donderdag 17 december 2009

OPDR 2: wie is de prosumer in 2009 | NIKE ID

De prosumer:

- Heeft een drang naar vergaring van informatie en de daarbij technologische kant van een product.
- Wil invloed op producten en diensten en maakt dat ook kenbaar.
- Hij beseft zijn macht en eist een gelijkwaardige relatie.
- In tegenstelling tot de early adopter, die met name snel aanschaft, vertelt de prosumer ook wat er aan een product of dienst te verbeteren valt.


Op de site van NikeID is het geheel mogelijk om je eigen schoenen te customizen. Daarnaast worden de beste ontwerpen op de startpagina van de homepage vertoont. Ze creëren een platform, waarbij er een wisselwerking plaatsvindt tussen de prosumer en Nike zelf. De prosumer kan zo de eigen wensen creëren. Nike kan hier weer de benodigde informatie uit putten om zo de consument tegemoet te komen. Overigens is de input van de prosumer wel beperkt tot de opties die Nike geeft.



maandag 16 november 2009








Uitgelicht:

It powers those stories in two key ways: experiences and “brag tags.” The brag tags are a collection of creative “I HEART ZAPPOS” badges for bloggers who write testimonials about their Zappos experiences—testimonials that are collected and stored in a special fan section of the website.

Of the thousands of Zappos stories floating around the web, one of the best is from Zaz Lamarr. She had intended to return some shoes to Zappos, but when her mom passed away, she just didn’t have time:

“When I came home this last time, I had an email from Zappos asking about the shoes, since they hadn’t received them. I was just back and not ready to deal with that, so I replied that my mom had died but that I’d send the shoes as soon as I could. They emailed back that they had arranged with UPS to pick up the shoes, so I wouldn’t have to take the time to do it myself. I was so touched. That’s going against corporate policy.

Yesterday, when I came home from town, a florist delivery man was just leaving. It was a beautiful arrangement in a basket with white

lilies and roses and carna- tions. Big and lush and fra- grant. I opened the card, and it was from Zappos. I burst into tears. I’m a suck- er for kindness, and if that isn’t one of the nicest things I’ve ever had happen to me, I don’t know what is.”

Ad Legend Dan Weiden on Authentic Branding

BY BILL BREENMon Jun 18, 2007 at 11:24 AM

My reporting for the article Who Do You Love? led me to Dan Weiden, co-founder ofWeiden + Kennedy, one of the world's largest independently owned ad agencies. From its base in Portland, Oregon's Pearl District, W+K has launched unforgettable campaigns for Nike, Coca-Cola, ESPN, Honda, Miller Brewing, and Old Spice, among many others. In an interview in his corner office, Weiden conceded that while he rarely thought about authenticity per se, the attribute was at the core of all of the agency's work. Some excerpts from our talk:

FC: What's driving our hunger for the authentic?
Weiden: As our relationships become increasingly complicated and superficial, our longing increases for things that are really genuine. Much of it has to do with the overabundance of marketing—every flat surface is trying to sell us something. And with the Internet, there's so many voices vying for our attention.

FC: So in world that's saturated with marketing messages, how does a brand demonstrate that it is, in fact, authentic?

Weiden: Authenticity comes from having a real passion for the thing. When we first started working with Nike, we didn't bother with focus groups and planning. We were just a group of people who were absolutely turned on by sports and athletes, and what Phil Knight was creating, and we just wanted to turn other people on. We weren't trying to manipulate anyone. We were trying to share something that we loved. It was that simple.

FC: What must marketing folks absolutely get right to create an authentic brand?

Weiden: In our business, creative people have to internalize the brand. They have to almost channel the brand, so some part of the organization can come through in a human way. The whole issue with authenticity is that it has relatively little to do with technique, and everything to do with honesty.

FC: Why, then, does The Daily Show With Jon Stewart, with its fake newscasts, come across as authentic?

