How to Stand Out in your Industry
AI-Generated Transcript below. There may be errors.
Claire Davis 0:12
Hey, everybody, and welcome back to another episode of today's medical sales leader. I am so excited to start this episode. And I know that everybody says that at the top of their podcast and show but listen, not everybody is starting with Michelle Griffin. So I am really excited today to bring her to you because we are talking all things personal branding, PR niching down and why any of this applies to you in medical sales. So Michelle, thank you so much for being with us here. Today. You are one of my favorites, and you know it. So thanks for your time.
Michelle Griffin 0:54
Oh my goodness, right back at you, Claire. When we first met like a year and a half ago, we instantly bonded. So I'm excited that you have this show. And I'm equally excited. Let's just put the word excited out like confetti, excited to be guessing and chatting. Because for those listening, Claire and I could probably talk for hours. So we're like, yeah, just start recording. Okay, so here we go. Let's let's do this.
Claire Davis 1:18
We promise we're going to talk about business related things right now. But listen. So one thing I see that's really exciting about the medical sales industry now is that people are coming around to the idea that if you want to get in front of your customer, we have to do it in a different way in this hybrid environment. That means personal branding is now important, because now we have to get in front of our client over zoom, they're going to look us up on social media Gone are the days when people aren't checking us out online before they do business with us. So Michelle, if you were speaking to a professional sales woman in medical sales, and she was just starting out to think about building and identifying what her personal brand is, where should she begin?
Michelle Griffin 2:04
Oh, great question. This is so good. So the clients I work with are either in corporate or entrepreneurs, experts, and they all have the same feeling Claire, they all think, Gosh, I know I need to do it. The world is changing, you know, building your online brand is the new thing. But they're scared putting themselves out there is scary. So we first have to address that the clarity or the confidence of knowing you have expertise, message, something talent, something that needs to be out there, not just for you to make yourself, you know, growing and known to the right people, but also because you have something to share with a company with your clients, all of the stakeholders that that you know, come into your orbit so to speak. So you have to know that if you're not known, how can you be of service? How can you be out there to grow? So I like to say visibility is not vanity visibility. It's just being valuable. It's being known for who you are and accompanying promise that people know that you are who you say you are, you know, truly authentic. And also visibility is opportunities, especially in your industry. If people don't know you, how do they know you are the perfect person for this new role for this promotion for this client for anything else, no one knows you unless you get out there. But you have to get out there and I get it. It's really scary. But it doesn't have to be when you flip the switch and realize it's a two fold approach. Because, you know, for you and for those you need to serve.
Claire Davis 3:34
You know, that's a great point. In fact, I would probably argue that how we present ourselves in the workplace and online and in front of our colleagues really means we already have a personal brand. So now, do you start with your clients by helping them identify what they're already known for? Or do you help them craft a message around what they want to be known for? Or is it a little combination of both?
Michelle Griffin 4:00
A little bit of both. So I guess the best way if we're going to start in kind of a foundational approach is really how I work with my clients. You know, I always say building a personal brand is not just showing up in LinkedIn, it's not a logo or colors or just posting and social. It's not really I mean, I look at a personal brand as a company brand, but the product and services use. So we start with this framework that I created three years ago and I call it my visible brand authority framework. And if you're okay with it, I can run really quick through the seven steps because I really think it gives us a foundation of kind of have some guardrails and what these are so we can arm ourselves with the best tools and knowledge to get out there clearly and confidently and also with credibility. So, real quick they all start with PS. The first one is perspective. You have to know yourself with a personal brand internally, who I am who I want to be known for or maybe who I already am known for work, but a lot of times, it's really Oh, actually, it really is hard to be the consumer of your own brand. It's just so hard. So having someone see the all the pieces, the frame of the picture and dumping all the 1000 piece puzzles of what makes you you personally, professionally, you know, all the ways, and then put that together. So we know what your value your missions, your beliefs, your why how you see the world and your point of view. All this is your perspective. So I'm doing this really high level, but we work on that with my clients personally and professionally, because they all merge together, then we go into the people. Number two is people and in my framework people is twofold. It's your persona, the someone you're showing up for the industry you work in, or the company or sub the audience you want to serve or be known to. But for me, it's also partners, because we need to partner with other people and cross pollinate our you know, our connections and collaborations and also people, your partners could be community, you just gonna grow a network, your network is your net worth. Now, I know that is one of the most cliche sayings out there.
