The Professional Brand Presentation Outline
Communicating a clear professional brand with an audience requires a lot of research, thought, and planning. Most people spend too little time in the essential preparation stage or even skip preparation completely.
The most important way to make your professional brand stand out from the competition and to ensure your presentation will resonate with an audience is to engage in thoughtful, meaningful preparation.
Instructions
The Professional Brand Presentation will be submitted in three pieces over the next three modules. A presentation’s outline forms the core of the message. This week, you will focus on developing a strong outline.
Before beginning your outline, it is important to have completed your Module 4 Readings, Videos, and Lessons as well as the Module 4 – Overview of this assignment. Additionally, pull up a copy of your Module 4 – Discussion: Communicating Your Body of Work. You shared three major accomplishments and what you felt those experiences had in common. We will use this as the starting point for building our Professional Brand Presentation outline.
Part One: Understanding Your Brand
Your professional brand should clearly communicate who you are, what you do, why you do it, and what makes you unique. In order to prepare a presentation that effectively communicates those key elements in an engaging way, address all of the prompts and questions below. Providing as much detail in the form of examples, facts, stories, and experiences from your professional career and your personal life can help you best understand and articulate your brand.
Start with why. Why do you do what you do? What motivates you? Why do you want to wake up and go to work at a particular job? For example, do you want to help others? Are you motivated by creativity? Do you want to earn respect and prestige? What problems do you want to solve? Use your Module 4 – Discussion: Communicating Your Body of Work. You shared three major accomplishments and what you felt those experiences had in common. Does this communicate why you do what you do?
Summarize your core “why” in a few sentences. This is your professional brand statement.
Support and evidence. Now that you’ve figured out your core “why,” you must provide support and evidence for your professional brand statement. You must also figure out how to differentiate yourself from your competition.
Answer the following questions:
1. Define your professional goals. Where do you see yourself professionally in the long-term (10 years from now)? Where do you see yourself in the short-term (next year)? Be sure to include not just the career you want to hold but also detailed information about that career. What is the company like? What is your position like? What are your co-workers or clients like? What is your life like as you work to accomplish your professional goals?
2. Define your strengths and skills. To achieve your professional goals, you must identify the strengths you possess and the skills you need to continue to build. List your strengths, the skills you’ve developed, and the important adjectives that describe you and your work ethic. Next, define some skills you need to continue to work on in order to achieve career success.
3. Analyze your target audience. Who do you need to share your professional brand with in order to achieve your professional goals? Is it a specific company? If you want to be your own boss, do you need to share your brand with prospective clients and customers? Conduct a bit of research on what your target audience looks like. What does your target audience need from you?
4. Analyze your competition. With over 7 billion people in the world, you’re bound to face competition as you work to accomplish your professional goals. What is it that you offer that other people cannot? Conduct a bit of research on your competition. What unique blend of character traits, goals, strengths, skills, and experiences do you possess? How do you stand out from the competition?
You will use the answers to all of these questions to build your Professional Brand Presentation Outline.
Part Two: Communicating Your Brand
Once you’ve developed a clear understanding of your professional brand, it’s time to create a plan to share that brand with a target audience.
Your Professional Brand Presentation outline should include the following key components:
· Introduction
· Attention-getter or hook
· Professional Brand Statement
· Body
· How you stand out from the competition
· Professional goals
· Strengths and skills
· Examples, stories, and support for your brand
· Conclusion
· Short summary
· Clincher or final thought
Be sure to clearly label all of the pieces of your outline.
Submission Instructions
Remember that for this assignment, you will submit both Part One and Part Two.
Readings
Business and Professional Writing: A Basic Guide by Paul MacRae (2015)
· Chapter 15: Individual Oral Presentations (pp. 251-265)
Resonate (Links to an external site.) by Nancy Duarte (2010)
· Chapter 1: Why Resonate? (Links to an external site.) (pp. 6-29)
· Chapter 2: Lessons from Myths and Movies (Links to an external site.) (pp. 30-58)
Communicating a clear professional brand with an audience requires a lot of research,
thought, and planning. Most people spend too little time in the ess
ential preparation stage
or even skip preparation completely.
The most important way to make your professional brand stand out from the competition
and to ensure your presentation will resonate with an audience is to engage in
thoughtful,
meaningful prepa
ration.
Instructions
The Professional Brand Presentation will be submitted in three pieces over the next three
modules. A presentation’s outline forms
the core of the message.
This week, you will
focus on developing a strong outline.
Before beginning
your
outline, it is important to have completed your Module 4 Readings,
Videos, and Lessons as well as the Module 4
–
Overview of this
assignment.