Weiden: Fiction is often more authentic than fact, because fact rarely reveals anything of import, whereas fiction is fully capable of showing us fundamental human truths. Jon Stewart delivers a fake newscast, but he is authentic. His humor strips away all the phoniness of politics and the pomposity of the network news.
A genuine, unscripted moment is so rare in politics. I remember when Richard Nixon metMao, he was asked what he thought of Mao. Nixon replied that Mao's fingers were really well manicured. Reporters lambasted Nixon for what many claimed was a shallow and trite observation, but I thought it was so human. Nixon made the mistake of saying what he genuinely thought.

FC: How has Nike managed to continue to be perceived by many as authentic, even though the brand is so ubiquitous?

Weiden: I don't know why companies do this, but they like to list attributes that describe their culture. And the one attribute that consistently shows up on Nike's list is the word "honesty." Nike's values are the values of an athlete. It just embodies the athlete's heart and soul. No matter what the sport, the athlete comes first. When Nike talks running, it talks runner to runner. They are who they say they are. And they're not afraid to use language that only a runner—or a skateboarder or a golfer—would understand.

In the early days, Nike wouldn't allow a print ad to run more than once. When I pointed out that that was incredibly inefficient, the reply was: You wouldn't continually send the same letter to a friend, would you?

I once put a picture of the great long-distance runner, Lasse Viren, over my desk, in an effort to write a piece of copy that would make him laugh or at least respect what was said. I really think that honesty comes out of talking to some one, rather than some group

woensdag 11 november 2009

Upload Cinema

Upload Cinema is bedacht om een nieuw publiek warm te maken voor een oud medium, het filmtheater. Door youtube filmpjes in te sturen wordt er na selectie een filmavond samengesteld volgens een thema en krijgt jouw filmpje misschien wel je eerste première.
Vandaag de dag kan iedereen filmpjes maken en die op het web publiceren. Youtube is een medium waar je je eigen creaties kunt zetten. Maar je computer beeldscherm kan nog zo groot zijn, het is natuurlijk nooit hetzelfde als het grote witte doek. En daarnaast kun je nog zo veel views of goede reacties krijgen, maar echte erkenning voor je filmpje is dat niet. Door Upload Cinema komen de echte gepassioneerde filmtalenten boven drijven. Door je filmpje in te sturen naar Upload Cinema kun je die erkenning wel krijgen. Je filmpje wordt getoetst bij de redactie en wordt verkozen uit tientallen inzendingen. Je filmpje komt op het grote witte doek. Zo ben je toegetreden tot een select gezelschap van filmfanaten. Upload Cinema maakt van hot media cold media en geeft zo een extra dimensie aan het filmtheater.


Waarom blijft het leuk?
Het is allemaal leuk en aardig wat er op youtube staat, maar er zit natuurlijk ook een hele hoop rotzooi tussen. Dat is het gevolg van het feit dat iedereen kan doen en laten wat ie wil op Youtube. Upload cinema scheidt het kaf van het koren. Zo blijft er een select en exclusief groepje over van enthousiastelingen, die allemaal van film houden en er ook allemaal een mening over hebben. Is anders het filmpje te consumeren door de hele wereld, in Upload Cinema krijgt het in intieme sfeer een meer verheven status doordat het op het voetstuk van het grote witte doek is gezet door een uiterst deskundige redactie. Daarbij krijgt je filmpje een plaatsje in het grote archief, dat keer op keer voller wordt en opnieuw geraadpleegd kan worden.

maandag 9 november 2009

2 Filter

Participatory Culture en Co-creation

Met de komst van Youtube heeft de consument steeds meer de mogelijkheid gekregen om eigen content te creëren. De consument heeft ook de behoefte om zichzelf te profileren en mee te discussiëren, denken, bekritiseren en nu ook creëren. Merken weten dit maar al te goed. Ze spelen hier in handig op in door consumenten inbreng te geven in hun producten. Consumenten kunnen zo hun individualiteit en identiteit benadrukken.

Maar deze ontwikkelingen hebben natuurlijk grote gevolgen voor de merken en natuurlijk ook de consument. Want hoe gaan merken met deze vorm van participatory culture? Wil je als merk wel zoveel overlaten aan de consument? En in hoeverre is het product dan nog wel van het merk? En heb je dan nog de controle over wie je bent als merk? Daarbij worden zij voortdurend gecontroleerd in wat ze doen en zeggen. De consument is geen mak lammetje meer, die zomaar klakkeloos overneemt wat het merk zegt. Het merk moet ervan bewust zijn hoe zij zich presenteert naar de consument.

