BY: Jeff Haden
When other people use these words to describe your talents, it's OK. When you do it, you just sound like a pompous jerk.
Picture this: You meet someone new. "What do you do?" he asks.
"I'm an architect," you say.
"Oh, really?" he answers. "Have you designed any buildings I've seen?"
"Maybe," you reply. "We did the new library at the university..."
"Oh wow," he says. "I've seen it. That's a beautiful building..."
And you're off. Maybe he's a potential client, maybe not... but either way you've made a great impression.
You sound awesome.
Now picture this: You meet someone new. "What do you do?" he asks.
"I'm a passionate, innovative, dynamic provider of architectural
services who uses a collaborative approach to create and deliver
outstanding customer experiences."
And he's off, never to be seen again... because you sound like a pompous ass.
Do you--whether on your website, or more likely on social media accounts--describe yourself differently than you do in person?
Do you use hacky clichés and overblown superlatives and breathless adjectives?
Do you write things about yourself you would never have the nerve to actually say?
If so, it's time for a change.
Here are some words that are great when used by other people to describe you, but you should never use to describe yourself:
"Motivated."
Check out Chris Rock's response (not safe for work or the politically correct) to people who say they take care of their kids. Then substitute the word "motivated." Never take credit for things you are supposed to do--or be.
"Authority."
If you have to say you're an authority, you aren't. Show your
expertise instead. "Presenter at SXSW" or "Delivered TED Talk at Long
Beach 2010" indicates a level of authority. Unless you can prove it,
"social media marketing authority" just means you spend a ton of time on
Twitter.
"Global provider."
The vast majority of businesses can sell goods or services worldwide;
the ones that can't--like restaurants--are obvious. (See?) Only use
"global provider" if that capability is not assumed or obvious;
otherwise you just sound like a really small company trying to appear
really big.
"Innovative."
Most companies claim to be innovative. Most people claim to be
innovative. Most are not. (I'm not.) That's okay, because innovation
isn't a requirement for success.
If you are innovative, don't say it. Prove it. Describe the products
you've developed. Describe the processes you've modified. Give us
something real so your innovation is unspoken but evident... which is
always the best kind of evident to be.
"Creative."
See particular words often enough and they no longer make an impact.
"Creative" is one of them. (Go to LinkedIn and check out some profiles;
"creative" will appear in the majority.)
"Creative" is just one example. Others include extensive, effective,
proven, dynamic, influential, team player, collaborative... some of
those terms truly may describe you, but since they're also being used to
describe everyone else they've lost their impact.
"Curator."
Museums have curators. Libraries have curators. Tweeting links to
stuff you find interesting doesn't make you a curator... or an authority
or a guru.
"Passionate."
Say you're incredibly passionate about incorporating an elegant
design aesthetic in everyday objects and--to me at least--you sound a
little scary. Same if you're passionate about developing long-term
customer solutions. Try focus, concentration, or specialization instead.
Save the passion for your loved one.
"Unique."
Fingerprints are unique. Snowflakes are unique. You are unique--but
your business probably isn't. Don't pretend to be, because customers
don't care about unique; they care about "better." Show how you're
better than the competition and in the minds of customers you will be
unique.
"Guru."
People who try to be clever for the sake of being clever are anything
but. Don't be a self-proclaimed ninja, sage, connoisseur, guerilla,
wonk, egghead... it's awesome when your customers affectionately
describe you in that way, but when you do it it's apparent you're trying
way too hard.
"Incredibly..."
Check out some random bios and you'll find plenty of further-modified
descriptors: "Incredibly passionate," "profoundly insightful,"
"extremely captivating..." isn't it enough to be insightful or
captivating? Do you have to be incredibly passionate?
If you must use over-the-top adjectives to describe yourself, at
least spare us the further modification. Trust us; we already get it.
SOURCE: www.inc.com
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