I absolutely love the way you break down Marie Kondo's techniques into practical advice. Solid, actionable, and inspiring.
But I want even more. :) The simplicity and obvious relevance of her core topic (tidying up) doesn't entirely translate to more complex, ephemeral, and multifaceted topics. Could you do a similar breakdown for a complex personal brand, someone whose core skill is less relatable? All the steps and principles you highlighted here are still relevant, but there's more to it: the need to answer questions like "what do you do?", "why does it matter?", and "who might it matter to?"
When your brand is grounded in a very niche topic or capability, the way you present yourself and the way you find your audience are much bigger foundational challenges. And when you have depth in more than one area, there are many ways to tell the story. (Can you tell I'm on this journey myself?)
Thanks, once again, for your thoughtful and thought provoking content!
I absolutely love the way you break down Marie Kondo's techniques into practical advice. Solid, actionable, and inspiring.
But I want even more. :) The simplicity and obvious relevance of her core topic (tidying up) doesn't entirely translate to more complex, ephemeral, and multifaceted topics. Could you do a similar breakdown for a complex personal brand, someone whose core skill is less relatable? All the steps and principles you highlighted here are still relevant, but there's more to it: the need to answer questions like "what do you do?", "why does it matter?", and "who might it matter to?"
When your brand is grounded in a very niche topic or capability, the way you present yourself and the way you find your audience are much bigger foundational challenges. And when you have depth in more than one area, there are many ways to tell the story. (Can you tell I'm on this journey myself?)
Thanks, once again, for your thoughtful and thought provoking content!