© 2010 Dream Merchant 2309 Torrance Blvd. #104, Torrance, CA 90501 (310) 328-1925 email: Jkm316@aol.com FIVE STEPS TO BUILDING A PERSONAL BRAND LIKE HARRY HOUDINI Harry Houdini Still Surpasses Many of Today's Modern Escape Artists. Why? He Created a Personal Brand. By George Torok Harry Houdini died in 1926. Yet he is still remembered as the greatest escape artist of all time. Even David Copperfield doesn't come close in terms of brand and name recognition. That is the power of personal branding. Build a solid personal brand and it catapults you to success. Build a really good personal brand and it survives your death.
Will your brand survive 80 years after your death? More importantly, will your personal brand help you while you're alive?
Just imagine how difficult it was to build a personal brand at the beginning of the 1900s. There was no Internet. Houdini didn't have a webpage or videos on YouTube. And he didn't have the money to buy expensive newspaper or radio advertisements. So how did Harry Houdini create and publicize his personal brand? What can you learn from his rags-to-riches story?
1. Be the First--Houdini created a new niche--the escape artist. When you are first in your niche, you are the standard. He started with card tricks, but there were already lots of magicians. So Eric Weiss (his real name) created a new type of entertainer--the escape artist.2. Be Bold--Houdini was bold. He issued challenges to prisons around the world, challenging them to try to restrain him. He then visited the prisons that accepted his challenge and escaped from them. He was a showman. He dangled upside down from a crane over New York City while escaping from a strait jacket and chains. He looked for unique ways to be the news.
3. Be Provocative--Houdini was provocative. The publicity photo of him that was most often used, shows his muscular body almost nude--draped in chains and locks. That photograph must have attracted women and interested men.
4. Be Creative--Houdini was creative. He started as a magician, but differentiated himself by adding the elements of escape. He made enemies. He challenged spiritualists who claimed they spoke to the dead.
5. Die Mysteriously--You can't plan this one, however it can contribute to the brand--but not always. Harry Houdini died under mysterious circumstances. He was an extremely fit man who died after a blow to the stomach. Something went wrong, and he died after an over-eager challenger punched him.
This method also worked to promote the personal brands of Elvis Presley and Bruce Lee. It's an effective way of enhancing the brand, although not an attractive option for the individual.
Harry Houdini did all this, long before anyone thought about the concept of personal branding. If you asked Houdini about branding, he probably wouldn't have understood your question. But he sure knew how to build his personal brand. What's important for you to know is that Houdini did not strive to build a brand. He worked to generate customers. All the publicity stunts he did were for the purpose of drawing crowds to his show. Branding was a byproduct.
What can you learn from Harry Houdini, the world's greatest escape artist, about creating and sustaining your own personal brand?
Don't focus on building brand. Instead develop relationships and get more customers. If you build a brand along the way, that's a nice bonus.
George Torok is the coauthor of the bestselling SECRETS OF POWER MARKETING: PROMOTE BRAND YOU, the first guide to personal marketing for the non-marketer. Get you free copy of "50 Power Marketing Ideas" at: http://www.PowerMarketing.com
Arrange for torok to speak at your conference or business meeting by visiting: http://www.Torok.com
For media interviews, please call 905-335-1997
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