Subscribe
The Carousel
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Beauty & Fashion
  • Wellness & Health
  • Travel & Leisure
  • Food & Drink
  • Lifestyle & Homes
  • About
  • News
  • Beauty & Fashion
  • Wellness & Health
  • Travel & Leisure
  • Food & Drink
  • Lifestyle & Homes
  • About
No Result
View All Result
The Carousel
No Result
View All Result
Home Lifestyle & Homes Careers

The 9 Biggest Mistakes People Make When Trying to Polish Their Personal Brand

Marie-Antoinette Issa by Marie-Antoinette Issa
07/11/2025
in Careers, Lifestyle & Homes
0
Personal brand mistakes
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

When it comes to reputation, money can’t buy class – or credibility. As Vinisha Rathod highlights in her new book The Briefcase Effect, personal branding is no longer a vanity exercise, it’s a survival skill. In a world where CEOs are judged as much for their courtside antics as their corporate wins, how you show up – online and in real life – shapes opportunity, influence, and impact.

personal brand mistakes
In this extract from her new book The Briefcase Effect, Vinisha Rathod highlights the biggest personal brand mistakes to avoid

Picture this: a billionaire CEO swipes a child’s hat courtside at a tennis match. Another is caught cheating at a Coldplay concert. Both behave badly, then double down with childish, classless defences. Rich? Yes. Reputable? Not so much. In a world fuelled by perception, powered by algorithms, and shaped by AI, your personal brand is the closest thing you have to real differentiation. Whether you’re climbing the ladder, pivoting careers, or building your own business, people don’t just buy your credentials. They buy you.

And the data backs it: 82% of people research a CEO’s online presence before deciding to work with or for them (Brunswick, 2022), 68% are more likely to recommend a brand if they follow its executives online (LinkedIn, 2024), executive reputation influences up to 43% of company market value (Weber Shandwick) and 56% of professionals say an executive’s digital presence sways their purchase decision (LinkedIn, 2024). So why are so many still getting it wrong? Here are the most common mistakes people make when trying to polish their personal brand and how you can do it differently.

Related articles

How This Game-Changing Aussie Pet-Tech is Solving Canine Separation Anxiety

The Great Winter Laundry Myth: Why We’re Punishing Ourselves Over an Outdated Fear

1. Confusing popularity with presence

Followers ≠ influence. Visibility is not the same as credibility. And AI-generated content? People can smell it. We are living in a time of digital exhaustion. What cuts through now is realness. A personal brand built from the inside out, grounded in values, voice, and lived experience creates traction. Anything else just creates noise.

2. Connecting through title, not character

How often do we ask, “So, what do you do?” then instantly sort that person into a mental category? When we lead with transactions, we attract the same. But real brand equity is built on character, not titles. Ask instead: Would I trust this person with the most vulnerable in our society? What’s their moral compass when no one is watching?

3. Trying to be liked by everyone

Spoiler: not everyone will like you. And that’s a good thing. A strong brand isn’t universal, it’s magnetic to the right people. You can be professional and have differing opinions. That’s called leadership.

4. Shapeshifting to suit the room

We’re in a trust recession. In a world where trust now takes closer to 12 interactions to build (double what it used to), inconsistency is the silent killer. If you keep changing your story, presence or positioning, people will notice. Have a few “anchor” stories that communicate your values, your superpowers, and your why. Let those travel with you across conversations and platforms.

5. Your online self doesn’t match the real you

Tempting as it is to present a curated, glossier version of yourself, if the in-person experience doesn’t match the promise, that’s brand erosion. Especially for introverts or emerging leaders, don’t hide behind the grid. Show up aligned, not inflated. Your presence should feel like a handshake, not a pitch deck.

6. Your personal style is unpolished

Like it or not, how you dress is part of how you’re received. You don’t need designer labels; you can build a powerful signature look from second-hand stores and still have presence. It is worth investing to understand what makes you feel powerful and helps elevate you in the room.

7. Not building networks outside your circle

For years, I worked hard, kept my head down, and stayed in my familiar circles. But personal brands grow at the edge of discomfort. Get in the room. Say yes to the panel. DM the person you admire. The best opportunities don’t come from job ads they come from being out there.

8. Leading with wounds, not your worth

This one is close to my heart. As a woman of colour with no family network, no financial safety net, and no “in”, Yes, the system is unfair. Yes, the odds are stacked. But you don’t need to lead with pain. Lead with power. Let your work, integrity, and evolution speak before your wound does. That’s how we shift the system, not just for us, but for those who come next.

