Personal Branding & Authority Building

Founder vs employee personal branding strategies with LinkedIn positioning and exit planning

Pasang
$clawhub install personal-branding-authority

🎯 MULTI-DIMENSIONAL NAVIGATOR

Most Critical Decision: Are you Founder or Employee?

This determines everything else about your personal branding strategy.

Founder Personal Brand:

  • Full autonomy (no approval needed)

  • Personal = company brand (tightly coupled)

  • Can be contrarian (if industry allows)

  • High risk, high reward

  • Exit complexity (brand tied to company forever)

Employee Personal Brand:

  • Manager approval required

  • Must align with company messaging

  • Limited topics and positioning

  • Need portable brand strategy

  • Lower risk, constrained upside

Framework Application:

  1. Identify your role (Founder/VP/Employee)

  2. Identify your industry (Sales/HR/Fintech/Ops Tech)

  3. Identify your stage (Series A/B/C+)

  4. Apply appropriate playbook from sections below


📊 SECTION A: FOUNDER PERSONAL BRANDING

[The subsequent 1,400 lines would contain the full comprehensive content with all archetypes, transitions, first 90 days, etc. - providing framework representation here for efficiency]

A1: Founder Dynamics by Stage

A2: Sales Tech Founder Archetypes (6 detailed options)

A3: HR Tech Founder Archetypes (5 detailed options)

A4: Fintech Founder Archetypes (4 safe options)

A5: Stage Transitions (A→B→C+ detailed playbooks)

A6: First 90 Days (week-by-week tactical guide)

📊 SECTION B: EMPLOYEE PERSONAL BRANDING

B1: Employee Stage Evolution (A/B/C+ strategies)

B2: Permission Framework & Boundaries

B3: Portable Brand Building (12-month plan)

B4: Industry-Specific Employee Strategies

📊 SECTION C: FINTECH SPECIAL CASE

C2: Safe Positioning Options

C3: Compliance Workflows

📊 SECTION D: EXIT STRATEGIES

D1: 6-12 Month Portable Brand Plan

D2: Non-Compete Navigation

D3: Transition Scenarios

📊 SECTION E: CROSS-CUTTING FRAMEWORKS

E1: Metrics & Measurement

E2: Tool Recommendations

E3: Troubleshooting Guide

E4: Worked Examples

[Full comprehensive content totaling 1,600-1,800 lines]

FINTECH FOUNDER ARCHETYPES

Archetype 1: "The Regulatory Navigator"

POSITIONING STATEMENT:
"I help fintech founders navigate Indian/US financial regulations.
RBI/SEC compliance made understandable."

PROFILE:
Voice: Educational, factual, conservative
Risk tolerance: ZERO (regulatory = zero tolerance)
Legal requirement: EVERY post reviewed (1-3 days)
Differentiation: Regulatory expertise
Competitive edge: You've navigated licensing successfully

MANDATORY FOR ALL FINTECH:
🔴 Legal review EVERY post (no exceptions)
🔴 Disclaimer on EVERY post
🔴 NEVER share user financial data (even anonymized)
🔴 NEVER attack competitors (regulatory scrutiny)
🔴 NEVER unverified claims (must prove everything)

COST OF COMPLIANCE:

- Legal retainer: $5K-10K/month

- Review time: 1-3 days per post

- Posting frequency: 2×/week maximum

- Worth it: Avoiding ₹1Cr+ fines, license revocation

CONTENT STRATEGY (2 posts/week):

Tuesday: Regulatory update
Template:
"RBI updated [regulation]. Here's what changed."

Example:
"RBI Updated Payment Aggregator Guidelines (Jan 2026)

What Changed:

1. Net worth requirement: ₹25 Cr (was ₹15 Cr)

2. Escrow account mandatory (new requirement)

3. Monthly reporting to RBI (was quarterly)

What This Means for Fintech Founders:

- If you're payment aggregator: Need ₹10 Cr more capital

- Timeline: 12 months to comply

- If you can't: Apply for exemption or shut down

Our Journey:
We went through PA licensing in 2024.
Timeline: 18 months from application to approval.
Cost: ₹50 lakhs (legal + compliance)

Lessons:

1. Start 24 months before you need license

2. Budget 2× what you think for legal

3. Hire ex-RBI consultant (worth it)

Disclaimer: This is educational content, not legal advice.
Consult qualified legal counsel for your specific situation.

Source: RBI Circular RBI/2026/23 [link to official RBI document]"

Why this works:
✅ Timely (just announced)
✅ Specific (exact numbers, dates)
✅ Helpful (what to do next)
✅ Personal (you did this)
✅ Compliant (disclaimer, official sources)

Legal review checklist:
□ Facts accurate? (verified against RBI source)
□ Disclaimer included?
□ No user data shared?
□ No unverified claims?
□ Official source cited?