Claire Davis 6:08
But you know, it's true.
Michelle Griffin 6:11
There are so many cliche words, I know they're cliche, I preface it that way, until we find a better way to say it. Let's just say it. So anyway, so we know who your people are and what they need and their problems and their pain points. So you know, how am I showing up? And what are these people want? And how can I best serve them? Number three is a really important part clear. And number, what I really love is positioning. Because there are 1000s of us, right? If there's no one really out there doing the one thing, there's so many different people. So positioning is how am I showing up? You actually had a really good post about that the other day, right about your unique value proposition member that then you just post about that just a few days ago.
Claire Davis 6:54
Yes. And you know, it's something that I think a lot of medical sales professionals are afraid to do, only because it and frankly, many people, I can't pin this just on this industry. But I do notice specifically, there are very few people leveraging personal brands in medical sales. And part of that is being comfortable niching down and getting very, very specific in their positioning, because they don't want to miss out on opportunities, right? They don't want someone to come to their profile and think, Oh, I this person can't help me. But when in reality, and I'm sure this is part of your process, too. You know, when we don't tell people the specific value that we offer and the specific person we help the right customers don't see us, they don't recognize that we are that direct line to their solution. So is that the next piece of the positioning is getting really clear on the specifics?
Michelle Griffin 7:53
Oh, absolutely. And you know, depending on the industry and the people niche can isn't. It can be many things it can be by your industry you serve or specialty, it can be actually your point of view, how you see the world or in the industry and some special way that you see it, that's a little bit different, right. And that really helps you stand out. It could be the way you see the world, it could be the problem you saw the offer, it could be a lot of I have like a list, which I don't have a top hand but it's not just I specialize in this. But there's a lot of layers to it across ways to help you stand out. But I always in those first two, deep dive and like, Oh, this is how you can stand out now we don't just stamp it like this is you forever. We're like this is how we're going to get you out there. So they feel clear, they feel comfortable and confident. And those are the main things when you're armed with those three C's. It is so much more reassuring to go out there and share ideas and meet people and know what to say and how to introduce yourself. So number three is positioning real quick. After three gets to be the fun part, the package package in a good way not in a false sense. I believe I've told you this once but five years ago there was this article The Case Against personal brands and they quoted Sheryl Sandberg the XE oh now of Facebook and she was against packaging. And hers was all about thinking packaging is like being an Instagram influencer. That is not the way we do personal branding. So he's just how am I going to present all my ways? How do I show up this is a lot of you do Claire, with resumes with your LinkedIn profile. If you have a website, just all the persona and how you show up and that's going to look a little bit different. The corporate versus you know, entrepreneurial consultant role all those differ, but we want to make sure that translates well and is aligned so packaging is huge. And there's more layers to it the payment you do number five is content is publishing. Five is publishing. We need content to fuel our ideas and share our ideas so people start resonating and connecting with us. The right people. So we need to share ideas. And that can be an audio written video, however you want to show up content publishing is the way. And number six is where I really am getting more granular. By bringing in my public relations, it's promotion, hat, once you're getting traction, and you're growing with his brand, you need ways to amplify your message and your voice. So earned media press PR is a wonderful way. And for someone like in corporate and medical sales, speaking on panels, you know, talking to being on podcast, those are amazing ways to borrow other people's audiences, you know, so absolutely paid. I'm sorry, we don't do paid here. Or, I mean, you can't pay for ads, but I don't. I don't work in that realm.
