The Perfect Song: 2 mins. 42 secs.

Lib shared some hilarious song stuff with me today:

First, The Perfect Song, by Carrie Brownstien & Fred Armisen.

Next, Two Minutes and 42 Seconds in Heaven, a super-sassy and highly logical argument for the length of the perfect song. I love the writer’s ‘about’ blurb:

Joshua Allen is a complex and exciting young man. He is a hard worker and always gives 110 percent. He is a people-person unless that person is a crab and not pulling their weight for the team. If enthusiasm and get-up-and-go are drugs, then he’s a hardcore drug addict. He’s pretty obviously an only child.

No wonder he starts his essay with this:

I am a very busy and important man. I don’t need to tell you this…I schedule 35 minutes a day for recreation. That’s all I need to refresh myself from the rigors of punching holes through the guts of this world. Recreation typically consists of lifting something heavy or posting a new sonnet to my blog.

Someday, maybe, if I try hard enough, I’ll be that busy.

Brand New

So I feel a new me coming around the bend. It’s sort of a unifying theory I’m using to tie all of my pursuits together. This awakening was hastened this evening by The Brand Called You and Brand You Survival Kit by Tom Peters. It’s all been swirling around in my head, but these methods give it something to proceed with.

Start by identifying the qualities or characteristics that make you distinctive from your competitors — or your colleagues. What have you done lately — this week — to make yourself stand out? What would your colleagues or your customers say is your greatest and clearest strength? Your most noteworthy (as in, worthy of note) personal trait?

Forget your job title. Ask yourself: What do I do that adds remarkable, measurable, distinguished, distinctive value? Forget your job description. Ask yourself: What do I do that I am most proud of?

What have I accomplished that I can unabashedly brag about? If you’re going to be a brand, you’ve got to become relentlessly focused on what you do that adds value, that you’re proud of, and most important, that you can shamelessly take credit for.

When you’ve done that, sit down and ask yourself one more question to define your brand: What do I want to be famous for? That’s right — famous for!

For most branding campaigns, the first step is visibility.

The second important thing to remember about your personal visibility campaign is: it all matters. When you’re promoting brand You, everything you do — and everything you choose not to do — communicates the value and character of the brand.

The key to any personal branding campaign is “word-of-mouth marketing.” Your network of friends, colleagues, clients, and customers is the most important marketing vehicle you’ve got; what they say about you and your contributions is what the market will ultimately gauge as the value of your brand. So the big trick to building your brand is to find ways to nurture your network of colleagues — consciously.

As a consumer, you want to associate with brands whose powerful presence creates a halo effect that rubs off on you.

One key to growing your power is to recognize the simple fact that we now live in a project world. Almost all work today is organized into bite-sized packets called projects. A project-based world is ideal for growing your brand: projects exist around deliverables, they create measurables, and they leave you with braggables. If you’re not spending at least 70% of your time working on projects, creating projects, or organizing your (apparently mundane) tasks into projects, you are sadly living in the past. Today you have to think, breathe, act, and work in projects.

You don’t have an old-fashioned résumé anymore! You’ve got a marketing brochure for brand You. Instead of a static list of titles held and positions occupied, your marketing brochure brings to life the skills you’ve mastered, the projects you’ve delivered, the braggables you can take credit for. And like any good marketing brochure, yours needs constant updating to reflect the growth — breadth and depth — of brand You.

Today loyalty is the only thing that matters. But it isn’t blind loyalty to the company. It’s loyalty to your colleagues, loyalty to your team, loyalty to your project, loyalty to your customers, and loyalty to yourself. I see it as a much deeper sense of loyalty than mindless loyalty to the Company Z logo.

What you want is a steady diet of more interesting, more challenging, more provocative projects.

Instead of making yourself a slave to the concept of a career ladder, reinvent yourself on a semiregular basis.

The Brand Gap

From J to McCombs to English at Work, seems like “Brand” is what I do now. As I try to focus my method, I thought again of this great slideshow about brand.

Here are a few notes and favorite lines:

14: A Brand is a person’s gut feeling about a product, service, or organization.

28: Problem: In most companies, strategy is seperated from creativity by a wide gap.

29: On one side are strategic thinkers (analytical, logical, linear, numerical, verbal) and on the other side are creative thinkers (intuitive, emotional, spatial, visual, physical).

32: A charismatic brand is any product, service, or oranization for which people believe there’s no substitute.

34: Charismatic brands: Amazon, Apple, Disney, DK Books, Google, Idea, Krispy Kreme, Levi’s, Mini Cooper, Nordstrom, Oxo Goodgrips, Rubbermain, Samsung, Southwest Airlines, Virgin

50: Who are you? What do you do? Why does it matter?

51: Unless you have compelling answers to these questions, you need more focus.

54: Ban brand extensions are those that chase short-term profits at the expense of long-term brand value. Good brand extensions grow the value of a brand by reinforcing its focus.

Differentiate, Collaborate, Innovate, Validate

from http://www.slideshare.net/BrandAutopsy/growing-a-brand-growing-a-team?src=related_normal&rel=98408

Our ______ is the only _____ that ______. Brand name, product category, uniqueness.