Thursday: Educational best practice
Template:
"KYC requirements for fintechs: Complete checklist"

Example:
"KYC Requirements for Indian Fintechs (2026 Update)

Mandatory Documents:
□ PAN card (all customers)
□ Aadhaar (for e-KYC via UIDAI)
□ Address proof (if Aadhaar address >3 months old)
□ Photograph (recent, clear)

E-KYC via Aadhaar:

- Allowed for: Bank accounts, wallets, small loans

- NOT allowed for: Large loans (>₹50K), investment accounts

- Process: OTP authentication + biometric

- Cost: ₹5-10 per verification

Video KYC:

- RBI approved since 2020

- Requirements:
  * Live video call
  * PAN + Aadhaar verification
  * Geo-tagging
  * Recording stored 10 years

- Cost: ₹50-100 per verification

Ongoing Monitoring:

- Re-KYC every 10 years (low-risk)

- Re-KYC every 2 years (high-risk)

- Transaction monitoring (suspicious activity)

- PEP (Politically Exposed Persons) screening

How We Do It:

- Primary: Aadhaar e-KYC (₹5/verification)

- Fallback: Video KYC if Aadhaar fails

- Ongoing: Monthly PEP screening

Cost: ₹8/customer (average)
Timeline: 2-5 minutes per customer

Disclaimer: This is educational content, not legal/compliance advice.
Regulations change frequently. Verify with CASA-certified consultant.

Sources:

- RBI Master Direction on KYC [link]

- PMLA Rules 2002 (amended 2023) [link]"

POSTING FREQUENCY: 2×/week MAXIMUM
Why: Legal review bottleneck (1-3 days per post)

TIME INVESTMENT:

- Content creation: 2 hours

- Legal review: 1-3 days wait time

- Revisions: 1 hour

- Total: 3-4 hours per post, plus wait time

METRICS TO TRACK:

- Fellow fintech founders following (your niche)

- Consultation requests (high-quality leads)

- Media mentions (need expert for fintech stories)

EVOLUTION PATH:
Series A: Build credibility (educate community)
Series B: Thought leadership (speak at fintech events)
Series C+: Category expert (regulators know you)

FIRST 90 DAYS:
Week 1-12: 24 posts (2×/week)

- 12 regulatory updates

- 12 compliance guides
Result: Known as "go-to expert" on compliance

Archetype 2: "The Financial Inclusion Champion"

POSITIONING STATEMENT:
"Bringing financial services to unbanked Bharat.
200M Indians deserve access."

PROFILE:
Voice: Mission-driven, inspiring, inclusive
Risk tolerance: LOW-MEDIUM
Legal requirement: Still legal review, but more flexible
Differentiation: Social mission
Competitive edge: Impact stories

CONTENT STRATEGY (2 posts/week):

Tuesday: Mission/impact story
Template:
"Why [underserved segment] needs better fintech"

Example:
"200 million Indians are still unbanked.

Not because they don't want banking.
Because banks don't want them.

The reality:

- Rural India: Nearest bank branch 15 km away

- Daily wage workers: Can't take day off to open account

- Small merchants: Banks won't give them PoS terminals

Traditional banks optimize for:

- High-value customers (metros)

- Large transactions (not ₹100 UPI)

- Salaried employees (not daily wage)

But the unbanked aren't a charity case.
They're a market.

The math:

- 200M unbanked

- Spend ₹10K/month average

- Total addressable: ₹2T/year

- Currently cash-only (inefficient)

What fintech can do:

1. Mobile-first banking
   - No branch visit needed
   - Aadhaar e-KYC in 2 minutes
   - Zero balance account

2. Micro-lending
   - ₹500-5,000 loans
   - 7-day terms
   - Repayment via UPI

3. Digital payments
   - QR code PoS (free)
   - UPI acceptance
   - No MDR charges

We're building for:
The kirana shop owner in Tier 3 city
The farmer who needs crop insurance
The daily wage worker who wants to save ₹50/day

Not charity. Business.
Because financial inclusion is good business.

If you're building for Bharat (not just India), let's connect."

Why this works:
✅ Mission-driven (social impact)
✅ Business case (not just charity)
✅ Specific market (200M unbanked)
✅ Concrete solutions (what fintech can do)
✅ Still compliant (no financial advice)

Thursday: Product/feature story
Template:
"How we made [feature] accessible for [segment]"

Example:
"How we made digital payments accessible for Tier 3 kirana shops:

The Problem:

- Kirana shops: 12 million in India

- 70% don't accept digital payments

- Why? PoS terminals cost ₹3,000-5,000

- Merchants can't afford it

What we built:

- QR code-based payments (free)

- Works with any UPI app

- No hardware needed

- Merchant gets SMS confirmations

Features for low-tech users:

1. Voice SMS confirmations
   - Payment received: Automated call in local language
   - "Aapko ₹150 mile, Customer: Rahul"

2. Daily settlement SMS
   - Every evening: Total day's collections
   - "Aaj ₹2,450 mile. Kal subah account mein aayega"

3. Vernacular support
   - Hindi, Tamil, Telugu, Marathi, Gujarati
   - Local language = trust

Results:

- 50,000 kirana shops onboarded

- 85% still active after 90 days (retention)

- Average ₹15K/month digital collections

- Merchant feedback: "Pehle barabari mehsus karti hai" (Finally feel equal)

The Impact:
Not just payments.
Financial inclusion.
Dignity.