Voor de consument gaat er nieuwe wereld open. De consument heeft alle macht om zijn stempel op het product te drukken. Werden voorheen merken vooral gecontroleerd door de consumentenbond en consumentenprogramma's (bv. kassa en radar), tegenwoordig kan iedereen dat. De consument heeft de mogelijkheid om andere consumenten te vragen naar hun bevindingen over een product. Ze kunnen merken controleren op wat ze zeggen. Zijn bedrijven authentiek? Maar kan ik mijn medeconsument vertrouwen in zijn of haar oordeel? Er zijn vele sociale media, die de consument kan helpen in hun besluit over een product. Consumenten helpen consumenten. Maar kan ik op de kwaliteit vertrouwen van een product als het merk zoveel over laat aan mij, de consument?


Creatieven

Hoe gaat de rol eruit zien van een creatief in een groeiende wereld van participatie van de consument? De creatief is van oudsher 'the creator of content'. Hij bepaalt de layout, vormgeving, inhoud etc. Maar als er steeds meer uit handen gegeven wordt, wat blijft er voor de creatief over? Geeft de creatief alleen de kaders aan waarbinnen de consument zich mag bewegen? Of er is de toekomst toch iets minder somber?

Voor zogenaamde image creators wacht een nieuwe uitdaging. Met de toenemende inspraak van consument zullen ze hun communicatie moeten aanpassen en waar kunnen maken.


Alles komt neer op de balans tussen wat het merk voor zichzelf wil houden en wat het aan de consument over laat. Maar waar ligt die balans?

Who Do You Love?

BY: BILL BREENWed Dec 19, 2007 at 8:19 AM
Who Do You Love?

The appeal--and risks--of authenticity.

Who Do You Love?


Who Do You Love?


* Related Stories

There were compelling reasons to send Juan Valdez off to the old folks home for advertising's ex-celebs. The fictional coffee-growing icon had been featured in ads for decades, helping establish "100% Colombian coffee" as a global brand. But Juan wasn't aging well. Recent TV spots showed him surfing with his faithful mule, Conchita, and popping up in kitchen pantries. While humorous, the ads reinforced the notion that Juan had become a bit of a joke.

Yet at the eleventh hour, the National Federation of Coffee Growers of Colombia decided that introducing a new, younger "Juan in a million" would be better than retiring him. A brand consultancy in Portland, Oregon, called Character advised that Juan's appeal--humble but uncompromising, dedicated to the hard work of raising coffee by hand--could still be valuable. "Juan Valdez taps into a fundamental human truth," contends Jim Hardison, Character's creative director, "that the things we savor the most are the hardest earned." People emotionally connect with Juan because he seems authentic, Hardison reminded the federation, and authenticity is a priceless commodity.

In an increasingly shiny, fabricated world of spun messages and concocted experiences--where nearly everything we encounter is created for consumption--elevating a brand above the fray requires an uncommon mix of creativity and discipline. And nowhere do you see the challenge more starkly illustrated than in the quest for authenticity. "Authenticity is the benchmark against which all brands are now judged," notes John Grant in The New Marketing Manifesto. Or as Seth Godin quips inPermission Marketing: "If you can fake authenticity, the rest will take care of itself."

Overloaded by sales pitches, consumers are gravitating toward brands that they sense are true and genuine. Hunger for the authentic is all around us. You can see it in the way millions are drawn to mission-driven products like organic foods. It's there in the sex-without-guilt way people respond to the footloose joy of BMW's Mini. You see it in the tribes of "i-centered" buyers who value individuality and independence--and whom Apple has so cleverly cultivated through its iMacs and iPods.