Claire Davis 10:48
Level we're starting. Oh, yeah, that's like the eight figure entrepreneur will go there.
Michelle Griffin 10:50
So earn media owned media, which is like your blog, or podcast, all the stuff that you own, and then your shared, which is social. And I always say, when you start number five publishing show up and like going to LinkedIn, I think we're in that sphere, whatever, start publishing your your track, get traction there. So we're going to number six, we're amplifying it. And then number seven is where you're propelling, you're keeping growing, evolving, building the trust, the the honesty, the believability, all the things that make you you, you're just gonna keep growing. A lot of times the number seven, bide my time my clients are there, they're ready to go bigger and go deeper and go to like bigger things. So that's where propel just keeps taking you there. So that's a long answer to your question and a very short, condensed version of my framework. But when you stairstep those, I think it really gives you some parameters to get out there with ease.
Claire Davis 11:45
Yeah, and you know, every everybody listening, and everybody joining us live here, I've seen Michelle's work in progress. And I think if you go out online, and if you Google personal branding, there will be a literal avalanche of information coming at you. But what I really appreciate about your approach, Michelle, is that those stair steps make it doable. It's such a logical progression going from, who am I and what am I known for in the first place? And how do I want to represent and be represented in my field, all the way to the propel stage. And it's just this incremental, step by step easy to follow framework. So thank you for doing it. Because truly, I think the way that you lay out concepts makes them very available to people who are in industries that are not traditionally focused on marketing, the sales people as brand champions, this is a totally new territory. So if anybody here is, you know, say working at Zimmer, Biomet or COVID, or you know, Medtronic, and they're thinking, Well, I mean, I've never even thought about being a Brand Champion. What is that? Can you talk a little bit about why it's important to develop? Well first identify, but what really is possible when we start to understand that we have a personal brand, and we start to lean into it in business, like, what opportunities lie ahead when you do start leveraging a personal brand?
Michelle Griffin 13:19
Oh, that's a great question. And really, you know, most professions and businesses a personal brand makes sense. And it shouldn't be, you know, different scales and levels, but look at as your professional security, you know, you don't want to have to keep working harder to find a new job, when you have that amazing job now, great, you landed it, well shouldn't stop there, you should now leverage what you have, take where you are, and just start building from there. So depending where you are, you know, first of all, follow this framework, find out what do I want to be known for? What are my beliefs and all those things, but realize this is just going to keep amplifying you to different people, more people are going to get into your network, more people are going to know you, you're going to be more top of mind to your inner colleagues, your external stakeholders, your patient, your diet, whoever I mean, it's just everyone you know, and it depends on how you want to show up like I have clients are like, Michelle, I really want to be on podcasts, or I really want to speak so you really need to start thinking about how, you know get really comfortable one place and get known and I guarantee you it happened to me It happens to all my clients a minute you decide to take action and show up. It just makes you a stronger person internally to and people feel that confidence and they want to be surrounded and you will start having people magnetically drawn to you now this is all of course showing that you know your expertise and you're a good person which you know, I'm sure the people we work with are but I mean it's your insurance policy you know, you don't have to know once people know you jobs come to you promotions come to you project special things because you're Top of Mind now, right, right, you know, I'm always thinking like when someone says, Hey, do you know so and so and I have some I was racking my brain, but then other times, like, Oh, I see them all the time here or I know them because they're working in a such a systematic way of being present and being valuable and helpful.