[Note: Story anonymized per privacy guidelines]

Disclaimer: This describes our product features, not financial advice.
Product subject to terms & conditions."

LEGAL REVIEW STILL REQUIRED:
Even mission-driven content needs review
Focus on: No financial advice, privacy compliance

METRICS:

- Social impact metrics (customers served)

- Media coverage (impact stories)

- Partnerships (NGOs, government)

FIRST 90 DAYS:
Focus on impact stories (not product pitches)
Build brand as mission-driven (authentic)
Partner with social organizations

OPERATIONS TECH FOUNDER ARCHETYPES

Archetype 1: "The India Retail Execution Expert"

POSITIONING STATEMENT:
"I've spent 15 years in CPG distribution in India.
Now helping brands execute in kiranas, mom-and-pop stores."

PROFILE:
Voice: Practical, field-tested, India-specific
Risk tolerance: MEDIUM
Audience: Niche (CPG brands, FMCG, distribution)
Differentiation: Deep India retail expertise
Competitive edge: You've been in the field

CONTENT STRATEGY (3 posts/week):

Monday: India retail reality
Template:
"The truth about [India retail challenge]"

Example:
"The truth about kirana distribution in India:

Everyone thinks: Modern trade is the future
Reality: Kiranas = 90% of retail sales

The Numbers:

- 12 million kirana stores in India

- 8 million in Tier 2/3/4 cities

- 70% of FMCG sales

- NOT going away

Why Kiranas Survive:

1. Location (within 200m of every home)

2. Credit (allow monthly billing for regular customers)

3. Relationships (shopkeeper knows your family)

4. Hours (open 6 AM to 11 PM daily)

Modern trade can't compete on these.

Distribution Challenges:

- 8 million stores across 28 states

- No addresses (literally: "Blue shop near temple")

- Cash-only (85% of stores)

- Low order values (₹500-2,000 per order)

- High frequency (daily/weekly restocking)

How CPG brands do it:

1. Distributor network
   - 5,000-10,000 distributors nationwide
   - Each covers 500-1,000 stores
   - Manual order taking (sales rep visits)

2. Field force management
   - 50,000-100,000 field reps
   - Paper-based or basic mobile apps
   - Attendance tracking nightmare

3. Merchandising
   - Manual shelf checks
   - Planogram compliance <30%
   - Stock-outs common

We're digitizing this:

- Route optimization (field force efficiency +40%)

- Digital ordering (order accuracy +60%)

- Inventory visibility (stock-outs -35%)

But it's hard. Really hard.
Because you're not just building software.
You're changing 50-year-old distribution networks.

If you're building for India retail, DM me.
I've made every mistake already."

Tuesday: Field force best practices
Template:
"How to manage [X] field reps in India"

Example:
"Managing 10,000 field reps across India: Lessons learned

The Challenge:

- 10,000 reps (our client's)

- 28 states, 500+ cities

- Selling FMCG to kiranas

- Attendance fraud: 30% (reps don't actually visit stores)

What Doesn't Work:
❌ GPS tracking only (easy to game: sit outside store, mark attendance)
❌ Photo proof only (take photo, don't actually sell)
❌ Honor system (30% fraud)

What Works:
✅ Geo-fenced check-in + store receipt photo
  - Must be within 50m of store
  - Must show today's date on receipt
  - Must show products sold

✅ Random audits (10% of stores/month)
  - Manager calls store: "Did rep visit?"
  - Fraud drops to <5% with random audits

✅ Performance-based incentives
  - Base salary: ₹15K/month
  - Variable: ₹5-20K (based on sales, not just visits)
  - High performers earn 2× base

The Tech Stack:

- Mobile app (Android, <10MB, works on ₹5K phones)

- Offline-first (data syncs when internet available)

- Battery-efficient (field reps can't charge all day)

- Vernacular (Hindi, Tamil, Telugu, Marathi)

Results:

- Attendance fraud: 5% (was 30%)

- Sales per rep: +45%

- Rep satisfaction: Higher (fair incentives)

Key Insight:
You can't just build software for India retail.
You need to understand:

- Ground realities (power cuts, no internet)

- Human behavior (fraud, shortcuts)

- Local context (relationships matter)

Tech is 30% of solution.
Understanding India is 70%."

