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The brand is you image in the age of first impressions
- 1. Personal Branding
Ref: 0068
The brand is you: Image in the age of first impressions
Quentin Bryce, Governor-General of Australia
By: Myriam Robin
Journalist, Leading Company
You are the CEO of you, American management guru Tom Peters wrote in 1997.
He meant that a leader’s brand – how they carry and project themselves – is important. Branding is no
longer just for corporations, he argued, but a crucial part of how a leader progresses through their
career.
Peters was writing 15 years ago. And while psychologists have long known physical appearance is a large
part of how we judge people, Peter’s insight is more relevant today than he could have known at the
time.
The past 15 years have seen a decline in corporate loyalty. Leaders get sacked. Or they choose to move
on themselves. The average CEO tenure at ASX100 companies is now less than four years, according to
recent research.
This is why personal brand has become so important. People shift between jobs more and more. This
has made personal branding more of a leadership issue.
For further information on this handout and the consulting
and coaching programs available please contact:
Image Group International
Asia Pacific Head Office
T: (+61 3) 9824 0420
E: info@imagegroup.com.au
www.imagegroup.com.au
©2012 1 of 2
- 2. Image consultant and executive coach Jon Michail has been in his line of work for more than 20 years.
This increased stress on personal marketing and brand management drives his business.
The former fashion designer for Christian Dior integrates style consulting with his broader coaching
offering. He fell into his work “by accident”.
“I discovered along the way that I was more interested in people than the actual product,” he says.
In 1989, he founded Image Group International, which he still heads. His clients are mostly executives,
many of them from Australia’s largest companies, including Qantas, Westpac, Myer and Hewlett
Packard. A lot of them are women.
“The typical client would be someone going for a promotion, or renegotiating their current position,” he
says. “Our clients want to be perceived as a better leader... Their personal brand and image plays a big
part of that.”
Michail describes a client he had recently. “He was in the IT business, and wanted coaching to improve
his assertiveness and confidence. He didn’t realise that his visual presentation was behind a lot of his
confidence issues.”
“He needed something simple like a new haircut, a polish, to get rid of his facial hair. We worked on
letting him keep his funky look while looking professional. So the next time he does a pitch, he’ll come
across better.”
Michail says talent is overrated anyway. “In a very competitive marketplace, your talent isn’t going to be
that much different from that of everyone else on the line,” he says. “So it becomes a matter of what
you do to differentiate yourself.”
Michail’s line of work is controversial. Many question whether a preoccupation with superficial
appearance is a healthy development.
It doesn’t help that for women, looking their best is often more expensive and time-consuming. A recent
opinion piece in the Sydney Morning Herald criticised an unnamed investment banking firm that held a
training seminar to teach women how to dress in the workplace. “While the men went about 'business
as usual', the women traders were pulled aside, sat down and told how to dress, what shoes to wear
and what body type each woman had,” writes social commentator and writer Nina Funnell. She quotes
feminist commentator Clementine Ford saying, “a women’s only aesthetic responsibility in a
professional workplace is to look professional”.
Michail is familiar with the criticisms, and doesn’t skip a beat in responding.
For further information on this handout and the consulting
and coaching programs available please contact:
Image Group International
Asia Pacific Head Office
T: (+61 3) 9824 0420
E: info@imagegroup.com.au
www.imagegroup.com.au
©2012 2 of 2
- 3. “I’m in the real world helping human beings grow professionally and personally. We do whatever it
takes to help people grow.”
Leaders who rise to the top realise they need to be savvy to get people to listen. This includes, he claims,
many of those who criticise his industry the most.
“Recently, I dealt with a leading commentator from the media who says things on the track you’ve
suggested. That’s what she talks about.”
“But privately, in my session, she wanted to know every possible way she could build her brand. And
then she goes out and says how all of this stuff is crap.”
Michail sees himself as an educator, teaching corporate Australia what it can’t learn in an MBA course.
“Business people know what the real world’s all about. They know that basically the whole package has
to be right to get the maximum value of return. It’s no different to how corporations brand products.
Human beings are no different… and if you don’t make a point of selling yourself, you won’t sell.”
Michail nominated some of the Australians he thought had strong personal brands. His list included:
Gail Kelly
Frank Lowy
James Strong
Richard Branson
Quentin Bryce
Simon McKeon
Andrew Demetriou
Mike Smith
©2012 Leading Company
For further information on this handout and the consulting
and coaching programs available please contact:
Image Group International
Asia Pacific Head Office
T: (+61 3) 9824 0420
E: info@imagegroup.com.au
www.imagegroup.com.au
©2012 3 of 2