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Transforming Personal Brands
By Michael Alan Hamlin
July 26, 2004

Good companies that become great companies according to Jim Collins, author of Good to Great: Why Some Companies Make the Leap and Others Don't, regularly transform themselves to leverage new opportunities, competitive threats, technology, and shifts in market dynamics. Among the changes that must take place, in my view, is how a company communicates its brand so that it remains relevant as times change.

Individuals, too, need to evolve over time. Some of this change involves "how" they do what they do. It also involves how they communicate what they are. What they are can be called a "personal brand." This personal brand allows individuals to distinguish themselves from other similarly talented individuals in the same way corporate brands distinguish enterprise competitors. Consider singer Justin Timberlake, for instance. My co-authors (Irving Rein and Philip Kotler) and I at work on a new edition of High Visibility spent some time thinking about this fast-evolving celebrity.

Timberlake was the leader of the chart topping, award winning band N'Sync. In 2000, the group's image was squeaky clean, boy-next-door and bubble gum pop. Their music was centered around budding yet incomplete adolescence. The lyrics were simple and the music was repetitive. This would turn out to be the first phase of Timberlake's career transformation.

It was clear that the adolescent audience for N'Sync was drying up as the group got older and the target audience broadened to young adults. A second phase was implemented with the introduction of the group's new album, Celebrity, which repositioned N'Sync and especially Timberlake from teen pop icon to a mainstream musical attraction with a wider audience. The lyrics were more self-revealing and the sound incorporated rhythm and blues. The strategy was clear as Billboard.com observed, "Celebrity has the potential to be a textbook study in straddling the line between commerce and creativity."

The third phase of the transformation was to convert Timberlake to a solo act. The transformation included his personal appearance. Timberlake ditched his trademark curly hair and abandoned his boy-next-door image. He posed shirtless on the cover of music's premier magazine Rolling Stone newly buffed and toned, erasing any doubt over whether Timberlake had matured. Collaborating with hip hop and urban music royalty of the likes of the Neptunes, Timbaland, and Janet Jackson for the album "Justified," Timberlake now completely moved into the soul and hip-hop artist role.

In essence, Timberlake in a four year period was able through appearance, material, and style changes to recast himself as a solo star. As evidence of his transformation, he won Pop Vocal album and Male Pop Vocal performance at the 2003 Grammy Awards for his album. In the new fast-paced model of visibility transformation, Timberlake emerged full-blown and credible. He not only prolonged his own career but has kept open the option that N'Sync will eventually be reunited with Timberlake.

It's unlikely to be Timberlake's last transformation. Singer/actress Madonna has already demonstrated that successive transformations can work to sustain a career. These artists understand that as the audience and culture changes, so often must the entertainer. This is a process that requires constant reevaluation of the audience and a remaking of the product and image.

Singers aren't the only examples of personal brands and their evolution. Last week, the Singapore government announced that in August, it would install its third prime minister. Consider some of the branding changes involved in that development.

It has never been a question of whether Lee Hsien Loong, Deputy Prime Minister and son of Singapore's founding father and first Prime Minister Lee Kwan Yew, will eventually become prime minister himself. It was just a question of when. It is never easy to follow the footsteps of a wildly successful leader - especially so when that leader is the aspirant's father - but Lee took on the formidable challenge under his legendary father's stern tutelage. Like his father, the eldest son is reputed to be brilliant, efficient - and blunt. He does not suffer fools gladly.

Unfortunately, that reputation translates into an image problem that makes Lee an unattractive leader to Singapore's politically powerful young professionals. These young voters are much more open-minded about their relationship with government than the subservient generation that grew up with Lee's father in control. Outgoing Prime Minister Apparent Goh Chok Tong publicly addressed the issue when he said, "Loong's public persona is that of a no-nonsense, uncompromising and tough minister. Singaporeans would like Loong to be more approachable." Soon after those remarks were made, the tightly controlled Singapore media began highlighting Lee's softer side. The effort included anecdotes from a reporter recalling Lee's genuine fondness for children and pictures of Lee talking to everyday citizens at subway stations and shaking hands with a fishmonger in the market.

Lee apparently has the skills to lead Singapore. He has the lineage. And it seems he has the insight to understand that his country doesn't need a clone of his father. When Lee takes the reigns of leadership over a new Singapore next month he will be leading a much worldlier and widely traveled constituency than that of his predecessors. Lee must adapt to be successful as its leader and he has already demonstrated his understanding that constant market scanning - and transformation - is essential.

(Michael Alan Hamlin is the managing director of consultancy TeamAsia and the author of three books on Asian economies and companies. His latest book is Marketing Asian Places, of which he is a co-author (Wiley, 2001), and he is currently at work on High Visibility: The Making and Marketing of Asian Professionals into Celebrities. Write him at mahamlin@teamasia.com.).

Copyright © 2004 Michael Alan Hamlin. All Rights Reserved

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