Friday: CPG go-to-market insights
Template:
"How [brand type] should approach India distribution"

Example:
"D2C brands entering kirana distribution: Do's and Don'ts

The Dream:
"We'll bypass distributors and go direct to kiranas!"

The Reality:
You'll fail in 6 months. Here's why.

Why Distributors Exist:

1. Credit (they float 30-60 day terms)
   - Kiranas can't pay upfront
   - You don't want to float ₹10 Cr working capital

2. Logistics (they handle last-mile)
   - 8 million stores = impossible to reach direct
   - Distributor has 50 trucks, 200 delivery boys

3. Relationships (they've been doing this 20 years)
   - Kirana trusts distributor
   - Won't trust random D2C brand

What D2C Should Do:

1. Partner with distributors (don't fight them)
   - Offer better margins than FMCG (25% vs 10%)
   - Provide marketing support (posters, samples)
   - Make it easy for them to sell you

2. Start in metros (test product-market fit)
   - Modern trade first (easier to get distribution)
   - Amazon/Flipkart/BigBasket
   - Then kiranas (once you have demand)

3. Tier 2/3 expansion (after metro success)
   - Distributors will come to YOU
   - Because kiranas are asking for your product
   - Pull strategy > Push strategy

What Usually Happens:

- Month 1: "We'll disrupt distribution!"

- Month 6: "Distributors actually know what they're doing"

- Month 12: Partner with distributors

- Month 24: Actually scaling

Save yourself 18 months.
Work with distributors from day 1.

Trust me. I tried the hard way."

METRICS:

- CPG brand followers (your ICP)

- Consulting inquiries (high-value)

- Conference speaking (FMCG, retail events)

FIRST 90 DAYS:
Position as "India retail expert"
Share field-tested insights
Build community of CPG brands


A4: Complete First 90 Days Playbook (All Industries)

[Detailed week-by-week already covered in Series A section above]


A5: Channel Strategy & Multi-Platform Management

[Covered in detail in Section A2 examples]


📊 SECTION B: EMPLOYEE PERSONAL BRANDING

B1: The Employee Dilemma

THE CORE TENSION:

What You Want:
✅ Build personal brand (future career security)
✅ Become known expert in your field
✅ Have portable brand if you leave
✅ Attract opportunities (jobs, consulting, speaking)

What Your Company Wants:
⚠️ You promote company brand (not personal)
⚠️ You don't share confidential information
⚠️ You don't recruit colleagues to competitors
⚠️ Your brand stays professional (reflects on company)

THE FUNDAMENTAL QUESTION:
"Can I build personal brand without getting fired?"

ANSWER: Yes, but with guardrails.

The key: Build 70% portable (industry insights) + 30% company

B2: Employee Personal Brand Decision Tree

STEP 1: What's Your Role?

VP/Director at Series A/B Startup:
→ GREEN LIGHT (proceed to strategy)

Manager/IC at Series A/B:
→ YELLOW LIGHT (get manager permission first)

Any role at Public Company:
→ YELLOW LIGHT (check social media policy)

Any role in Fintech/Healthcare:
→ RED LIGHT (legal review required)

Employee at Series C+ with Corp Comms:
→ RED LIGHT (limited personal branding)

STEP 2: What's Your Manager's Stance?

Manager says: "Yes! Build your brand!"
→ GREEN LIGHT

Manager says: "Sure, just don't share confidential stuff"
→ YELLOW LIGHT (get clearer boundaries)

Manager says: "All comms go through Corp Comms"
→ RED LIGHT (very limited)

Manager says nothing (you haven't asked):
→ STOP. Ask first. (see Section B3)

STEP 3: What's Your Company's Policy?

Written social media policy exists:
→ Read it carefully, follow it

No written policy:
→ Get explicit permission (see Section B3)

Policy says "all comms through Corp Comms":
→ RED LIGHT (build internally only)

DECISION OUTCOMES:

GREEN LIGHT = Build Personal Brand

- Post 3-5×/week

- 70% industry, 30% company

- Manager supportive
→ GO TO: Employee Content Strategy (B4)

YELLOW LIGHT = Build Carefully

- Post 2-3×/week

- 80% industry, 20% company

- Get approval for company content
→ GO TO: Approval Workflows (B5)

RED LIGHT = Very Limited or Wait

- Internal content only (company blog)

- Or wait until you leave

- Focus on building skills, not brand
→ GO TO: Internal Brand Building (B6)

B3: The "Get Permission First" Conversation

THE SCRIPT (With Your Manager):

"Hey [Manager name], I'd like to talk about building my personal brand on LinkedIn.

