The notion of this book is that it's not aimed squarely and solely at business owners. You don't have to be the CEO of an organisation or business; it's relevant if you're an employee too, applying for jobs, or wanting to further your career and stand out. With the economy not in it's best shape, this is about trying to find ways of "marketing" yourself and stand out from the crowd. It's a book that actually job hunters and business owners can all benefit from.
The book has a few excellent areas especially with regards to the exercises. I've always struggled with the concept of "values" and "talents" and more importantly, "authenticity" when they're bandied around in other books. Is it just about saying "I'm not going to do that because I don't like it", or "I'm going to be as sincere as I can be"? This book actually identifies what those words mean, and offers exercises to help the reader work out their talents, values and authentic views.
The exercise of identifying archetypes is also useful - how you can find your "archtype" role, how you can use that to your advantage and further, the language you can adopt to portray that archetype and encourage clients confidence.
It will help you to identify your Unique Selling Point. One of the best pieces of advice, is that a USP isn't about being cheaper, because that's not unique if everyone else could do it too if they wanted.
There's also some excellent advice about pricing, about negotiating prices or payments with clients or prospective employers. The value of not underpricing, and being reassuringly expensive.
It's a bit dry to start with, but the opening quote from Jeff Bezos, founder of Amazon, is probably one of the most memorable and effective opening lines: your brand is what people say about you when you are not in the room.
That's not to say the book doesn't have a few bits which I feel could have been left out, or feel a bit "tacked on". The areas about karma, or the laws of attraction, flow... I appreciate them, but it's things I remain a bit skeptical about. On the plus side, they're only briefly mentioned, so it's not that the book takes a diversion route down the roads I'd personally attribute to self-help gurus and life coaches. I suppose they mention it as a means of making sure there's no areas left undiscussed.
The chapter about being famous... again, my personal inner skeptic comes to the forefront reading this. The lines about improving presence so "have a website, make sure it has good search engine optimisation.", just feel a bit tacked on. Again, it feels like the writers want to make sure they mention it, but it feels more like it's a checked tick-box in things they think you should know, and didn't want to stand accused of not covering.
Unlike some books about branding, this is very much a British approach. So there's no overstated, book-the-fireworks-and-dancing-girls, Americana in this; you won't read it thinking "but if I do those things, I'll feel fraudulent and a bit of a wally"; it's calm, achievable, and applicable to a British workforce and clientele. You can do the things they suggest, build a "brand" around yourself without feeling that it's forced or fake.
Overall though, I enjoyed this book, and its exercises immensely. I like the list of recommended reading at the end, I think that's something that offers possibilities for exploring certain areas further