itâs always best to plan for, well, everything! My cancer scare lasted a really long time. I saw doctor after doctor who couldnât find a thing wrong with me, and yet I knew I was getting worse. In the meantime, I was letting my responsibilities and image fall by the wayside. I didnât care about anything but finding out the truth. However, I really hurt myself in the long-run by approaching the situation that way. After the problem was found and removed, I was basically starting from scratch â" and had a lot of explaining to a lot of people to do. At that point, I wanted nothing more than to go back to my ânormal life,â but Iâd burned so many bridges, that wasnât possible. The same thing happened before I was officially diagnosed with chronic migraines. I now know Iâve had them since I was 12, but my symptoms had never been given a name or a solution. Again, the result was the same â" a damaged reputation when all I wanted to do was start living my life again. Iâd only really gotten a foothold on my personal brand again when my accident happened in November 2008. I actually didnât know it was going to change my life forever, but I made a promise to myself that I wouldnât shut out the world â" maintaining my connections and continuing to build my brand as someone who helps young professionals achieve their career dreams kept me going. Build a support system I donât know what Iâd do without all the mentors in my life. Iâm currently in remission, but my nerve disorder is expected to rear its ugly head approximately every 12 months for the rest of my life â" the painful procedures they perform to keep things under control only last so long. My husband, while completely fantastic, doesnât understand the need to build and maintain a personal brand. So Iâve built a system of great folks in the career space who I can lean on when I need to. They not only offer words of encouragement just to get through the day, but also suggestions for keeping at a minimum of a jogging pace with my brand. You guys know who you are, and I canât thank you enough for how youâve impacted my life thus far and how Iâm sure you will continue to do so far into the future. Automate Iâm not saying you should set up your Twitter account to send auto-DMs every time someone follows you â" we all know thatâs annoying and fake. But, that doesnât mean there arenât parts of your brand that canât keep going without your undivided, constant attention. One of the best pieces of advice Iâve picked up while launching my business is to create a manual of everything I do just in case Iâm not there to do them â" for whatever reason. (Iâm secretly hoping the reason is a much-needed vacation!) Whoâs to say you canât do the same thing for your brand? Write out everything you do on a daily/weekly/monthly basis, and have someone ready to fulfill those duties while you canât. I hired an assistant in May 2009 when things were really bad for me. And while she can attest I didnât have everything all nicely written out for her at that time, she knows how much of an impact she made on my life, business and brand. Simply put: Learn to delegate and donât just disappear. Those two things will help you out tremendously when youâre ready to be back at the helm. What other tips would you recommend? Author: Heather R. Huhman is a career expert and founder president of Come Recommended, an exclusive online community connecting the best internship and entry-level job candidates with the best employers. She is also the author of #ENTRYLEVELtweet: Taking Your Career from Classroom to Cubicle (2010), national entry-level careers columnist for Examiner.com and blogs about career advice at HeatherHuhman.com.
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