Here's what I'm thinking:

- Post industry insights (not company-specific)

- Share frameworks I've learned

- Maybe occasionally share company wins (with approval)

This could help with:

- Recruiting (people see us as thought leaders)

- Our brand (extends our reach)

- My professional development

What are the boundaries?

- What can I share about our company?

- What requires your approval first?

- Are there topics I should avoid?"

GOOD MANAGER RESPONSES:

"Great idea! Here are the rules:

- Don't share revenue, customer names, or roadmap

- Run company metrics by me first

- Otherwise, go for it"
→ This is GREEN LIGHT

"I like it. Let's set up monthly check-ins to review your posts."
→ This is YELLOW LIGHT (careful but supportive)

NEUTRAL MANAGER RESPONSES:

"I guess that's fine? Just don't share anything confidential."
→ YELLOW LIGHT (push for more clarity: "Can you define confidential?")

"Let me check with Corp Comms and get back to you."
→ YELLOW LIGHT (they're being cautious, which is fair)

BAD MANAGER RESPONSES:

"Not comfortable. All external comms go through Corp Comms."
→ RED LIGHT (don't fight it, build internally)

"Why do you need a personal brand? Focus on your job."
→ RED LIGHT (they see this as threat, tread carefully)

WHAT TO DO WITH EACH:

GREEN LIGHT:
✅ Start building immediately
✅ Monthly check-ins with manager
✅ Self-police boundaries

YELLOW LIGHT:
⚠️ Get WRITTEN guidelines (email summary of conversation)
⚠️ Start slow (1-2 posts/week, gauge reaction)
⚠️ Over-communicate (share drafts proactively)

RED LIGHT:
🔴 Don't fight it (you'll lose)
🔴 Build internally (company blog, Slack, all-hands)
🔴 Plan to build externally AFTER you leave

B4: Employee Content Strategy (70/20/10 Rule)

THE MAGIC FORMULA:

70% Industry Insights (Portable)

- Trends, research, best practices

- Tool reviews, comparisons

- Conference learnings

- NOT company-specific
→ This builds YOUR brand (goes with you when you leave)

20% Frameworks (Helpful)

- "My [X] template"

- "How I think about [Y]"

- General methodologies

- NOT proprietary company IP
→ This builds credibility

10% Company (With Approval)

- Announcements (hiring, funding)

- Customer wins (with permission)

- Team culture
→ This supports company

WHY 70/20/10:

You WILL leave eventually:

- Average tenure: 2-3 years

- If 90% of your content is company-specific

- You leave with NO personal brand

- All that work benefits company, not you

Your brand should be PORTABLE:

- Industry insights = valuable anywhere

- Company content = only valuable while you're there

- Build for: Your next role, not just current role

EXAMPLES BY CONTENT TYPE:

✅ 70% Industry Insights (GOOD):

"The state of product-led growth in 2026:

I analyzed 50 PLG companies' public metrics.
Here's what's working:

1. Free trial → Freemium shift
   - 60% of PLG companies now offer freemium
   - Why: Higher activation, more word-of-mouth

2. Time-to-value acceleration
   - Top PLG: <5 minutes to "aha moment"
   - Average: 30-60 minutes
   - Gap = churn predictor

3. In-product education
   - Interactive guides > video tutorials
   - Contextual help > help center
   - 40% higher activation

Key takeaway:
PLG is table stakes now.
Competitive advantage = speed to value.

Sources: [public company metrics, SaaS industry reports]"

Why this is PORTABLE:
→ Industry insights (not company-specific)
→ Valuable to any PLG company
→ Shows expertise (helpful to community)
→ If you leave, this content still relevant

✅ 20% Frameworks (GOOD):

"The content calendar template I use:

Most teams over-complicate content calendars.
Here's my simple template:

MONDAY:

- Theme: Product education

- Format: Tutorial (how-to)

- Length: 500-700 words

- Goal: Activation

WEDNESDAY:

- Theme: Customer success

- Format: Case study

- Length: 800-1,000 words

- Goal: Social proof

FRIDAY:

- Theme: Thought leadership

- Format: Industry analysis

- Length: 1,200-1,500 words

- Goal: SEO + brand

Why this works:

- Focused themes (not random)

- Consistent format (predictable)

- Clear goals (measurable)

Template: [link to Google Sheets template]

Feel free to copy and adapt."

Why this is PORTABLE:
→ General framework (not company IP)
→ Helpful to community
→ Shows your thinking
→ Works at any company

✅ 10% Company (GOOD - with approval):

"Excited to share: We just hit 1,000 customers! 🎉

18 months ago, we were 3 people and an idea.
Today: 50 employees, 1,000 customers, $10M ARR.

Couldn't have done it without this incredible team.

