639 - You Built the Career. Someone Else Owns the Narrative episode artwork

EPISODE · Jun 17, 2026 · 1 MIN

639 - You Built the Career. Someone Else Owns the Narrative

from The Daily Hint with Jens Heitland · host Jens Heitland

You Built the Career. Someone Else Owns the Narrative.Before a sales conversation, before a board introduction, before any room a CEO walks into, someone has already searched for them. They have formed a picture. The question is whether that picture has anything to do with who the CEO actually is.What tends to happen is that it does not.The experience is real. The track record is there. The narrative exists inside the organization, shaped over years of decisions and results. The issue is not the substance. The issue is that the substance is not organized in a way that reaches the outside.A Google search returns whatever the internet has accumulated over time. An AI search compounds the problem. It pulls from sources that may be years old, conflates information across people who share the same name, and produces a summary that the CEO has no meaningful control over. The picture that forms is not curated. It is assembled by default.This is the environment senior leaders are now operating in, whether or not they have paid attention to it.Authority in the digital space can be examined across five dimensions, each describing a different layer of how a leader shows up externally.The first is findability. When someone searches for a CEO, in a search engine or through an AI tool, what appears. The accuracy, recency, and alignment of that result determines the first impression before any conversation has taken place.The second is ownership. Findability depends on what exists to be found. A leader who owns something in the digital space, a website, a podcast, a body of written work, creates a foundation that is theirs to shape over time. Ownership allows for continuity. Someone can trace how a leader has thought, how they have evolved, what they have consistently stood for. Rented visibility does not allow for that. A LinkedIn presence is a presence on LinkedIn's terms. The platform owns the content, controls the distribution, and can change the rules at any point.The third is earned presence. Every senior leader with a long career has accumulated something through the consistency of how they have shown up over time. The question is whether that accumulation is visible externally. Presence built gradually, through sustained contribution rather than periodic announcements, tends to be more legible. It signals something about how a leader operates, not just what they have achieved.The fourth is narrative clarity. What does the leader stand for, and can someone who has never met them understand that from what is publicly available. The leaders who are clearest externally are rarely the ones with the most polished communications. They are the ones who have been consistent. The narrative becomes recognizable because it has been repeated over time, across different contexts, in different formats.The fifth is contribution to business outcomes. The external presence of a CEO is not separate from the commercial reality of the organization they lead. How they show up publicly, what they are associated with, what conversations they are part of, shapes how the organization is perceived by clients, partners, and talent.What an audit across these five dimensions surfaces is not a score. It surfaces a gap. The gap between how a leader understands themselves and how they are understood by anyone who has not yet met them. For leaders with long careers and genuine depth, that gap tends to be significant.The picture that forms when someone searches for them begins, gradually, to resemble the person who actually walks into the room.Highlights:00:00 CEO Authority Framework00:04 Findability Online00:11 Owning Digital Assets00:39 Earned Social Presence00:59 Narrative Clarity01:17 Driving Business Outcomes01:39 Audit Wrap UpLinks:https://www.jensheitland.com/links

You Built the Career. Someone Else Owns the Narrative.Before a sales conversation, before a board introduction, before any room a CEO walks into, someone has already searched for them. They have formed a picture. The question is whether that picture has anything to do with who the CEO actually is.What tends to happen is that it does not.The experience is real. The track record is there. The narrative exists inside the organization, shaped over years of decisions and results. The issue is not the substance. The issue is that the substance is not organized in a way that reaches the outside.A Google search returns whatever the internet has accumulated over time. An AI search compounds the problem. It pulls from sources that may be years old, conflates information across people who share the same name, and produces a summary that the CEO has no meaningful control over. The picture that forms is not curated. It is assembled by default.This is the environment senior leaders are now operating in, whether or not they have paid attention to it.Authority in the digital space can be examined across five dimensions, each describing a different layer of how a leader shows up externally.The first is findability. When someone searches for a CEO, in a search engine or through an AI tool, what appears. The accuracy, recency, and alignment of that result determines the first impression before any conversation has taken place.The second is ownership. Findability depends on what exists to be found. A leader who owns something in the digital space, a website, a podcast, a body of written work, creates a foundation that is theirs to shape over time. Ownership allows for continuity. Someone can trace how a leader has thought, how they have evolved, what they have consistently stood for. Rented visibility does not allow for that. A LinkedIn presence is a presence on LinkedIn's terms. The platform owns the content, controls the distribution, and can change the rules at any point.The third is earned presence. Every senior leader with a long career has accumulated something through the consistency of how they have shown up over time. The question is whether that accumulation is visible externally. Presence built gradually, through sustained contribution rather than periodic announcements, tends to be more legible. It signals something about how a leader operates, not just what they have achieved.The fourth is narrative clarity. What does the leader stand for, and can someone who has never met them understand that from what is publicly available. The leaders who are clearest externally are rarely the ones with the most polished communications. They are the ones who have been consistent. The narrative becomes recognizable because it has been repeated over time, across different contexts, in different formats.The fifth is contribution to business outcomes. The external presence of a CEO is not separate from the commercial reality of the organization they lead. How they show up publicly, what they are associated with, what conversations they are part of, shapes how the organization is perceived by clients, partners, and talent.What an audit across these five dimensions surfaces is not a score. It surfaces a gap. The gap between how a leader understands themselves and how they are understood by anyone who has not yet met them. For leaders with long careers and genuine depth, that gap tends to be significant.The picture that forms when someone searches for them begins, gradually, to resemble the person who actually walks into the room.Highlights:00:00 CEO Authority Framework00:04 Findability Online00:11 Owning Digital Assets00:39 Earned Social Presence00:59 Narrative Clarity01:17 Driving Business Outcomes01:39 Audit Wrap UpLinks:https://www.jensheitland.com/links

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639 - You Built the Career. Someone Else Owns the Narrative

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You Built the Career. Someone Else Owns the Narrative.Before a sales conversation, before a board introduction, before any room a CEO walks into, someone has already searched for them. They have formed a picture. The question is whether that picture...

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