Claire Davis 15:16
So well, you know, definitely in the way that we continually show up, right, the way that we are operating in front of our customer over and over again, is what we are already putting out there in the environment. The way that I see this changing is when we start to do it with intention. So let me give an example for re listening, thinking Claire's going woowoo. Here, here's what I'm talking about. For years, I worked in medical sales in my very first role with at a company called precision therapeutics, and we had an oncology diagnostic tests for women with ovarian cancer. Now, I was calling on the same offices over and over and we develop relationships. But a lot of times, they're seeing 2030 reps every day in their office. So they may not have always known my name, but they did know me as Oh, there's there, there's our precision girl. There's the precision rep, right. So fast forward to two jobs later, when I am now calling on some of the same offices, but with a new name tag, because now I'm focusing on women with breast cancer. And I would walk in, and even though it was a fresh call for me from that new company, they still knew me as the precision girl, right? So really, they already in their mind had me singled out as a specific personal brand. But I didn't realize it as that. So do you think there's a way to maybe systematically identify how we're already perceived, so that we can start to lean into those things? And what does that look like for somebody?
Michelle Griffin 17:06
Absolutely. And I love that you said that, because reminds me of my, you know, husband's, he started in medical sales and in pharmaceuticals. And he, I think he had three jobs in that whole industry. And you know, he called on the same people, but they all knew him. So they're like, oh, yeah, you know, he developed those relationships. But just as I said earlier, your personal brand, and my definition has word intentionality and strategy. And are you strategically being intentional on how you want to show up? And no one can take that away from you, Claire, just like you demonstrated, I think, a lot of times when you're ready, and you know, when you work with someone, and there's tests and things that you can do you know, in your heart of hearts, what makes you light up? What makes you like, where are you gravitating for? And how do you want to show up and what you are, I mean, so I run my clients through, like, we have a really deep dive. And so it's pretty obvious my first thing, but once you you lean into who you really are, and how you want to show up, you just go for it, you don't have to make believe you're just showing up as Claire Davis. And yeah, you know, three jobs later, you're still getting into the back offices, because you know, you're that intentionally strategic, bright, shiny spot smart lady that they want to do business with. So that doesn't change just because your job changes your personal brand. Is you not your company brand.
Claire Davis 18:26
Yes, we'd like to call it going beyond the name tag. And that's really about it is and you know, I mean, with your husband being specifically in the medical sales, industry and farm, people still like to do business with people they like, and you're in this particular industry long enough, it gets really small, like you end up knowing a lot of the same people, it's really, really worth keeping your bridges strong and not burning any of them. Because you will indefinitely see somebody and work with somebody who you did in a previous role in a future role. It's just it's going to happen. So can we talk a little bit through sort of a next stage of Okay, so now I'm comfortable. I recognize now that I have a personal brand, I'm starting to understand what my doctors may be continually say about me over and over. I'm getting to know what I'm known for. And now I want to lean into that. Maybe I want to try social media to do that. And one thing you mentioned earlier, that's really encouraging for me and probably for everybody here is that there are a lot of ways to do that. So Ken, what are some of the ways that you would recommend somebody to start when they really want to lean into their personal brand on social media?
Michelle Griffin 19:46
Oh, great question. So find out where your audience is. And I'm assuming for the majority of the people that you work with, it's LinkedIn, is that correct? Okay. So yeah, yeah, I would think so too. And that's the majority of the people I work with too. So it can get it can be really scary to go to LinkedIn because we're surrounded by our peers and I get it like, I get it like I made myself last year post 365 days just to get myself you know, used to it, you know. And I always say that I've worked to the most accomplished people. And I tell you, they all feel the same way. Imposter syndrome is like universal and Oh, start small. So first, like on LinkedIn, I would just start if you want to post let's talk about the posting, first start getting in the feed. If you haven't been on LinkedIn a while it's a totally different place. So you know, get on the feeds are commenting start meeting, think of LinkedIn as the world's big networking event. Every little post is a topic you're interested in and hashtag and go find the people and just start commenting. It's actually a very small community to when you think about it. Not many people posting. Yeah, yeah, it's easy to start being seen.