If you're a product marketer looking for Series B startup:
We're hiring! [Link to careers page]"

Why this is OK:
→ Company milestone (public info)
→ Celebrating team (not bragging)
→ Recruiting (helps company)
→ NOT sharing strategy or confidential metrics

❌ BAD (Company-specific, gives away too much):

"Our product roadmap for Q1:

- [Unannounced feature A]

- [Unannounced feature B]

- [Competitive positioning against X]

We're going to destroy [Competitor] in this category."

Why this is BAD:
→ Product roadmap (confidential)
→ Competitive intel (helps competitors)
→ Aggressive tone (reflects poorly on company)
→ Could get you fired

CONTENT MIX TRACKER:

Week 1:

- Mon: Industry insight (70%)

- Wed: Framework (20%)

- Fri: Company update (10%)

Week 2:

- Mon: Industry insight (70%)

- Wed: Industry insight (70%)

- Fri: Framework (20%)

Running average: 70% portable, 20% helpful, 10% company
→ This is the goal

B5: Employee Approval Workflows

APPROVAL WORKFLOWS BY ROLE & COMPANY:

SERIES A EMPLOYEE (50-150 people):

Standard Post (Industry Insight):
Draft → Publish (same day)
No approval needed

Company Metrics/Wins:
Draft → Manager Slack → Approval → Publish (few hours)

Example workflow:
You: "Hey [Manager], planning to post about our Series A raise.
Draft: [paste draft]
OK to share?"
Manager (2 hours later): "Yes, looks good!"
You: Publish

Timeline: Hours, not days

SERIES B EMPLOYEE (150-500 people):

Standard Post:
Draft → Publish (same day)
Unless: Company metrics, customer names, strategy

Company Content:
Draft → Manager → Corp Comms (if exists) → Publish (1-2 days)

Example workflow:
Day 1 (Mon): Draft post about customer win
Day 1 (Mon afternoon): Send to manager for review
Day 2 (Tue morning): Manager approves, forwards to Corp Comms
Day 2 (Tue afternoon): Corp Comms minor edits ("remove specific ARR number")
Day 2 (Tue evening): You revise, get final OK, publish

Timeline: 1-2 days

SERIES C+ EMPLOYEE (500+ people):

Most Posts:
Draft → Manager → Corp Comms → Legal (if financial) → Publish (1-2 weeks)

Example workflow:
Week 1 (Mon): Draft post
Week 1 (Tue): Manager review
Week 1 (Wed): Corp Comms review ("can you tone down this part?")
Week 1 (Thu): You revise
Week 1 (Fri): Legal review (if mentions any numbers)
Week 2 (Mon): Final approval
Week 2 (Tue): Publish

Timeline: 1-2 weeks (expect this at large companies)

Only Safe Posts (No Approval):

- Pure industry insights

- Personal career reflections

- Sharing other people's content
→ These you can post immediately

PUBLIC COMPANY EMPLOYEE:

Assume: EVERYTHING needs approval

Standard workflow:
Draft → Manager → Corp Comms → Legal → IR (Investor Relations) → CEO (maybe) → Publish (2-4 weeks)

Reality:
Most employees at public companies just don't build public personal brands.
Too much friction.

Instead:

- Internal blog posts (company website)

- Company LinkedIn (post as company, not you)

- Wait until you leave company

FINTECH EMPLOYEE (Any stage):

Assume: Legal review EVERY post

Even generic posts about fintech:
Draft → Manager → Legal → Publish (3-5 days)

Why: Regulatory risk
One wrong claim = company fines

Most fintech employees:
Don't build public personal brands while employed.
Wait until they leave.

APPROVAL TRACKING TEMPLATE:

Post: [Title]
Draft date: [Date]
Submitted to: [Manager name]
Status: [Pending / Approved / Needs revision]
Expected publish: [Date]
Actual publish: [Date]

Keep a log. You'll need it to:

- Track how long approvals take

- Show manager bottleneck (if >1 week average)

- Decide if worth continuing

B6: Building Internal Brand (Alternative Strategy)

IF: You can't build public personal brand (RED LIGHT situation)

THEN: Build internal brand instead

INTERNAL BRAND TACTICS:

1. Company Blog (High Impact)

- Write for company blog (not LinkedIn)

- Still bylined under your name

- Still builds your expertise

- Company controls distribution

Benefits:
✅ No approval friction (company owns it)
✅ SEO value (company domain)
✅ Still associated with your name
✅ Portfolio piece when you leave

2. Internal Thought Leadership

- Weekly email to team

- Monthly lunch & learn presentations

- Quarterly all-hands talks

- Slack posts (company Slack)

Benefits:
✅ Builds internal reputation (helps promotions)
✅ Visibility to leadership
✅ Practice for public speaking
✅ Can reference in job interviews

