The Ghost in the Marketing Machine: Who Owns Your Reputation?
Scanning the PDF of my annual performance review, I stopped at the highlighted bullet point in the ‘Growth Areas’ section: “Increase external visibility and thought leadership presence to support firm-wide authority.” There was no corresponding budget allocation. No line item for a copywriter, no 8-hour weekly carve-out for research, and certainly no mention of the 48 Saturday mornings I’d likely have to spend shouting into the digital void of LinkedIn just to satisfy this metric. It felt like a polite way of asking me to donate my personal identity to the company’s marketing department. I realized then that my career wasn’t just my performance; it was becoming a mandatory, unpaid freelance gig for a brand I didn’t own.
The Mandatory Donation
My career was becoming a mandatory, unpaid freelance gig for a brand I didn’t own. This realization shifted the entire premise of professional effort.
The Great Extraction of the Individual
We are living through the Great Extraction of the Individual. In the old world, companies paid for advertising. They bought billboards, radio spots, and expensive television slots to tell the world they were innovative. In the new world, they realize it is much cheaper to compel their employees to be the billboards. If 108 senior consultants post once a week about ‘AI disruption,’ the firm achieves a level of organic reach that would cost $20008 in paid search ads. The cost is zero for the organization, but the toll is paid in the currency of the employee’s private life. It is a transfer of marketing liability where the professional development of the individual becomes continuous, unpaid labor.
The Cost Transfer Ratio
I’m thinking about this because I spent my morning cleaning out my refrigerator, a task I’ve avoided for 18 months. I threw away three jars of expired Dijon mustard and a bottle of salad dressing that looked more like a science experiment from 2008. There is something deeply satisfying about purging the stale things that no longer serve a purpose. Corporate-mandated thought leadership feels like those expired condiments-crusty, taking up space, and ultimately lacking any real flavor. We keep holding onto the idea that if we just ‘build our brand’ under the company umbrella, we are doing ourselves a favor. But are we? Or are we just keeping the fridge full of things that aren’t ours to eat?
The Invisible Hand’s New Chore
Take Flora M., for instance. Flora is a food stylist. She’s the kind of person who knows exactly which brand of motor oil makes a pancake look moist for a camera. She’s spent 28 years perfecting the art of the ‘invisible hand.’ Last month, her agency’s creative director told her she needed to start a TikTok series showing ‘behind the scenes’ content. The goal was to humanize the agency. Flora, who values her privacy and the tactile silence of her studio, now spends 68 minutes every evening editing clips of her hands pinning sesame seeds onto a bun. She’s not paid for the editing. She’s not paid for the ‘brand’ she is building. The agency, however, just signed a new client who cited Flora’s videos as the reason they reached out. The agency’s valuation went up; Flora’s free time went down to zero.
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“I’m not paid for the editing. I’m not paid for the ‘brand’ I am building. The agency’s valuation went up; my free time went down to zero.”
This is the contradiction of the modern career. We are told that a ‘personal brand’ is our greatest asset, our portable reputation that travels with us from job to job. But the paradox is that the more we build it for the benefit of our current employer, the more we are tethered to their narrative. You are encouraged to be a ‘thought leader’ as long as your thoughts align with the Q3 goals. The moment you deviate, the moment you express a thought that is truly yours-raw, unpolished, or perhaps critical of the industry-the ‘leadership’ part of the equation becomes a liability.
The Paradox of Ownership
Building a brand on someone else’s land means you are tethered to their narrative. Leadership is permitted only within the walls of current organizational strategy.
I’ve seen this happen in 38 different scenarios across a dozen industries. A high-performer is encouraged to speak at conferences. They spend 58 hours of their personal time over a holiday weekend preparing a keynote. The company gets the logo on the ‘Gold Sponsor’ slide for free because their employee is the draw. The employee gets a round of applause and perhaps a $78 steak dinner. Who won? The company externalized their conference presence cost to the employee’s mental health. It’s a brilliant, if sinister, piece of accounting.
Mental Health Toll
Sponsor Slide Logo
We often mistake visibility for value. We assume that because 1008 people liked a post, we have increased our career capital. But capital implies ownership. If your visibility is dependent on the context of your current role, you aren’t building capital; you are just renting space in the company’s lobby. The real tragedy is that we’ve been gaslit into believing that this is part of ‘professionalism.’ We are told that ‘executive presence’ now requires a digital footprint.