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 On this page: Meg Guiseppi shares the 7 reasons job seekers should develop their own authentic personal brands.
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  Back to «  Home   « Personal Branding Home
7 Reasons to Be an Original, Not a Personal Brand Copycat
You see a beautifully written, branded resume – or maybe a LinkedIn profile – of a job seeker with similar qualifications to yours, seeking the kind of job you want. It sounds a lot like you, and you don’t have a lot of time, so you see no reason why you shouldn’t use some of that good writing in your own resume or LinkedIn profile.

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More on Personal Branding:
Personal Branding Home
  What Is Personal Branding?
What's So Important About Personal Branding?
Branding Is Key to Future Employment
Branding Hype and Myth vs. Reality
  Building Your Personal
    Brand
10-Step Personal Branding Worksheet
How to Create Your Personal Brand
Personal Branding for New Grads
Get Personal with Your Personal Branding Statement
Personally Branded Resumes
10 Tips for Stronger Resume Branding
Branding with Your Personal Brand Biography
Branding with Structured Examples
Branding with Your Colors
Branding with Your Email Signature
  Online Branding
Components of a Strong Online Personal Brand
Building Your Online Brand and Online Identity
Measuring Your Online Brand
The 6 Keys to Online Executive Branding
7 Reasons to Be Original
  Social Media & Your Brand
Branding with Your LinkedIn Profile
Branding with LinkedIn Groups
New articleBranding with Your Google+ Profile
Amplify Your Personal Brand with Twitter
Building Your Brand with Guest Blogging
Branding with a Photo in Your Online Profiles
Power Your Personal Brand with Google Alerts
Branding by Making Comments on Blogs
  Maintaining Your Brand
The 3 C's Test for Your Personal Brand
Branding with Thank You Notes
  Refreshing/Changing Your
    Brand
Refreshing Your Personal Brand
  Personal Branding Expert
Meg Guiseppi, Personal Branding Expert
  For More Information:
Executive Branding and Your LinkedIn Profile (free ebook)
Job-Hunt Help's Personal Branding LinkedIn Group

Somehow, because it’s right in front of you, and there for all the world to see (if it’s online), you don’t think of it as stealing. But, despite what you may have heard, it is a form of stealing known as copyright infringement.

And, for many reasons, it is a very good idea to avoid copyright infringement because that copying can create all kinds of problems for you.  When you borrow someone else's brand, you put yourself in a difficult position. How will you come across in an interview - confident and convincing or floundering and failing?  When you borrow content, you risk exposing yourself as "less than" what you are trying to present.

Here are 7 reasons why borrowing content is a bad idea:

1. Copyright infringement has expensive penalties.

In the USA, the government thinks stealing content is wrong, too, and makes violating copyright law a serious, punishable offense, with fines up to $150,000 for each infringement.

ANY content you’ve found online, even if it doesn’t carry a “© Copyright” claim, is protected by the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), which is international in scope and consistent with similar laws in the European Union and most other parts of the globe.

2. A borrowed "personal" brand isn't very personal.

A “personal” brand is just that. It’s associated with a specific “person,” designed to resonate with their specific target employers, and crafted to showcase that person’s unique set of personal attributes, motivated strengths, passions, and value proposition. The content you’re stealing may sound like you, but it’s really not your brand story.

Employers are increasingly using the Internet to validate what is contained on a resume or in an online profile.  If everything isn't "in sync" it will look very odd, and will likely negatively impact your chances.

3. It's not your unique personal brand.

Branding is all about differentiating yourself. It’s not about how you’re the same as the others competing for the jobs you want. In today’s highly competitive job market, you need to stand out . . . not get lost in a sea of sameness.

Identify and help people assessing you understand what specifically elevates you above the rest, and makes you the best-fit candidate for your target companies.

4. It may not be appropriate for your situation.

The well-written content that’s tantalizing you may not do the job a resume or online profile is meant to do – aligning what you have to offer with the current needs of your target employers. You MUST research those companies to determine the key functional areas that will be important to them, and pump your resume and LinkedIn profile with your specific expertise, contributions, and value-add in those specific areas.

5. It may cause you to be shut out by identity confusion and conflicts.

That resume you stole from may still be in circulation, being used by an active job seeker, or the LinkedIn profile you borrowed may belong to a job seeker who is pursuing the same jobs you are. What do you suppose happens when a recruiter or hiring professional notices the same content for two (or more, if others have stolen the content, too) candidates they’re considering for the same job? All of you get shut out. Nobody wins.

6. It puts your integrity in question.

If hiring professionals find out, you could be jeopardizing your chances to land the jobs you want. What does stealing say about your integrity? What kind of employee are you likely to be if you have no qualms about scraping copyrighted content? Even if you never heard of the DMCA, you should know that stealing is wrong.

7. Bad SEO (search engine optimization) reduces impact and authority.

If you create a web resume that duplicates more than 50% of someone else's web resume (or any other web page), Google and other search engines will view yours as "duplicate content" and will place it further down in search results, below the original version done earlier. Search engines penalize the duplicates!

Bottom Line:

Authentic branding doesn't come from using someone else's brand messaging. It comes from digging deep and differentiating yourself. Read my 10-Step Personal Branding Worksheet to learn how to develop your own brand content.  Put in the time and effort it takes to develop your own personal brand.  It will pay off for you in many, many ways - not only in your job search, but also in your career.

© Copyright Meg Guiseppi, 2012. All rights reserved. Used with permission.

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Meg Guiseppi, Job-Hunt’s Personal Branding Expert and 20-year careers industry veteran, holds 7 certifications, including Reach Certified Personal Branding Strategist, Reach Certified Online Identity Strategist, and Master Resume Writer. Meg is the author of the ebook, "23 Ways You Sabotage Your Executive Job Search and How Your Brand Will Help You Land." Connect with Meg at Executive Career Brand, on LinkedIn (LinkedIn.com/in/megguiseppi), and on Twitter (@megguiseppi).

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