Additionally,
pull up a copy of your
Module 4
–
Discussion: Communicating
Your Body of Work. You shared three majo
r accomplishments and what you felt those
experiences had in common. We will use this as the starting point for building our
Professional Brand Presentation outline.
Part One:
Understanding Your Brand
Your professional brand should clearly communicate who
you are, what you do, why you
do it, and what makes you unique. In order to prepare a presentation that effectively
communicates those key elements in an engaging way, address
all of the prompts and
questions
below. Providing as much detail in the form of
examples, facts, stories, and
experiences from your professional career and your personal life can help you best
understand and articulate your brand.
Start with why.
Why
do you do what you do? What motivates you? Why do you want to
wake up and go to work
at a particular job? For example, do you want to help others?
Are you motivated by creativity? Do you want to earn respect and prestige? What
problems do you want to solve? Use your
Module 4
–
Discussion: Communicating Your
Body of Work. You shared three m
ajor accomplishments and what you felt those
experiences had in common. Does this communicate why you do what you do?
Summarize your core “why” in a few
sentences. This is your
professional brand
statement.
Support and evidence.
Now that you’ve figured out your core “why,” you must provide
support and evidence for your professional brand statement. You must also figure out
how to differentiate yourself from your competition.
Answer the following questions:
1.
Define your professiona
l goals.
Where do you see yourself professionally in the
long
–
term (10 years from now)? Where do you see yourself in the short
–
term (next
year)? Be sure to include not just the career you want to hold but also detailed
information about that career. What i
s
the company like? What is
your position like?
What are
your co
–
workers or clients like? What is
your life like as
you work to
accomplish your
professional goals?
2.
Define
your strengths and skills.
To achieve your professional goals, you must
identify the
strengths you possess and the skills you need to continue to build.
List
your strengths, the skills you’ve developed, and the important adjectives that
describe you and your work ethic. Next, define some skills you need to continue to
work on in order to a
chieve career success.
3.
Analyze your target audience.
Who do you need to share your professional brand
with in order to achieve your professional goals?
Is it a specific company? If you want
Communicating a clear professional brand with an audience requires a lot of research,
thought, and planning. Most people spend too little time in the essential preparation stage
or even skip preparation completely.
The most important way to make your professional brand stand out from the competition
and to ensure your presentation will resonate with an audience is to engage in
thoughtful, meaningful preparation.
Instructions
The Professional Brand Presentation will be submitted in three pieces over the next three
modules. A presentation’s outline forms the core of the message. This week, you will
focus on developing a strong outline.
Before beginning your outline, it is important to have completed your Module 4 Readings,
Videos, and Lessons as well as the Module 4 – Overview of this
assignment. Additionally, pull up a copy of your Module 4 – Discussion: Communicating
Your Body of Work. You shared three major accomplishments and what you felt those
experiences had in common. We will use this as the starting point for building our
Professional Brand Presentation outline.
Part One: Understanding Your Brand
Your professional brand should clearly communicate who you are, what you do, why you
do it, and what makes you unique. In order to prepare a presentation that effectively
communicates those key elements in an engaging way, address all of the prompts and
questions below. Providing as much detail in the form of examples, facts, stories, and
experiences from your professional career and your personal life can help you best
understand and articulate your brand.
Start with why. Why do you do what you do? What motivates you? Why do you want to
wake up and go to work at a particular job? For example, do you want to help others?
Are you motivated by creativity? Do you want to earn respect and prestige? What
problems do you want to solve? Use your Module 4 – Discussion: Communicating Your
Body of Work. You shared three major accomplishments and what you felt those
experiences had in common. Does this communicate why you do what you do?
Summarize your core “why” in a few sentences. This is your professional brand
statement.
Support and evidence. Now that you’ve figured out your core “why,” you must provide
support and evidence for your professional brand statement. You must also figure out
how to differentiate yourself from your competition.
Answer the following questions:
1. Define your professional goals. Where do you see yourself professionally in the
long-term (10 years from now)? Where do you see yourself in the short-term (next
year)? Be sure to include not just the career you want to hold but also detailed
information about that career. What is the company like? What is your position like?
What are your co-workers or clients like? What is your life like as you work to
accomplish your professional goals?
2. Define your strengths and skills. To achieve your professional goals, you must
identify the strengths you possess and the skills you need to continue to build.
List your strengths, the skills you’ve developed, and the important adjectives that
describe you and your work ethic. Next, define some skills you need to continue to
work on in order to achieve career success.
3. Analyze your target audience. Who do you need to share your professional brand
with in order to achieve your professional goals? Is it a specific company? If you want