Yet our sense of what's "real" in this post-postmodern world takes on all kinds of strangely distorted shapes and guises, as if it's reflected back at us from a swirl of fun-house mirrors. A fictional coffee grower, it turns out, has lasting resonance. The Daily Show With Jon Stewart, with its hoaxy newscasts, comes across as authentic in large part because it self-consciously declares itself to be fake. A coffeehouse chain like Starbucks can rise to prominence by creating an imitation of Milan's espresso bars--and then be pilloried (by its own chairman, among others) for not staying true to that fabricated experience. What's authentic is not always real, and what's real is not always what it seems.

Playing the authenticity game in a sophisticated way has become a requirement for every marketer, because the opposite of real isn't fake--it's cynicism. When a brand asserts authenticity in a clumsy way, it quickly breeds distrust or, at the very least, disinterest. Just remember Coca-Cola's attempt to muck with the Real Thing's original formula--and the calamitous launch of New Coke. Or consider the plight of Levi's, at one time the very epitome of an authentic American brand, which became increasingly out-of-date to new lovers of denim.

Both the promise and the peril of "getting real" are, indeed, very real. "Authentic" is derived from the Greek authentikós, which means "original." And unfortunately, there's no recipe for originality. Each brand must build its own primary source code for the authentic. Still, there are some larger lessons (and pitfalls) that anyone charged with overseeing a brand would be wise to consider. What follows is a series of questions that every brand, at some point in its evolution, will have to wrestle with if it hopes to be, in the immortal words of Smokey Robinson, "really, really real."

What does it take to be authentic?

Authenticity constantly requires reinforcement, and it can come from a number of sources: craftsmanship, timeliness, relevance. But it is a brand's values--the emotional connection it makes--that truly define its realism. And there are four primary strands that draw out that connection.

  • A sense of place. "Authenticity comes from a place we can connect with," says Steve McCallion, creative director of Ziba, a Portland, Oregon--based design consultancy. "A place with a story." The Champagne region of France, for instance, helps give Veuve Clicquot special cachet. And yet, our notion of place does not need to be literal. On the contrary, it can sometimes prove considerably elastic. Häagen-Dazs, the Nordic-sounding ice cream, originated in that quaint Scandinavian village known as the Bronx, New York. The brand's name, concocted from two nonsensical words, is a perfect fake--so well chosen, and so evocative, that it resonates as real to folks who love the product.
  • A strong point of view. Authenticity also emerges from "people with a deep passion for what they are doing," says McCallion. So Martha Stewart is perceived to be authentic in large part because her ambitious recipes for Perfect White Cake and Chocolate-Strawberry Heart-Shaped Ice-Cream Sandwiches stand in the face of a world where food is mass-produced and preparation for the average dinner is measured by the number of minutes it takes to microwave the thing.
  • Serving a larger purpose. Consumers quite rightly believe, until they're shown otherwise, that every brand is governed by an ulterior motive: to sell something. But if a brand can convincingly argue that its profit-making is only a by-product of a larger purpose, authenticity sets in. "Just as there are purpose-driven lives," says Character's Hardison, "there are purpose-driven brands." (Think Whole Foods here, or even, in a way, Google.) The counterpart is also true: "When a brand changes its story to better capture its customers' dollars, it's basically a poser," Hardison says, "and people sense that right away."
  • Integrity. Authenticity comes to a brand that is what it says it is. In other words, "the story that the brand tells through its actions aligns with the story it tells through its communications," Hardison says. "Only then will customers sense that the brand's story is true." When McDonald's launched its "We love to see you smile" campaign in 2000, commentators like Advertising Age's Bob Garfield hooted in derision, arguing that filthy restrooms and grumpy counter clerks rendered the ads "preposterously false." A year later, published reports revealed that rude employees were costing Mickey D's millions of dollars in lost sales. And when bloggers exposed a flog (read: "fake blog") that masqueraded as a travel journal written by a couple who were compensated for their gushing posts about Wal-Mart, the deception elicited a torrent of rebuke.

How do you stay authentic even as you get big?

Imagine you lived in Atlanta, and one day in the mid-1990s, you came across a tiny sandwich café tucked into Sandy Springs, a nearby suburb. Seduced by the eatery's yeasty charms, you fell for its French baguettes and Italian pesto focaccia, freshly baked every morning, right on site. The Atlanta Bread Co., as it was called, became your discovery--your place--and you began stopping there at least once a week.

