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In a recent article for Chief regarding the importance of a personal brand for senior executives, Danielle Hughes, founder of branding consultancy More Than Words Marketing, said, “A personal brand has gone from being a nice-to-have to a need-to-have.”

This is especially true for ambitious business leaders.

Everyone has a personal brand. Your brand is based on what you’ve accomplished, what you’ve shared online, where you’ve spoken, and other evidence of your ideas and interests. However, your current personal brand may or may not represent how you’d like to be perceived.

Yes, blog posts, media mentions, TED Talks, and other recognition help establish your presence—your brand—but nothing else elevates your professional reputation like publishing a book.

Authorship is one of the most powerful ways you can build a credible, authoritative personal brand. Here’s why:

What Makes Up Your Personal Brand

At its core, your personal brand is made up of three components that together shape how others see you professionally: 1) Expertise, 2) Reputation, and 3) Visibility.

Your expertise consists of your experience, knowledge, skills, abilities, and insights. It’s what makes you a professional standout.

Your reputation reflects how others see and describe you. Your reputation is made up of your track record of success, your credibility, and authority. How people describe you when they tell others about you contributes to your professional reputation.

And visibility is determined by how well people remember you and recommend you to others, often based on how easily you can be found online. If people need to dig deep to come across your profile or anything that has been said about you online, your visibility would be considered low.

Unless you’re already a celebrity in your industry, it’s very likely you’re weak in at least one of these areas. For example, you might have a tremendous reputation within your company but be a complete unknown outside of it. Or maybe you have recognized expertise, but people don’t know you well enough to be able to speak out in support of you.

The good news is that writing and publishing a book can address all three of these components in one fell swoop.

The Authority that Books Convey

No matter how many speeches you’ve given, presentations you’ve made, or consulting engagements you’ve won, none of those impact your personal brand like claiming author status. Being able to call yourself an author instantly elevates your reputation.

Sure, there are industry icons who blog or have a podcast or YouTube channel, and many may be considered “influencers.” However, writing and publishing a book signals a different level of influence, of commitment to your field, as well as a higher level of expertise. You can write hundreds of articles and blog posts, but penning an entire book is an entirely different accomplishment, and everyone knows it.

In part because of the space that books provide, you have the freedom to articulate original thinking and innovative ideas that distinguish you from your colleagues. That’s the power of long-form content. When you have 50,000 or 60,000 words to use, you can delve deeply into your area of expertise and define new frameworks, point out coming industry trends, and speak out for or against what’s already headed your way. That’s harder to do in a 1,000-word blog post or article. Books can shift your career in new ways more quickly than any other tool.

The fact that media outlets and websites prefer to interview authors, or view them as credible sources for stories, confirms this enhanced credibility and authority. When you take the time to organize your ideas and insights into a book-length work, your efforts and serious engagement with your ideas are respected and even rewarded with increased attention.

With more credibility and attention comes new opportunities. Those new opportunities often include speaking invitations at events, podcast guest offers, as well as magazine columns or guest blogging requests. Landing consulting engagements, expert witness gigs, and board of directors offers are not unheard of. Your book becomes your business card.

Repurposing Your Ideas for Greater Visibility

Although a book is a way to package your expertise, it doesn’t have to restrict you. Once you’ve written a book, you can then deconstruct it and slice and dice it in new and different ways, for greater reach and impact.

For example, each of your chapters could become a related blog post. Pithy quotes can become graphic posts on Instagram. You could take an idea from your book and record a 30-second explanation or example to share on YouTube. You can create a course or courses based on your book or host a webinar or masterclass. That book becomes the center of a new content system to which you can return for more ideas over time.

Choosing the Right Topic is Key

Of course, your book has a better chance of being a jumping-off point for your personal brand if you select a topic that is at the intersection of your interests and expertise as well as your audience’s interests and information needs. No matter what, your book needs to offer a unique take on a topic or provide a new way of understanding it, such as through a framework, blueprint, or system.

When faced with a choice between what you want to write about and share and what your target audience wants to hear about, choose the topic they want to know more about. No, it may not be what they need, but by giving them what they want, you have a shot at attracting their attention. Over time, you can start to serve up what you know they need, but if you lead with what you want to write about, you may never sell enough books to have the impact you hope to.

As you’re evaluating topics and angles, think about where you want your personal brand to go. What do you want to be known for in the future? If you want to shift into doing more consulting, for example, weave in success stories and hit hard on corporate strategy. If you want to be considered for a global role, make sure you include content that addresses a global perspective. And keep in mind that long-term, you may write several books, so this first title does not have to include everything you have to say on a subject; go with the most relevant and perhaps unconventional, to attract attention and raise some eyebrows.

Your Long-Term Brand Strategy

The good news about a book is that it has staying power. Although LinkedIn users may come across your post once and promptly forget about it, your book may sit on their desk or bookshelf for several weeks or even years. For that reason, a book can have a larger impact on your brand-building efforts. A book can demonstrate that you have the experience, the insights, and the expertise worth paying attention to.

Some of the most successful authors started with one book that made a splash and they followed that one with another, in between speaking engagements and other invitations that quickly heightened their visibility. Their books sparked movements that positioned them for many more revenue-generating opportunities even years later. Just look at Malcolm Gladwell, James Clear, or Cal Newport, for example. They’re no longer just authors; they are massive brands. But their careers really took off when they decided to invest the time in writing a book.

You have a similar opportunity to make your mark.