Sunday, May 24, 2020
Personal Branding Weekly - Bloodied, Beaten by Your Own Hand - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career
Personal Branding Weekly - Bloodied, Beaten by Your Own Hand - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career Dave blew it this week. His email response was filled with CAPS, accusations, references to âpent up feelingsâ â" all the things you may want to say but didnt (which would be the smarter move) have now placed in an email where it can live for eternity (and be shared, reviewed and re-read). Iâve been there. But, havenât we all? You allow someone to push your buttons and you âgo thereâ. Something has to be said. Something has to be done. Hereâs how to stop yourself from bloodying and beating your personal brand up by your own email: 1. Take a breath Youâre experiencing emotion. Take a lesson from Michael Corleone and realize that âitâs not personal, itâs just businessâ. You may have taken it personally. You might not really know the person who emailed you so youâve allowed your own personal filter to fill in tone and the cadence of the email.a Gather your thoughts and your emotions and come back to decide upon a response, if any is really needed, later. 2. Write away â" get it all out but donât put anyoneâs email in the TO section Get it all out. Tell them what you think of them. Pick the email a part. Highlight, capitalize, quote â" do whatever it takes to get all of the anger and hurt out of your system. Donât send it. Donât address it. Leave it in your draft folder and revisit it later after 24 hours. Time magically gives most of us the clearer thoughts we need to make better decisions. 3. Let it simmer Just leave it alone, for now. Remember, you have the power to respond or not. You do not need to react to everything. 4. Review, edit, review again Much like tip number two, you can get all your feelings up. But, then come back after 24 hours and review again with a clearer mind. Edit what you wanted to say and say it better or delete things that really serve your anger but not you. 5. Pick up the phone If, after youâve given yourself breathing room, and after youâve had a chance to write and then to review and edit your email. If itâs over six sentences long, then itâs time to pick up the phone. Remember, that 93% of communication is tone and body language, all of which is lost in written form. Perhaps you misunderstood something. Perhaps the filter of your own personal experience has tainted how you received a message or even your mood at the moment can alter what youâre reading. Call and speak to them if you think that the relationship is worth preserving. Understand that not all relationships are worth preserving. For example, the person who Dave blew it with didnât think the relationship was worth it. She was a partner and the president of a company doing business with his company. As a customer, she felt she had other choices and didnât have to respond to his emotional venting. After all, her company was paying him to do a job. Sometimes writing that venting email may get it off your chest but it may also get business (or a connection) off your books. Respond instead of react. [tweet this] Other tips to help you keep your personal brand integrity intact: Slow Down to Enhance Your Personal Brand by Debra Benton Youâre Losing Money by not Using These Prospecting Tips by Crystal Washington The Difference between Work Friends and Real Friends by Ceren Cubukcu How to Research Your Personal Brand by Heather Huhman Complementing Core Competency Strengthens Growth by Elinor Stutz Professionally Edited Résumé Adds Huge Value by Alex Freund âDeath by Interviewââ"What it can Cost YOUR Company by Skip Freeman How to Upgrade Your Resume, Part 2 by Richard Kirby Take Ten Minutes a Day to do NOTHING by Jeff Shuey 10 Reasons Why Women Should Help Other Women by Glassdoor.com 4 Steps to Build Influence for Your Personal Brand by Susan Gilbert Six Tips for Using Social Media to Land a Job by Leslie Truex Be Strategic and You Can Build A Powerful Social Media Brand, says Aidan J. Cassidy by Dan Schawbel The Secrets to Becoming a Respected and Sustained Influencer by Beth Kuhel Does Your Personality Mesh with Your Career? by Marc Miller Writing a Perfect Resume Regardless of College Major by Ken Sundheim
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