But some time later, on a business trip to Detroit, you were walking across Pointe Plaza, when suddenly, there it was--an almost exact duplicate of your café. Atlanta Bread had been franchised (it currently counts 150 locations in 27 states), and while the baguettes were as fresh as ever, the experience of shopping there just wasn't the same. A replica Atlanta Bread somehow felt a little less special than the original.

Ubiquity might not be toxic to authenticity, but it certainly dilutes it. When a brand spreads far beyond its home turf, its branches almost invariably (though not inevitably) weaken. Ben & Jerry's ice cream and Tom's of Maine toothpaste lose a bit of their authentic luster when they're snapped up by the likes of Unilever and Colgate-Palmolive --global behemoths trying to act local.

No business has confronted this challenge more urgently than Starbucks. As chairman Howard Schultz lamented to upper management in a bluntly worded missive on Valentine's Day, the company's rapid growth has "led to the watering down of the Starbucks experience," and the company's stores "no longer have the soul of the past." The Seattle-based coffee juggernaut gained its authentic mien as the quintessential "third place" (after home and the workplace), where people could linger for hours over "grandes" of java. Yet today, stores are overrun with a clutter of CDs, coffeemakers, puzzles, bagged beans, and more. The outposts have become as much retail space as meeting place.

"It will be another decade before Starbucks becomes as meaningless as Chock Full o'Nuts," jokes Patrick Hanlon, CEO of the brand consultancy Thinktopia. Despite Schultz's impassioned outburst, Starbucks has not retreated from its previously stated aim to eventually establish 40,000 retail outlets around the world. "As it lurches slowly toward ubiquity," Hanlon notes, "it moves further and further away from authenticity."

Yet it doesn't have to be that way for all big brands. Another colossus from the Pacific Northwest, Nike, has demonstrated that growth and authenticity are not wholly incompatible. A framed black-and-white photograph that hangs in CEO Mark Parker's corner office in Beaverton, Oregon, reveals one of the secrets to how Nike keeps it real even as it has grown to more than 28,000 employees and a portfolio of 13,000 products. The portrait is of Bill Bowerman, the legendary University of Oregon track coach and Nike cofounder, who died in 1999. "If you talk to a lot of designers around here, they'll say they've got Bill sitting on their shoulder, speaking up for the athlete," Parker says.

By taking "deep dives" into various sports tribes and using the resulting insights to become more relevant--and therefore more authentic--Nike has maintained a renegade edge. As Parker tells it, not so long ago the company believed it was "too big, too corporate" to be accepted by the skateboarding culture. But as the market grew to 15 million skaters who generate $3 billion in annual sales, Nike plunged in. Parker assembled a Nike Skateboarding team that lived and breathed skate. It worked with hard-core skaters to develop a shoe, dubbed the Dunk, customized for skateboarding. It signed hot young skaters to represent the new Nike SB division. And it brought in maverick graphic artists to tell their stories on the canvas of Dunk shoes. To some die-hard skaters, Nike may still be a wannabe, but it has managed to pick off a sizable chunk of customers. The antidote to size and ubiquity--for Nike, at least--has been to go vertical. "As we get bigger," Parker says, "we get deeper."

Can you be authentic when you're trying to be authentic?

The first time you hear a quartet of Cold Stone Creamery's ice-cream slingers, in response to a tip, warble a verse of "Sprinkle, sprinkle candy bar, this is what our mix-ins are," it feels both silly and endearing. But when the same bit of showmanship is replayed on repeat visits, it comes off as shtick. It turns out that Cold Stone, the No. 3 ice-cream chain in the United States with more than 1,300 stores, auditions prospective scoopers to see who can carry a tune that will amuse the kids and ultimately move more mint chocolate. Although dishing up a little dazzle with its sundaes might help Cold Stone achieve its goal of toppling Dairy Queen and becoming the nation's big cherry by 2010, mandated singing feels phony.

The crooning Cold Stoners share the same plight as Wal-Mart's smiley greeters. Coerced by corporate fiat, their "warmth" can wear out its welcome and feel contrived. That's one reason why we so often distrust the big-box retailers and chain stores: Their take on what's authentic springs straight from the company manual. Authenticity is necessary, but it cannot be compelled.

