Creating your personal boilerplate
When someone asks you, “what do you do?” What do you say? If you’re like many folks, you reply with your title and place of employment. And you know how I feel about that: communicating your title is not really answering the question and certainly doesn’t promote your talents. It’s time to create your personal boilerplate; your own thirty-second elevator speech; a verbal “About Me” that is sincere, to-the-point and purposeful.
This is an exercise in consistently and confidently communicating your own skills, talents and line of work. Without apology! Without shame! Even if you have a title that you view as demeaning or wrong! This is especially important if you are a jack-of-all-trades and it’s hard for you to explain what you do!
I’ll go first. When someone asks me, “What do you do,” I say something like:
I manage public relations at a national policy shop in D.C.—helping very smart and often long-winded folks succinctly and confidently communicate with media and policy makers. I’m also a technology and productivity columnist, and a go-to gal for the social media curious. And I blog about PR and geek stuff on my personal blog, FlackRabbit.com.
Now, it’s your turn. Warning: it is harder than it looks. The good news: you don’t have to memorize it; it can in should be organic. And it may change according to your audience.
When creating your personal boilerplate, try to think about the following:
What do you do? Notice that I did not ask what your title is. Explain to me what you do in a way that I’ll likely understand, even if I don’t know anything about your line of work. For instance, most folks know what public relations is, but not many folks understand what it means. That’s why I include some detail to nudge them in the right direction. Additionally, you should include skills and interests that make you, you. I don’t write a technology column or pen a blog as a part of my day job, but both are a relevant part of my professional work and skill set, so I include them in “what I do.”
What do you want to do? If what you do doesn’t have anything to do with what you’d like to do, find a way to express what you’d like to be doing. When I worked at a place where I was not doing cause-related public relations, I felt the need to express to folks that cause-related PR was something I really enjoyed and did well. You may have a similar career passion or interest that needs to be communicated in your personal boilerplate. Don’t be afraid to tag on something like “xyz…and a healthy obsession with sports marketing.” Or whatever.
What do you do better than anyone else? What makes you different? I know that I am very good at boosting the confidence of my bosses, clients, co-workers, etc. In fact, my ability to help folks believe they are capable of nailing a media interview, strategizing, taking calculated risks, speaking in front of an audience, etc, is part of what makes me different. So, that’s why I include it in my boilerplate. No doubt you have some secret sauce of your own; be sure to include it in there. Maybe it’s your ability to be the voice of reason in a crisis, your news judgement or nunchuck skills. Whatever it is, find a way to express it.
So, what do you do? Share your boilerplate in the comments!
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I help companies better tell their stories about their products and services. I’m a part of their team, and I love helping companies succeed.
susan hart´s last [type] ..Dear John- It’s Over…TC…EOM
Thanks for sharing, Susan!
Margie´s last [type] ..From the mailbag- advice for new-to-town-ers
[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Margie Newman, AliahPublicRelations. AliahPublicRelations said: What do you do better than anyone else? What makes you different? -Creating your personal boilerplate http://bit.ly/a3BD8n #PR #success [...]
I write a blog called Mopwater PR + Media Notes that informs and inspires an international audience and helps both budding and seasoned PR pros focus on social media tools that help make communications work more effectively.
I speak on panels, conduct trainings and host events that educate the PR community on the intersection of PR and social media as well as how to identify one’s PR specialty.
I help businesses get more customers and organizations reach larger audiences by leveraging social media tools like blog posts, YouTube videos, Facebook updates and tweets to get the attention of traditional media for subsequent media coverage.
I empower others to believe that they can do it because I believe they can.
Amanda Miller Littlejohn´s last [type] ..In Retrospect- @NYTimes Reporter Would’ve Studied Statistics Instead of Journalism
Good stuff, Amanda!
IPeople always ask me what I do (as in what do you do as a day job that pays you a salary.) I really don’t want to talk about what I currently do. As soon as I say, “I do HR consulting…” I’m pigeonholed as an “HR person.” I’d much prefer to talk about what I WANT to do because that’s what I want people to think about when they think of me. Most times I can switch the person’s focus easily enough; but I’m definitely going to work on my boilerplate statement.
Tamara Rasberry´s last [type] ..EVENT RECAP- DCTweetup 15 @ Policy
Tamara, I hope you’ll share your “what you want” boilerplate with us when you have a draft of it! Nothing wrong with looking to the future, but there’s also no shame in your HR work; you’re building a skill set that is very applicable to PR.
Margie´s last [type] ..Tackling Internet Trolls Her Nashville August Issue
Margie,
As a former finance wealth advisor to busy C level executives and high net worth clients, it was essential to have a tight elevator speech with hooks. I set sail on a new adventure in life as a political liaison and discovered having a personal boilerplate (i.e. elevator speech) is as essential in politics as it is in sales. We’re all sales professionals in one way or another aren’t we? Many people reach out to my boss by connecting with me. I meet so many people with brilliant concepts and ideas, but who are unable to succinctly describe themselves, their professional value, their product or even their “asks”. Developing a personalized boilerplate helps us to define who we are, what we want to be, our value and what desired end result we want or can accomplish.
Thanks for sharing your skills and expertise via your blog. I’d value the opportunity to also connect via LinkedIn. Please send me an invite if interested.