EPISODE · Jun 24, 2026 · 1 MIN
644 - Why CEOs Resist Personal Branding
from The Daily Hint with Jens Heitland · host Jens Heitland
Why CEOs Resist Personal BrandingWhen I sit down with a CEO for the first time, it rarely takes long for the conversation to get to the same place. They will say something like, "I understand there is value in this, but I do not want to do personal branding." And I always tell them the same thing: they are right not to want it.What they are resisting is a system built around projection. And that instinct is accurate.Personal branding, as it is commonly understood, is built around projection. It assumes you start with an image and work backwards. You pick a niche, you define a persona, you create content that reinforces the persona. For a founder building a consumer product or a consultant trying to attract clients, that logic has some internal coherence. For a CEO of a complex organization, it does not. It sits wrong with them because it should.What a CEO actually carries is not a brand. It is a credibility built over decades, inside real organizations, through decisions that had real consequences. That credibility is not something you design. It is something that has accumulated. The work is not to create it. The work is to make it legible to the outside world.This is where the distinction between personal branding and thought leadership becomes a practical one, not a semantic one. Thought leadership starts with the person as they actually are. The personality, the way they think, the patterns they have observed over a long career. And then it draws a line from that person to the company they lead. Not to make the CEO look impressive. To close the gap between what the organization is and how the outside world understands it.At scale, trust does not form because a company communicates well. It forms because the people leading the company are legitimate. Investors, partners, senior talent, customers at the enterprise level, all of them are reading the CEO. Not the website. Not the press release. They are trying to understand whether this person's judgment can be trusted over time. That reading happens whether the CEO participates or not. The question is whether the signal they are receiving is accurate.What I repeatedly see is that CEOs who resist visibility are not wrong about the activity they resist. They are resisting the version of it that feels performative and disconnected from how they actually think. The version that requires them to pretend to be something they are not, or to reduce complex thinking to content that will perform on a platform.Thought leadership done properly is the opposite of that. It is a long-term system for making the existing personality and existing credibility visible in a way that connects back to the company. No character construction. No persona. Just a translation of what is already there into a form that the external world can encounter and evaluate.The outcome is not reached. The outcome is trust. And over time, trust drives the decisions that matter at the business level. The partnership that forms because someone followed the thinking for eighteen months. The candidate who accepted the offer because they understood the direction. The investor who moved faster because the judgment was already legible to them.This is rarely visible as cause and effect in the short term. Which is exactly why it requires a strategic approach rather than a content calendar.Highlights:00:00 Beyond Personal Branding00:18 Personality Meets Credibility00:29 Stories Into Strategy00:50 Thought Leadership Results00:58 Long Term Trust BuildingLinks:https://www.jensheitland.com/links
What this episode covers
Why CEOs Resist Personal BrandingWhen I sit down with a CEO for the first time, it rarely takes long for the conversation to get to the same place. They will say something like, "I understand there is value in this, but I do not want to do personal branding." And I always tell them the same thing: they are right not to want it.What they are resisting is a system built around projection. And that instinct is accurate.Personal branding, as it is commonly understood, is built around projection. It assumes you start with an image and work backwards. You pick a niche, you define a persona, you create content that reinforces the persona. For a founder building a consumer product or a consultant trying to attract clients, that logic has some internal coherence. For a CEO of a complex organization, it does not. It sits wrong with them because it should.What a CEO actually carries is not a brand. It is a credibility built over decades, inside real organizations, through decisions that had real consequences. That credibility is not something you design. It is something that has accumulated. The work is not to create it. The work is to make it legible to the outside world.This is where the distinction between personal branding and thought leadership becomes a practical one, not a semantic one. Thought leadership starts with the person as they actually are. The personality, the way they think, the patterns they have observed over a long career. And then it draws a line from that person to the company they lead. Not to make the CEO look impressive. To close the gap between what the organization is and how the outside world understands it.At scale, trust does not form because a company communicates well. It forms because the people leading the company are legitimate. Investors, partners, senior talent, customers at the enterprise level, all of them are reading the CEO. Not the website. Not the press release. They are trying to understand whether this person's judgment can be trusted over time. That reading happens whether the CEO participates or not. The question is whether the signal they are receiving is accurate.What I repeatedly see is that CEOs who resist visibility are not wrong about the activity they resist. They are resisting the version of it that feels performative and disconnected from how they actually think. The version that requires them to pretend to be something they are not, or to reduce complex thinking to content that will perform on a platform.Thought leadership done properly is the opposite of that. It is a long-term system for making the existing personality and existing credibility visible in a way that connects back to the company. No character construction. No persona. Just a translation of what is already there into a form that the external world can encounter and evaluate.The outcome is not reached. The outcome is trust. And over time, trust drives the decisions that matter at the business level. The partnership that forms because someone followed the thinking for eighteen months. The candidate who accepted the offer because they understood the direction. The investor who moved faster because the judgment was already legible to them.This is rarely visible as cause and effect in the short term. Which is exactly why it requires a strategic approach rather than a content calendar.Highlights:00:00 Beyond Personal Branding00:18 Personality Meets Credibility00:29 Stories Into Strategy00:50 Thought Leadership Results00:58 Long Term Trust BuildingLinks:https://www.jensheitland.com/links
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644 - Why CEOs Resist Personal Branding
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