PERSONAL BRANDING · WALKTHROUGH

How to audit your personal brand — the 6-dimension framework.

10 min read · Visibility Index walkthrough

Most personal-brand audits are vibes-based. You scroll your LinkedIn, feel a vague sense of "this could be better," and close the tab. A framework forces structure on the same twenty minutes — and structure is what turns "I should fix this" into "I'm fixing this Tuesday."

Why most personal-brand audits don't work

Three reasons:

1. They're self-assessments. You rate yourself on "professionalism" or "clarity" without a rubric, and you systematically score yourself ~3× higher than reality. Self-perception of personal brand is one of the most reliably wrong measurements in business.

2. They're checklists, not frameworks. A checklist tells you "have a profile photo, write an About section, post regularly." A framework tells you what each of those is worth, what counts as good vs adequate, and what to fix first when you can't fix everything.

3. They're sales pitches in disguise. Most "audits" delivered by agencies conclude that you need their service. The framework should be the same whether the conclusion is "you're fine" or "you need help."

The Visibility Index handles all three: observed signals not self-rating, six structured dimensions not a checklist, and the same rubric whether you score 3/100 or 88/100.

The six dimensions, briefly

Full definitions live on the methodology page. The short version:

  1. Digital Footprint — what shows up when someone Googles you.
  2. Brand Clarity — whether a stranger can explain what you do in one line.
  3. Authority Signals — proof other people already vouch for you.
  4. Content Cadence — frequency and consistency of public posting.
  5. Visual Identity — profile photo and banner quality.
  6. Network Recognition — quality of engagement from your network.

Each scored 0–3. Composite 0–18. Most professionals score 6–10 on first audit (the Rising Voice tier).

How to score yourself, dimension by dimension

1. Digital Footprint

Open an incognito window. Google your name, exactly as it appears on LinkedIn.

2. Brand Clarity

Show your LinkedIn headline and About section's first line to someone outside your industry. Ask them to write one sentence: "this person helps [audience] [outcome]."

If you don't have a willing test subject, score yourself one level below your gut answer. Self-perception inflates clarity scores most of all dimensions.

3. Authority Signals

Search Google for your name + "podcast", your name + "press", your name + "interview", your name + "speaks at." Count what comes back from the last 18 months.

4. Content Cadence

Look at your LinkedIn activity for the last 90 days.

5. Visual Identity

Look at your profile photo and banner.

6. Network Recognition

Look at your last 5 posts. Ignore likes; count comments and meaningful re-shares.

A worked example

Series A founder, four years in, ~5,000 LinkedIn followers, raised €4M last year, mostly absent from public channels.

Composite: 8/18 — The Rising Voice. This is roughly the median first-audit score.

What to fix first — the order matters

Don't try to fix all six. Fix the lowest-scoring dimension that's cheapest to move. Order, in most cases:

  1. Brand Clarity first. 20 minutes of writing fixes a 0 → 2. Without clarity, every other dimension is harder.
  2. Visual Identity second. One afternoon with a designer. 0 → 2 permanently.
  3. Content Cadence third. Pick one slot per week, hold it for 12 weeks.
  4. Authority Signals fourth. The 12-month plan starts now. Quarter-by-quarter approach here.
  5. Network Recognition fifth. Largely a downstream effect of the four above; engagement comes when there's something worth engaging with.
  6. Digital Footprint last. The compounding result of all the above.

The temptation is to start with the dimension where you scored lowest. Resist. Start with the dimension where the cost-of-improvement curve is steepest — usually Clarity, sometimes Visual.

"Most personal-brand work fails because people fix the cheap things last and the expensive things first."

The 90-day plan

The Visibility Index returns a four-phase plan when you run the tool. The structure works for self-application too:

Three months in, you've moved Brand Clarity from 1 to 2 or 3, Visual Identity from 1 to 2, Content Cadence from 0 to 2, and started the Authority Signals work. Composite goes from 8 to 12 — Rising Voice to Emerging Authority. That's a tier shift.

Why you should still run the actual tool

This article gives you a self-audit. The free Visibility Index gives you an observed-signals audit. Two different things.

Self-audits are useful for showing you the framework. Observed audits are useful because they correct the systematic 3× inflation of self-perception. Most people who self-score a 12 audit at 7. The gap is the actionable bit.

Run the audit. Then re-read this article with the actual scores in front of you. The "what to fix first" section reads differently when you're working from real numbers instead of optimistic ones.