Claire Davis 20:51
Yeah. Like, what is it now like 1% of all
Michelle Griffin 20:55
maybe it's up to 3% of 83% of the people, there's 830 plus million, maybe a third of that are active, and then maybe 3% post. So trust me, I know, you know, working with clients or people who get on and get traction fast, because there's, it's a really small, little air pond, really, when you think in a big sea, it's crazy, you wouldn't think it but it really is a great way to get traction. So now, if you like posting and doing that, that's great. But there's also other ways Claire, you know, you can go and get on LinkedIn lives, you know, you can go talk on LinkedIn live. Now that's streaming, that's video streaming. That might be a little intimidating for some. But there's also like, audio shows. And there's also ways you could write on medium. There's also ways let's see, you could we you and I started now not so much. It's like social audio club house, you and I started in clubhouse a year ago. But now LinkedIn has audio rooms. So I'll tell you a little secret about audio rooms, i beta tested it for them. For the first 90 days, I met the most amazing people, audio rooms are great because we're all raising our hand to be in the self contained topic. So even if they're not topics in this industry, now that LinkedIn audio is open, everyone go start your own, just hey, you don't wait for permission. You go and make it happen. You know, I'll say, yeah, don't wait for permission or perfection. Those are the two things especially for women, the demographic iser, is that and I'm guilty of it too. Perfect permission. Perfection get the best of us. So Oh, yeah. After rd, go start, just like you to this podcast clear. You started this. No one said Claire, I'm now giving you permission to start it? Did they?
Claire Davis 22:41
Heck no. Well, kinda gasmate was my, when you talk to someone, you like to talk about medical sales and resume way too much. Can you please go started my test or something?
Michelle Griffin 22:52
Thank you. Yeah, it was definitely needed. So that's what I did. I'm like, hey, I want to do LinkedIn live show. You know, I I'm like, you know, I'm not waiting to be visible, I'm just gonna make my own visibility. And that's how you do it. Fastest way. Now, depending, you know, you and I are both extroverts who like to talk. But trust me, I know plenty of introverted friends and contacts that they say, Michelle, I'm actually very introverted, but for some reason, they just get on and talk to people. Because here's the thing, if you host someone else, you're not really the one doing the talking, you're just there, you look like the expert for hosting it, and you just have other people talk. So those are some little areas to get traction, depending if you're like audio, video or written. And I would say pick one and lean into it.
Claire Davis 23:37
Okay, so speaking of that, I'm sure some people are listening, or even watching this and thinking, Wait, so I could start by just commenting on LinkedIn. And in fact, that is not so little known of a strategy, but it's a very, very powerful engagement strategies. So can you talk a little bit about what that is? Maybe How to know what to comment on? And then what those comments should look like, because I'm sure we've all been guilty in the beginning days of ever commenting on social media where, you know, our comments consist of like, congrats, Mary, or great post, Tom. But really, can you talk through like a robust comment strategy and why that's helpful.
Michelle Griffin 24:21
Oh, that it that's the baby step right there. Like at the beginning or end of the day, if you want to do it, just get on LinkedIn and start commenting. You don't have to post I actually when I work with my clients, I'm like, don't even start posting so you give yourself a warm up, you're warming up the feed, you're getting the lay of the land. So you're gonna go to the to the people in your industry where you want to be seen and known by that could be you know, thought leaders, or you could even go to a hashtag though, the favorite and preferred hashtags every industry and look for posts that way. Start reading the ones and then add some insightful comments and I believe, I don't know if this is true or not. I've heard you need to have more than five words. should be considered a legit good comment because a lot of what LinkedIn has or something called engagement pods and bots, were those kind of answers just say good post congrat. You know, those are, I shouldn't say throw away posts, but they don't really add to the conversation. I guess that's a nice way to put it. Yeah, if you want to lend your expertise and your thoughts, what a wonderful way, on the flip side, because when you create content, I don't care if you're have two followers or 20 million, you know, and maybe not the 20 million because they don't care. But they're just thought leaders who find out if their team posts for him.
