Your basket is currently empty!

This content was originally created in English. Have in mind, we use automatic translation in Bulgarian which is not optimised. We apologise for any mistakes.
Editor Note: This article was created by the Women in Marketing – Bulgaria team in collaboration with the speaker Vassilena Valchanova, and is based on her presentation at our Networking Dinner #001 in Sofia. It’s been edited for conciseness and brevity.
See what associated resource Vassy shared with attendees on the night of the networking dinner and follow along yourself – complete the author’s recommended assessments in your own time. ✨
Before we dive into frameworks and tactics, I’ll start with a confession that sets the tone for everything that follows:
I have to channel my inner Drag Queen before I speak. For me that means a red blazer. It’s a small ritual, but it flips the switch—gives me energy and reminds me I’m exactly where I need to be when I speak in public.
Because here’s the truth: I fight the same noisy thoughts you probably do—“I don’t know enough,” “I’m not doing enough,” “who am I to speak to these people?” People are often surprised to hear that, because I apparently don’t show it. That’s nice, but it’s not the whole picture. Saying it out loud—especially in intimate rooms like the one where I first shared this—matters.
I’m a ‘structure’ person (very Virgo of me). My brain operates in frameworks. For years, “personal branding” felt like an overhyped, fuzzy blob—until I started digging deep, collecting the pieces that actually help me operate with clarity. Over the past 6–8 months, I tried a bunch of things, removed the over-complicated bits, and kept what worked in real life. The result is a four-part process I call my Personal Branding Blueprint.
Because the common advice splits into two unhelpful extremes:
My blueprint bridges those. It starts with clarity and ends with a repeatable publishing routine. Today, I’ll share with you some of the most useful exercises and the most helpful tools you can use to define and grow your brand, but if you want to dive deep, I highly recommend taking my course: Personal Branding Blueprint – it’s a a 4-week hands-on process designed to help you prove your worth and build an audience. 🌟
The first part of the Personal Branding Blueprint is “Setting the Scene” – defining your purpose, setting clear goals, and identifying the audience you want to reach. A big part of this phase is identifying what you want to build, what you want to be known for. This is where the concept of Ikigai comes into play.
You probably know Ikigai—the overlap of:
I tweaked it to make it more than a poster.
Do it like this:
When I did this back in 2018, two items stood out:
Layering in usefulness, something clicked:
I want to do the work and teach clients to fish.
I’ll run the project—and I’ll make my thinking visible so people can repeat it without me.
From then on, I’ve tried to make that dual value obvious everywhere: show I can execute and explain the logic in plain language, with examples that stick.
Do this, not that: Don’t build a personal brand for “likes” in a random network. Build it to align how you work with who you want to work with.
The second part of the Personal Branding Blueprint is called “Building the Base” and this is the step where you should focus on laying the foundation for a strong, resonant brand identity.
To start, you can use a classic brand exercise repurposed for people:
“I’m the only [who/that]…”
No one is literally the only one—but you can articulate a memorable angle.
Mine: I don’t just deliver. I make the process transparent and teach you how to do it yourself next time.
This isn’t wishful thinking; clients validated it. People tell me they come for the transparency: I say what I’ll do, show how I’m thinking, which questions I ask, what I noticed, why I chose a path, and where I’d recommend improvements. That feedback was a strong market signal to double down.
A career story I love here: Amanda Natividad at SparkToro. Before joining, she decided she didn’t want to climb the standard ladder into management. She wanted to be a high-level individual contributor—to keep doing the work she’s best at. That clarity guided her toward the right team and leader (hello, Rand Fishkin) and into a role that still fits today. Your personal brand can be a compass, not just a megaphone.
The third part of the Blueprint is all about defining your content strategy: what are the pillars you’ll be turning back to again and again and become known for.
I couldn’t find a good term for this concept, so I named it myself: Remarkable Content Angles—themes and opinions that either light you up or make you physically itch when you see them done poorly.
One of mine (and it reliably sets me off):
“150 content ideas in 15 minutes.”
I can feel steam coming out of my ears when I see that. I don’t believe in idea lotteries. I believe in structured, intentional content—in a process that filters noise and surfaces what’s valuable.
These angles become the foundation for consistent publishing. Many people tell me, “I have nothing to write,” or the opposite: “I kind of know, but I’m afraid I’ll bore people if I repeat myself.” In my experience, repetition (with fresh phrasing and examples) is how ideas land and how you get associated with them.
Think of Coca-Cola not changing its logo every two years. Likewise, don’t change your core topics every two months. Hold your ground long enough to become top-of-mind—so when someone asks, “Who should I talk to about content marketing?”, your name has a chance to pop up.
Finally, we work on “Mastering the Magic” – the most practical of the Blueprint steps where you create a consistent content practice.
I’ve been writing for almost 20 years, and I still get paralyzed by the empty page. What saved me was assembling a “cookbook” of opening hooks. You can start with just ten reliable hooks to get into gear.
How I use them:
This shifts my brain from “I must write a perfect article now” to “I’m playing with approaches.”
Play kills perfectionism. Perfectionism kills publishing.
My content system lives in the cracks because I want most working hours for clients:
And yes, I love the Seth Godin line: plumbers don’t get plumber’s block. If it’s a client deliverable with a deadline, I sit down and get it done. I’ve noticed writer’s block shows up when I can postpone something (aka personal projects). Naming that helps.
Try this bonus framework: Character Identities—the lens through which you create content.
Pick the lens that fits today. You can switch later. Publishing through a lens that matches your current confidence beats waiting for a title you don’t feel you’ve “earned” yet.
It depends on your audience and goals. A model that often works:
Don’t sever parts of yourself with a knife. A personal brand should be personal. Some of my best insights come from cross-pollination—like my dance-class lesson: clean 45% now, 55% next time. That maps directly to content cadence and channel selection.
A practical LinkedIn tip: plan 2–3 expert themes to rotate, plus occasional personal notes. (If you have an employer, their expectations may shape how you blend topics—that’s a separate, tactical conversation.)
A personal brand isn’t vanity or “growth hacks.” It’s a system to:
Steal any part of my blueprint that serves you. Toss what doesn’t. The point isn’t to be perfect—it’s to keep moving, one clean repetition at a time.
Vassilena Valchanova is an expert in content marketing, brand positioning, and copywriting. She has over 15 years of experience in building comprehensive marketing strategies, content planning, and creating texts that reveal the value of the brand. With her skills, she has helped SaaS platforms with over 500,000 registered users and e-shops with €12,000,000 annual turnover.
Leave a Reply