The lines between corporate and personal branding are becoming increasingly blurred.
For engineering companies and other technical industries, personal branding offers an unparalleled opportunity to amplify your corporate brand’s message, build thought leadership with your audience, and humanize your business.
While corporate brands project a unified identity, personal brands bring the credibility, relatability, and expertise of individuals to the forefront, fostering connections that drive engagement and growth.
A corporate brand encompasses the overall identity and perception of a company—its tone, values, and promises to its customers. Think of style guides, value propositions, and consistent messaging across platforms. The goal is to deliver a cohesive and professional image that resonates with a broad audience.
A personal brand, on the other hand, represents an individual’s professional identity, shaped by their skills, values, and expertise. Personal brands are inherently flexible and diverse, reflecting the unique voice, personality, and affiliations of the individual. They can include hobbies, communication styles, and areas of expertise that make someone relatable and trustworthy.
Corporate brands thrive on consistency. Personal brands thrive on authenticity.
Together, they create a powerful synergy: corporate brands establish trust at scale, while personal brands provide the human touch customers increasingly crave.
Companies should care deeply about personal brands because in long B2B sales cycles—often stretching from 12 to 24 months or longer—buyers crave consistent, trusted sources of information. In this context, corporate messaging alone often isn’t enough. Personal brands act as a bridge between technical buyers and the broader organization, offering authenticity, expertise, and ongoing visibility in ways a faceless brand cannot.
According to the State of Marketing to Engineers Report, engineers still want to hear from people, especially when navigating complex topics such as automation systems, CAD software, or sustainability solutions. They turn to technical publications, and applications engineers for trusted information. In a world overflowing with information, individual voices who are known, respected, and relatable cut through the noise and help move prospects along their journey.
Strong personal brands serve as vital extensions of the corporate brand. When employees build public, respected personas—whether as engineers, marketers, executives, or technical specialists—they increase the company’s reach, credibility, and influence. Personal brands and corporate brands are not in opposition; instead, they can and should reinforce one another. A programmer talking about plant-floor software issues or a VP of engineering discussing cloud-based MES platforms all reinforce the company’s expertise, just through a human lens. This layered messaging strategy helps tailor thought leadership to a buyer’s specific needs, role, or stage in the buying process.
Strategically cultivating personal brands also supports specific corporate initiatives—whether it’s aligning with industry trends, supporting a technology partner, or amplifying a niche application area. This approach not only shortens the path to trust but also de-risks future engagement, as buyers begin to see your team not just as vendors but as advisors and collaborators.
Personal branding can transform your organization’s engagement strategy. A well-established personal brand:
For example, a startup aiming to engage C-suite executives might struggle with traditional outreach. But an R&D engineer attending an alumni gathering can spark a conversation that leads to a meeting, simply by leveraging their expertise and personal brand.
Defining your personal brand starts with introspection and honest self-assessment. Look inward to identify your unique skills, values, and attributes. You can also gain invaluable perspectives by seeking feedback from your colleagues, manager, and peers. These external insights often highlight strengths and qualities you might overlook.
Once you define your own personal brand, it will be easier to lead your SMEs through the personal branding process.
Scaling personal branding efforts across an organization requires structure and support.
Here’s how to get started:
Let’s take the example of a manufacturing company that is focusing on software and services with a new initiative around an MES platform. The corporate message they’ve landed on is as follows:
We bring digital transformation to large, growing manufacturers through Manufacturing Execution Systems that provide accurate, actionable data.
Here’s what personal branding execution could look in a cross-functional team promoting the company through their personal brands:
These two people are incredibly different in their careers and expertise, but they can each reach different audiences with an authentic message.
To help individuals and teams of individuals build out a network of personal brands within their organizations, we have a downloadable worksheet. On the first side of the worksheet, an individual can answer questions about themselves, their personalities, professional identity, and audience, and then on the back side, begin to tie those personal aspects to potential content topics that relate to a corporate initiative like we did above with Maria and Brian.
This exercise is best done in pairs, where one individual interviews the other, helping their partner best identify their personality strengths and potential content topics. It’s often easiest for us to quickly see the potential in others.
As personal branding grows, so does the need for clarity around its boundaries. Companies should be proactive in:
Companies must navigate the legalities of personal branding with care and precision. Drafting clear policies is essential to define what employees can and cannot share about their work, ensuring that sensitive information remains protected. Typically, and especially for technical companies, LinkedIn is a place for personal brands to talk about professional topics. Anywhere a person is affiliating themselves with the company (like on LinkedIn, meant for connecting professional relationships), companies expect employees to represent the company as if they were at a company-related function.
Respecting intellectual property laws is equally critical, as employees need to understand the boundaries of proprietary information, particularly when creating content. This is even more critical for public companies. Providing regular training on social media best practices, confidentiality, and appropriate representation helps employees align their personal branding efforts with company standards.
Lastly, encouraging transparency fosters an open dialogue about expectations and responsibilities, reducing the risk of misunderstandings while supporting personal branding initiatives. As content is no longer hidden with the internet and sharing of information, individuals should be aware of what they share and how it represents both themselves and their organization.
Ultimately, when companies empower individuals to speak with clarity, confidence, and relevance, they scale brand impact exponentially. Personal brands humanize the buying experience, especially in complex technical industries. They build lasting relationships that outlive marketing campaigns—and that’s something no logo or tagline can do alone.
Ready to get started building your personal brand? Check out our Personal Branding Worksheet here.
Need help building a campaign like this? TREW Marketing specializes in brand marketing and for technical B2B companies. Let’s talk.
TREW Marketing partners with engineering and B2B technology companies to elevate their brand, engage their audiences, and generate new opportunities through insightful research and unrivaled industry expertise. Contact us today to learn more about the services we offer.