TIER 4 · COMPOSITE 16–18

The Recognised Leader.

Strong personal brand built. Real authority in place. The work at this tier isn't more — it's sharper. Becoming the obvious reference for one specific thing rather than a competent generalist across many.

What the tier means

The Recognised Leader is the Visibility Index's top tier, composite 16–18 (88–100 on the 100-point display scale). Roughly 5–8% of audited profiles land here on first run.

At this tier, every dimension scores at least 2, most score 3. There's no remaining "fix this" work in the conventional sense — the structural foundations of a strong personal brand are all in place. The remaining gains come from a different kind of effort: deepening, not broadening.

What scoring here usually looks like

The work at this tier is different

Below this tier, the work is structural — fix the headline, set the cadence, earn the press. At this tier, the structure is fine. The work is editorial.

Three editorial moves matter most:

  1. Sharpen the signature. Most Recognised Leaders have a clear position. Few have a recognisable signature. Signature is when your audience can predict your take on a topic before you publish — and they show up to see how you'll articulate it. That's a different artefact from clarity, and it takes longer to build.
  2. Pick the one thing you want to own. Recognised Leaders who try to own three topics dilute. The ones who become legacy-level pick one — the unmistakable thing they're the obvious reference for — and let the other interests live as supporting context. Specificity beats breadth even at this tier.
  3. Build inheritable assets. A book. A named annual essay. A taxonomy or framework that bears your name. A community that outlives any single platform. These are the assets that turn a strong personal brand into a legacy.

What to watch for

The two failure modes at this tier:

What to do this week

Run the free Visibility Index audit to see if your signature is as sharp as you assume. The audit is most useful at this tier as a calibration check — making sure your self-perception matches the observed reality. The two often diverge after a few years of consistent winning.