Claire Davis 25:44
But basically, the end of the day content creators really do appreciate feedback on their post in beauty is in your in their feed, you're getting Yeah, what would you say, is the sweet spot when you're looking at these, you know, influencers, as we might call them, or maybe just people who we want to engage with and get seen by like minded people, maybe they're, maybe they're orthopedic surgeons, who are starting to get more comfortable posting videos about the technology they're using? I'm seeing a ton of that in the ortho, so good. So what's the sweet spot? When we're talking audience? Is it usually like 10,000? or less? What would you say?
Michelle Griffin 26:13
I think it's the person. I mean, I know people who are tremendously, really, you know, renowned and gifted. And maybe their LinkedIn feed isn't as you know, high, but these people are so well known. So I sometimes think you can't judge people by the numbers, because I know New York Times bestselling authors, they just, you know, haven't paid attendance. It's only because they haven't put LinkedIn as a you know, everyone thought it was career resume recruiter site for years, I still is, but it's changed. So I would say go to the middle ground of the person look at the person that could benefit is this someone I want to be known to or, you know, have a connection or relationship with I mean, it is nice to comment on some big ones, because people flocked there, and they see you. So maybe a nice mix, you know, but the real ID conversations are gonna start with the ones that you know, you can or relatable to you and you know, so you want to have a conversation. So your comment, hopefully, we'll have them respond back. And then you start the seed right there, and you plant the seed, so to speak.
Claire Davis 27:16
And I love it, just continuously continue it. Yes, that's such a good point. Because if you go and you try, and you don't see, you know, explosive results in the first week, don't give up. Because with any kind of personal branding, any kind of social media engagement effort, it's going to be consistency. It's kind of a long game. So you know, if you're listening to this, and you're thinking, Okay, well, I had a season in my life where I was looking for a job. And I, I put maybe posted or I commented for a while, but I didn't see a lot of traction, you do need to keep going if you want to leverage this. It's just the same way as you want to continue networking, even when you're happily employed. Because you have to really continue to fill the bucket, right? You've got to dig the well before you need to draw from the well. So there's one other thing that another thing that you mentioned earlier, which was those audio rooms, I had a client not so long ago, and she was doing really great in biotech sales. And in fact, she was doing so well that at the next national sales meeting, they'd asked her to come up on stage and speak to an audience while she went up there. And she had such terrible stage fright. She couldn't continue with her speech. And so she said, Well, Claire, what do I do? You know, how do I learn about public speaking? Who do I go with? How do I get this confidence back? And, you know, the advice I gave her because I asked a friend of mine who's a professional speaking coach, you probably know Brendan Kamara. Yeah, he's amazing. So I asked him, and I said, Where can she get her practice? You know, he goes, we'll have her join, you know, clubhouse rooms, do some audio rooms, through LinkedIn. And even when you're just sitting in those rooms, you know, you're starting to think about how people are presenting, you're starting to hear how people are coming across and presenting their personal brands, when they're speaking them before you even have to get brave enough to raise your hand and speak yourself. So do you feel like audio rooms are a good place for practice?