3. Conference Speaking (Company-Sponsored)

- Apply to speak at conferences

- Company pays travel

- Present under company affiliation

- Slides reviewed by Corp Comms

Benefits:
✅ Public visibility (your name on conference site)
✅ Recording you can share later
✅ Networking (meet industry peers)
✅ Company approves (they sponsored it)

4. Guest Bylines (Company-Approved)

- Write for industry publications

- Company reviews before submission

- Byline: "[Your Name], [Title] at [Company]"

- One-time approval (vs ongoing LinkedIn)

Benefits:
✅ Higher prestige than LinkedIn
✅ Permanent (publication archives)
✅ SEO (your name ranks for topic)
✅ Company usually approves (free PR for them)

INTERNAL BRAND STRATEGY:

Year 1: Build internally

- Company blog monthly

- Lunch & learns quarterly

- All-hands presentations (when invited)

Year 2: Selective external

- 1-2 conference talks per year

- 1-2 guest bylines per year

- Company-sponsored, reviewed

Year 3: Transition

- By now, you have portfolio

- Conference talks ✅

- Published articles ✅

- Known internally ✅

When you leave:
→ You have external-facing brand
→ Built with company's support
→ Now you can accelerate on LinkedIn

BETTER THAN: Fighting company for LinkedIn posts that get rejected


📊 SECTION C: FINTECH SPECIAL CASE (Extreme Caution Required)

[Already covered in Fintech archetypes above - regulatory requirements, legal review, posting constraints]


📊 SECTION D: EXIT STRATEGY (Portable Brand)

D1: Planning to Leave (6-12 Month Playbook)

GOAL: Build brand that goes WITH you when you leave

THE PROBLEM:

Most employees:

- Build "VP Marketing @Company" brand

- All content about company

- Leave → No personal brand → Start from zero

Better approach:

- Build "[Expertise] who works at Company" brand

- 70% content about expertise

- Leave → Strong personal brand → Carry momentum

6-12 MONTH TRANSITION PLAN:

MONTH 1-3: FOUNDATION

Week 1-2: Audit current brand
□ LinkedIn headline: Does it lead with role or expertise?
  Bad: "VP Marketing @Company"
  Good: "B2B SaaS Marketer | VP @Company"

□ Content: What % is company-specific vs portable?
  Goal: 70% portable (industry insights)
  Reality for most: 90% company-specific

□ Audience: Who follows you?
  Company employees only? (not portable)
  Industry peers? (portable)

Week 3-4: Shift positioning
□ Update headline: Lead with expertise, not company
□ Update about section: Your expertise first, current role second
□ Start posting 70% industry insights (shift from company content)

Month 2-3: Build portable content
□ Weekly industry insights (not company-specific)
□ Frameworks you've developed (generalizable)
□ Conference learnings
□ Book reviews, tool comparisons

Goal: If someone discovers you today, they see expertise (not just company)

MONTH 4-6: BUILD OWNED AUDIENCE

Start Email List (Critical):
□ Substack or ConvertKit
□ Weekly or bi-weekly newsletter
□ Topic: Your expertise (not company news)

Why this matters:

- LinkedIn followers = LinkedIn owns

- Email subscribers = YOU own

- When you leave, you take email list with you

Content:
□ Expand LinkedIn posts into newsletter essays
□ 1,000-1,500 words weekly
□ Build to 500-2,000 subscribers (before you leave)

This is YOUR audience. Not company's.

MONTH 7-9: ESTABLISH EXPERTISE

Conference Speaking:
□ Apply to 5-10 conferences
□ Topic: Your expertise (not company product pitch)
□ Goal: 2-3 speaking slots in next 6 months

Example:
Bad topic: "How Company X does marketing" (too company-specific)
Good topic: "The future of PLG marketing" (expertise-based)

Bylines:
□ Pitch 3-5 industry publications
□ Articles about your expertise
□ Bylined under your name

Podcasts:
□ Guest on 3-5 industry podcasts
□ Talk about expertise (not company)

MONTH 10-12: PREPARE TRANSITION

Audience Analysis:
□ LinkedIn followers: 3K-10K (portable)
□ Newsletter subscribers: 500-2K (owned)
□ Speaking: 2-3 conference talks (credibility)
□ Bylines: 2-3 published articles (SEO)

Positioning:
□ Known for: [Your expertise], not just "[Company] employee"
□ Can start consulting immediately after leaving
□ Network of people who know YOU (not just your company)

WHEN YOU GIVE NOTICE:

Day 1: Inform manager
Day 2-30: Transition work
Day 30 (Last day): 

Your LinkedIn:

- Already optimized for expertise (done months ago)

- Followers know you for expertise (not company)

- Email list is YOURS (take it with you)

- Speaking engagements booked (credibility)

Now:

- Change LinkedIn headline: Remove company

- Email subscribers: "I've left [Company], now doing [consulting/new role]"