And therein lies an authentic paradox: A brand doesn't feel real when it overtly tries to make itself real. To the hypertargeted consumer, baldly billboarding a brand's message smacks of insincerity. General Motors' "Our Country, Our Truck" campaign for Chevrolet's Silverado offers a striking example. Silverado's TV commercials, which this past fall were in heavy rotation on NFL games, featured clichéd images of he-man Americana--rugged factory workers, proud firefighters, and the truck itself, lumbering through a golden field of grain--backed by John Mellencamp's song "Our Country," an ode to America's can-do spirit. Media critics assailed the ads, in part because the original spots flashed iconic images of Martin Luther King Jr. and Rosa Parks, all in the service of selling trucks.

But GM also has trouble walking the talk of Silverado's gauzy message. We know that, while GM is celebrating the workin' man, its recent history includes layoffs that have put tens of thousands on the street. And, as Slate has pointed out, we know that while Mellencamp indulges in a bit of jingoism with his declaration that "this is our country," he once sang a remarkably similar line, "ain't that America," with a caustic edge. "Our Country, Our Truck" has all of the trappings but none of the rich truths that make for a truly authentic story.

Can you be cool and still be authentic?

Chris Bangle, BMW's design director, contends there's a universal explanation for why successful brands stumble: They fail to evolve. Bangle calls them "fortress brands." Deeply rooted in their heritage and values, they are inflexible, unmovable, and ultimately stuck in time. "That's the problem with a dogmatic, static brand," he says. "The competition will outflank it, and the world will pass it by."

Levi's, for one, is a brand that appears to have slipped into the fortress category. The king of denim, whose founder stitched and riveted the world's first pair of jeans in 1873, has lately missed out on the fast-changing trends of an industry that it created. When the craze for $200-a-pair, ripped and jewel-studded denim exploded in the late 1990s, Levi's persisted in distributing boxy jeans for men through cut-rate retailers. According to a January report in The New York Times, Levi's is now the apparel industry's most litigious company--a sure sign of a reactionary brand that attacks by retreating.

To maintain its integrity, a brand must remain true to its values. And yet, to be relevant--or cool--a brand must be as dynamic as change itself. An authentic brand reconciles those two conflicting impulses, finding ways to be original within the context of its history. Look at Abercrombie & Fitch. Its flagship store on New York's Fifth Avenue twines the company's legacy as a purveyor of outdoor paraphernalia with its role as modern-day hangout for teens buying jeans and T-shirts. The store combines the visual iconography of its origins--a moosehead mounted over the cashier's counter, wooden canoes, and racks of ancient shotguns--with the dark lighting and amped-to-the-max soundtrack of an after-hours dance club. "This place mixes the old and new in a really delightful way," Thinktopia's Hanlon shouted above the din, when we visited on a recent Monday afternoon. "It's an inspiration that proudly declares you can have more than 900 stores scattered in shopping malls throughout the U.S. and still have soul."

Sometimes even the most homogenized of places can evoke a flicker of authenticity. The morning after last fall's congressional elections, the newly elected senator from New Jersey, Robert Menendez, breakfasted at his usual spot, the International House of Pancakes in Union City. Menendez, formerly mayor of Union City, sat in his regular booth, ordered the same breakfast he always orders, and spent an hour catching up with longtime friends.

Few restaurants are more prefab than IHOP, yet there Menendez was, paying homage to a staff that knew his breakfast by heart and to patrons who've watched his kids grow up. On the surface, the Union City franchise is hardly authentic--it's similar to the IHOP in, say, Muncie, Indiana. But the friendships that Menendez has made there are certainly genuine. It's not that Starbucks, Cold Stone Creamery, BMW, Nike, or any other brand is really, really real. What's real are the experiences and the connections that the brands allow us to make--if they give us an honest chance.

Authentic Personal Branding

Authentic personal branding starts with the real you. Hubert Rampersad explains how to create a professional brand from your personal values

With all of the social media opportunities today, personal branding is frequently being used not just in personal, but also in professional roles. It can be quite a dilemma for people to brand themselves successfully without losing their real selves in the process.

