
The personal brand strategy
The personal brand strategy that gets senior marketers inbound clients
Here is what most marketing consultants' personal brands say, stripped to the frame:
"I am a [title] with [X] years of experience in [list of things]. I help [vague category of client] with [list of services]. I am passionate about [something]."
Read it back. Who is that for?
The credentials are for the consultant. The passion statement is definitely for the consultant. The only person missing from that entire brand is the client.
That's the inside-out problem. And it's why most senior marketers with genuinely impressive careers get almost no inbound from their personal brand, while someone with half their experience who says the right things to the right people gets more work than they can handle.
The architecture is wrong. A better headshot or a more consistent posting schedule won't touch it.
The outside-in reframe
A personal brand that generates inbound has one job: make the right person feel immediately understood.
When a prospective client lands on your LinkedIn profile, reads your bio, or encounters your content, they should feel — before they've read a single credential — that you understand their problem. That you've been in the room where that problem lives. That working with you would be different from working with the twelve other consultants who pitched them last quarter.
Credentials don't do that. Specificity does.
Consider the difference between these two positioning statements.
"Senior marketing strategist with 15 years' experience across B2B and B2C brands."
"I work with professional services firms who are generating solid revenue but can't seem to convert that into consistent inbound. Usually the problem isn't their service. It's how they're talking about it."
The first tells you what someone has done. The second tells a specific person "this is about you." The second generates enquiries. The first generates polite nods.
Why marketers get this wrong
We spend our careers building brands for other people. You'd think that would make us better at our own.
It doesn't, for a simple reason: when we build brands for clients, we start with the customer. We write audience profiles, we run discovery, we map out the problems worth solving. When we build our own personal brand, we start with ourselves. Our history, our services.
The discipline that makes you good at client work is exactly what you skip when it's your own name on the tin.
So apply it properly. Before you write a word of your bio or plan a piece of content, answer these two questions honestly:
Who specifically is the right client for you — not the broadest possible category, but the specific type of company or person where you do your best work?
What is the problem they have that they'd pay to solve — not the service you provide, but the actual business or career problem keeping them up at night?
Everything in your personal brand should be an answer to those two questions. The bio. The content. The LinkedIn headline. The way you introduce yourself at events.
What outside-in looks like in practice
Your headline. LinkedIn gives you 220 characters. Most senior marketers fill them with a title and a list of disciplines. Use them to state who you help and what changes for them. "I help B2B professional services firms stop being the best-kept secret in their market" is a headline that makes the right person stop scrolling. "Marketing Director | Strategy | Brand | Digital" is a job title.
Your bio. Write the first paragraph entirely from your client's perspective. What is their situation? What do they need that they're not finding? Where do you come in? Your credentials come second — they're the proof, not the pitch.
Your content. Content that generates inbound talks about the client's problems with enough specificity that the right reader feels seen. Posts about your opinions on industry trends are fine. Posts where a specific type of client reads the first line and thinks "this person gets it" are what generate DMs.
The test: read your last five posts. How many of them would make a prospective client feel immediately understood? If the answer is zero, you know what to adjust.
The specificity trap
Narrowing down feels like leaving money on the table. It's not.
The broader your positioning, the more you compete with every other generalist consultant in your space. The narrower your positioning, the more you own a category. And the person who owns a category gets asked for by name, referred specifically, and rarely has to justify their rate.
Most senior marketers have enough experience to be genuinely excellent in two or three specific contexts. The question is which ones to lead with publicly, knowing that the others will come anyway once you've earned trust.
Pick the context where you do your best work and where the problem is painful enough that people will pay to have it solved well. Build your whole public brand around that. The generalist work fills in around it.
The one thing to do this week
Pull up your LinkedIn headline and your bio. Read them as if you're the client — the specific person you actually want to work with.
Do they make that person feel immediately understood? Do they describe a problem that person has? Does it sound like someone who's been in the room with their specific situation?
If not, rewrite the first line of your bio before you plan another piece of content. One sentence. The client's situation, your entry point. That's it.
The rest of the brand rebuilds from that sentence outward.