Michelle Griffin 29:21
Absolutely. clubhouse, you know, when we were all in last year, it you learn fast, you know, you have to also communicate who you're the message, you want to share the question very succinctly. And that is a huge asset in the business world. So yeah, so anyone now can do audio. So I would go do a search on LinkedIn audio events, plural, hashtag LinkedIn audio events, and you can find the ones they are making them more discoverable. You can host your own now you know what you can what's gone on a medical I mean, any topic and just start inviting people. I didn't mention that LinkedIn newsletter. That's another cool either tool where you can, you know, start a newsletter, maybe go do a search, are there any other newsletters? Am I finding a gap or maybe you know, here's the thing, just because you're one doesn't mean that's it, people need different perspectives. So a monthly newsletter might be able, you know, to get your name across an out there. And then as authority, let's not forget that a lot of these things are authority and trust factors and tokens that just keep getting deposited into our brand. Now, your brand, as you say, is not something we grow and do. In one day, it is a complete process. When you were saying, Claire, you know, you can't just show up and I see this all the time, or used to last year, people would just show up, look for a job or just try out LinkedIn, and boom, it's the same thing as you have a friend. Yeah, do we all have those friends, and hopefully not too many of these, or whatever, maybe growing up was worse, when we were little, they just come around and sweet talking just like, oh, when they want something. And then once they get what they want, boom, you know, like, that's too bad, you know. So same thing with when you show up to, you know, start a business, get a job show up to stay out there and just keep growing and evolving. And you don't have to spend that's another thing people say, Well, I don't want to spend all my time I don't have all the time, Michelle to be on LinkedIn. And I've shown him you know, the ways to do it strategically. But what other way would we be doing to build our business? I mean, LinkedIn, I mean, I have clients and friends globally because of it, you know? So what are the way can you connect with everyone in your industry, right under one area, so and getting this close to senior management or CEO so they can see you. So it is a wonderful place to build your personal brand. And that's how I started my business was personally, you know, from landing clients, and just building my brand. And it's continued to evolve as I keep putting investments into it.
Claire Davis 31:51
I think you really hit on something important there is that, you know, to be so intentional as you are with your brand, is is so incredibly important. It is an investment, like you said, you know, and when you start to invest in who you are as a professional, and how you come across in the world already and lean into that so that you can leverage that persona that's already out there for everybody to see. A ton of opportunity lies ahead. So I love what you share. Thank you so much for making it so relatable for everybody. You guys, if you're not yet following Michelle, please do take the time you will thank me, you will thank yourself, she really has it figured out. And like I said the step by step process is something that not only business owners can use, but very, very much that professionals medical sales professionals VPs of sales can use for themselves, to help people to get to know them so that they're more clear on why they would do business with us in the first place. Because really, people want to work with people they like. So get out there so people can learn exactly who you are. So Michelle, where can people find more about you and about connecting with you and your programs that you run?
Michelle Griffin 33:10
I will thank you so much for all that nice feedback, Claire, I appreciate it. So connect with me on LinkedIn, I would love after you're seeing or hearing this Sydney connection request and said, I saw you in Claire's awesome podcast and I would love to connect with you. Because I'm on LinkedIn about every day. You can check out my website, which is Michelle B griffin.com. And really my brand consultancy goes to that website too. That's the easiest way. I have two podcasts. One's about to get rebranded one is the business of you personal branding podcast, and it's going to be rebranded in the next couple of weeks. But all the 51 Plus episodes are there got a lot of good stuff on personal branding LinkedIn. Two months ago, I rolled out a second podcast I told you I like to talk I just can't help it. So it's a co hosted podcast. It's the LinkedIn branding show. And it's about how to build your personal and company brand on LinkedIn with Michelle squared is my LinkedIn bestie Michelle J. RAMAN who lives in Sydney, Australia. She's the global company pages experts. So together we take a non cliche, different approach and 15 minutes or less to educate you about building all that on LinkedIn. So that is the best way my link tree has some free templates on LinkedIn. You can grab and just check out all the goodies. Oh, and then I have that 365 Creators community. So if you want yeah, one last little plug. There's like 1000 of us globally if you want to get out on LinkedIn and want some guidance. One thing I made a recent adjustment is I'm not really posting my LinkedIn tips on my feed.
Claire Davis 34:52
I'm going all in on personal branding PR stuff, but my LinkedIn tips are all in my free communities to leverage the seven step process that she mentioned earlier today, and how you can access communities like her 365 Community so that you can not go it alone, right? Because when we go as a community are more confident and we're stronger in our approach. So Michelle, thank you so so so much. We truly appreciate your time and thank you for helping to unmask how we can start mastering the professional brands and personal brands for our own business needs. So thanks so much for your time today, friend.
Michelle Griffin 35:21
Thank you, Claire. It has been a pleasure. I'll chat with you soon.
Transcribed by https://otter.ai