9. No digital footprint

If we can’t find you online in 2026, you’re invisible. A simple digital presence even just a sharp LinkedIn and a consistent tone is your 24/7 CV. Don’t let perfectionism keep you silent. People aren’t looking for polish. They’re looking for resonance.

Personal brand mistakes the briefcase effect

The biggest mistake people make? Building their brand from the outside in. Trying to appear impressive, instead of asking: what do I want to be known for and why? In the age of automation, your humanity is your edge. You don’t need to be perfect. And, you just need to be consistent. You just need to be true.

Vinisha Rathod is a keynote speaker, advisor, and founder of P3 Studio, and author of The Briefcase Effect. With 15+ years shaping leadership, brand, and culture across sectors, she’s known for her sharp commercial insights and disarming warmth. Her book The Briefcase Effect is based on her signature 1:1s and workshops — a practical deep-dive for anyone seeking alignment, agency and traction. As a fierce advocate for systems that reward merit and capability, Vinisha is driven by a bigger mission: breaking glass ceilings and ending domestic violence through economic empowerment and community. More at thebriefcaseeffect.com

Tags: Personal BrandPersonal brand mistakes
Previous Post

If Your Cleanser Doesn’t Contain Vitamin B5 It Might Not Be “The One”

Next Post

Yoghurt Bites are TikTok Trending … And This is One of the Easiest Recipes to Try

Marie-Antoinette Issa

Marie-Antoinette Issa

Marie-Antoinette Issa is the Beauty & Lifestyle Editor for The Carousel, Women Love Tech and Women Love Travel. She has worked across news and women's lifestyle magazines and websites including Cosmopolitan, Cleo, Madison, Concrete Playground, The Urban List and Daily Mail, I Quit Sugar and Huffington Post.

Related Posts

smiling, dogs
Lifestyle & Homes

How This Game-Changing Aussie Pet-Tech is Solving Canine Separation Anxiety

08/07/2026
Fitbit for family
Lifestyle & Homes

The Great Winter Laundry Myth: Why We’re Punishing Ourselves Over an Outdated Fear

07/07/2026
Dr. Anna Cohen: ‘Raising Good Boys Into Great Men’
Parenting

Dr. Anna Cohen: ‘Raising Good Boys Into Great Men’

07/07/2026
low tox home
Lifestyle & Homes

The Low Tox Home Has Grown Up … And Australians Are Expecting More Than Green Marketing

01/07/2026
Strawberry Moon
Astrology

Capricorn Full Moon and Mercury Retrograde Collide to Create Confusion

30/06/2026
15 Things Bosses Hate About Employees
Careers

Young Entrepreneur’s Guide To Being a Girl Boss

30/06/2026

Recommended

Tears, Melt-Downs & "Sharing Winnings" on The Block: Glasshouse Final 2014

Tears, Melt-Downs On The Block: Glasshouse Final 2014

12/09/2016
Margot Robbie Confuses Prince Harry For Ed Sheeran1

Margot Robbie Confuses Prince Harry For Ed Sheeran

14/06/2016

Recent Posts

Commando Steve's Five-Spiced Beef Short Ribs With Sweet Potato Puree
Entertaining & Wine

Commando Steve’s Five-Spiced Beef Short Ribs With Sweet Potato Puree

by Robyn Foyster
11/07/2026
0

This rich, aromatic slow-braised beef recipe by Commando Steve is the ultimate comfort food. Infused with warming five-spice, ginger, and...

Read moreDetails
Sports Style

Sideline Style: Eight Winning Looks To Get You in the Sporty Spirit … Even if You’ve Never Kicked a Ball in Your Life

11/07/2026
Crispy Butternut Pumpkin, Feta & Pine Nut Vegetarian Pizza

Pizza On The Grill

11/07/2026
Regenerative Food forest

Turning Pasture into Paradise: What I’ve Learned As A Volunteer On A Regenerative Food Forest Journey

10/07/2026

The Secret to Glowing Winter Skin

10/07/2026

Subscribe to Newsletter

Be the first to get daily fitness news & tips from JNews Fitness.

[mc4wp_form]
  • News
  • Beauty & Fashion
  • Wellness & Health
  • Travel & Leisure
  • Food & Drink
  • Lifestyle & Homes
  • About
Foyster Media Pty Ltd Copyright 2026
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Beauty & Fashion
  • Wellness & Health
  • Travel & Leisure
  • Food & Drink
  • Lifestyle & Homes
  • About

© 2025 Foyster Media Pty Ltd. All rights reserved