I am frequently asked questions about branding because of my success at "marketing me." For a different perspective, I called Hubert Rampersad, an authority on authentic personal branding, and asked about his thoughts on the subject. Rampersad recently wrote a best-seller entitledAuthentic Personal Branding: A New Blueprint for Building and Aligning a Powerful Leadership Brand. In it he provides a sorely needed guidebook that shows us all how to build our own authentic personal brand—and just as important—how to persuasively communicate this brand to the world.

Hubert and I talked about his blueprint for authentic personal branding, the connection it has with personal brand coaching, and how his holistic system helps to attract success, build credibility, separate individuals from the crowd, and cultivate happiness. Edited excerpts of our conversation follow:

Hubert, what is authentic personal branding?

The image of your brand is a perception held in someone else’s mind. Personal branding entails managing this perception effectively and influencing how others perceive you and what they think of you. Building an authentic personal brand is an evolutionary and organic process that should emerge from your search for your identity and meaning in life. It is about getting clear on what you want, giving it all your positive energy, doing what you love, and improving yourself continuously.

What are the benefits of an authentic personal brand?

Having a strong authentic personal brand is an important asset in today’s online, virtual, and individual age. It is the key to personal success, and it's the positioning strategy behind the world's most successful people, such as Oprah Winfrey, Richard Branson, and Bill Gates. Everyone has a personal brand, but most people don't manage it strategically, consistently, and effectively. It's important to take control of your brand and the message it sends, as it will help you distinguish yourself as an exceptional professional.

How does your innovative approach differ from traditional personal branding concepts?

Traditional personal branding concepts focus on personal marketing, image building, selling, packaging, outward appearances, and self-promotion. As a result, people may perceive you as egocentric and selfish. Rather, your personal brand should be authentic—it should reflect your true character. It should be built on your dreams, purpose, values, uniqueness, genius, passion, specialization, characteristics, and favorite activities. If you are branded in this organic, authentic, and holistic way, your personal brand will be strong, distinctive, relevant, meaningful, and memorable. You will create a life that is fulfilling, and attract the people and opportunities perfect fit for you. This new approach places more emphasis on understanding yourself and the needs of others, and how to meet those needs while staying true to your values.

You mentioned that your system entails a guide for turning personal financial crisis into opportunity. How do you see that working?

Especially in times of financial crisis you need to be independent and redefine yourself in order to create and attract new creative opportunities. Remember what Albert Einstein said: "In the middle of difficulty lies opportunity" Now is the best time to engage in meaningful dialogue with yourself and to build your personal brand to better master the financial crisis with your unique value proposition. This can be realized successfully according to my four-stage authentic personal branding model.

Based on your approach, how do you build, maintain, and cultivate an authentic personal brand?

Building an authentic personal brand consists of four phases:

1. Define and formulate your personal ambition. This means [assessing] your personal vision, mission, and key roles—and make them visible. It is about developing self-awareness and identifying your dreams: who you are; what you stand for; what makes you unique, special, and different; and what your values are.

2. Define and formulate an authentic personal brand promise that you can use as the focal point of your behavior and actions. Your personal brand statement entails the total of your ambition, brand objectives, specialty, service-dominant attribute, and domain.

3. Formulate your personal balanced scorecard. The emphasis at this stage is to develop an integrated and well-balanced action plan based on your personal ambition. It's about translating your personal ambition and brand into manageable and measurable personal objectives, milestones, and improvement actions in a holistic and balanced way.

4. Implement and cultivate your brand. Personal branding has no value unless you make it a reality. So create and maintain your brand effectively.

How is your personal branding system related to personal coaching?

The personal brand coaching framework involves 15 phases with comprehensive exercises, tools, and activities associated with each phase. It is meant to be helpful to build, implement, maintain, and cultivate an authentic personal brand, which is in harmony with your goals and aspirations. The emphasis is on excelling in everything you do, making the right choices for your future, having a happier and more fulfilling life, and facing new life challenges.

My mission is to: "Enjoy the freedom to develop and share knowledge, especially if this can mean something in the life of others."