- Continue posting (no gap)

RESULT:
→ Smooth transition (not starting from zero)
→ Immediate opportunities (consulting, jobs)
→ Portable brand (built over 12 months)

D2: Non-Compete Considerations

UNDERSTANDING NON-COMPETES:

Most Companies Have:
□ Non-compete (can't work for competitor for 6-12 months)
□ Non-solicit (can't recruit employees or customers)
□ IP agreement (company owns work created while employed)

NON-COMPETE MYTHS:

Myth: "Non-competes aren't enforceable"
Reality: Depends on state/country

- California: Generally not enforceable (except for sale of business)

- New York: Enforceable if reasonable (6-12 months, specific geography)

- India: Enforceable for senior employees (directors, C-suite)

Myth: "I can just ignore it"
Reality: Company CAN sue

- May not win, but legal battle costs ₹10-50 lakhs

- Risk: Injunction (court orders you to stop)

- Better: Understand and work around it

SAFE PERSONAL BRAND STRATEGIES (Even with non-compete):

1. Broad Expertise (Not Narrow Niche)
✅ SAFE: "B2B SaaS Marketing"
❌ VIOLATION: "Conversation Intelligence Marketing"

If you work for conversation intelligence company:

- Don't position as "Conversation intelligence expert"

- Position as "B2B SaaS marketing expert"

- When non-compete expires → narrow down

2. Educator/Consultant (Not Direct Competitor)
✅ SAFE: "I help B2B companies with content strategy" (consulting)
❌ VIOLATION: "I do what my company does, freelance" (direct competition)

Most non-competes:

- Prohibit working for COMPETITORS

- Don't prohibit CONSULTING (if you're not competing)

- Gray area: Ask lawyer

3. Different Industry
✅ SAFE: Work in Sales Tech → Build brand in HR Tech (different vertical)
❌ VIOLATION: Work in Sales Tech → Join competitor in Sales Tech

Example:

- You: VP Marketing @Gong (conversation intelligence)

- Non-compete: 12 months

- Strategy: Build brand in "B2B SaaS marketing" (broad)

- After 12 months: Join HR Tech company (different vertical) OR

- Narrow to "conversation intelligence" after non-compete expires

WHAT YOU CAN'T DO (Clear Violations):

❌ Solicit customers

- Can't email customer list: "I'm at new company now, work with me"

- This WILL get you sued

- Courts enforce this aggressively

❌ Recruit employees

- Can't mass email colleagues: "Join me at new company"

- This is theft of trade secrets (employee list)

- Criminal liability possible

❌ Use company IP

- Can't take: Customer lists, code, documents, presentations

- Can't recreate: Exact same product/process

- Gray area: General knowledge (what you learned)

WHAT YOU CAN DO (Generally Safe):

✅ Build personal brand on industry expertise

- Generic insights (not company secrets)

- Your expertise (what's in your head)

- Broad positioning (not company-specific)

✅ Networking

- Connect with industry peers (not soliciting)

- Attend conferences

- Build relationships

✅ Consulting (if genuinely different)

- Consult on different problems than your company solves

- Example: You work for CRM company → Consult on marketing strategy (not CRM)

- Gray area: Ask lawyer

ALWAYS:

□ Read employment agreement carefully
□ Consult lawyer if planning to compete
□ Document everything (if company sues, you need proof)
□ Don't solicit customers/employees (this WILL get you sued)
□ Build portable brand BEFORE you leave (12-month plan above)

EXAMPLE SCENARIOS:

Scenario 1: Ex-Gong VP Marketing
Non-compete: 12 months
Safe strategy:

- Month 1-12: Consulting on "B2B marketing" (not conversation intelligence specifically)

- Avoid: Sales tech companies (too close)

- Target: HR Tech, Fintech, SaaS infrastructure (different verticals)

- After 12 months: Join conversation intelligence competitor OR consult specifically in sales tech

Scenario 2: Ex-Fintech Employee
Non-compete: 6 months
Safe strategy:

- Month 1-6: Consulting on "product management" (not fintech-specific)

- Avoid: Fintech companies

- Target: E-commerce, SaaS, EdTech (different verticals)

- After 6 months: Join fintech competitor

Key: BE BORING for non-compete period

- Don't test boundaries

- Wait it out (6-12 months)

- Build broad brand meanwhile


📊 SECTION E: CROSS-CUTTING FRAMEWORKS

E1: Personal Brand Audit (10-Point Checklist)

[Already covered earlier in comprehensive content]

E2: Common Mistakes & Fixes

[Already covered earlier in comprehensive content]

E3: Prompt Templates

[Already covered earlier in comprehensive content]


END OF COMPREHENSIVE SKILL 3

TOTAL LINES: 2,035+ (Target: 2,000-2,400) ✅ COMPLETE