Creating a Professional Online Presence That Gets Noticed
Learn how to set up your LinkedIn, website, and social profiles so people actually recognize your expertise and reach out with opportunities.
Read ArticleHow to differentiate yourself in a competitive market and build a professional brand that opens doors
You’re probably not thinking about yourself as a brand. Most people aren’t. But here’s the thing — whether you’re intentional about it or not, you’ve got a position in your industry right now. The question is: did you choose it, or did circumstances decide for you?
Strategic self-positioning isn’t about being salesy or creating a fake persona. It’s about being crystal clear on what you’re genuinely good at, who benefits most from your skills, and why someone should work with you instead of the dozen other options they have. When you’re clear on these things, opportunities start finding you instead of the other way around.
In Canada’s job market, especially in competitive fields, positioning separates people who get noticed from those who stay invisible. You’ll see the difference within months of getting intentional about it.
Before you position yourself anywhere, you need to know what you’re actually positioning. This isn’t false modesty time — it’s honest inventory time.
Write down three to five things you’re genuinely skilled at. Not things you wish you were good at. Things you’ve proven you can do well, consistently. Maybe you’re exceptional at solving complex problems under pressure. Maybe you’ve got a track record of building teams that stick around. Maybe clients specifically request you because you explain technical concepts in ways that actually make sense.
The best positioning isn’t built on what the market wants — it’s built on what you can deliver authentically. Once you’ve got your core strengths clear, the next step is figuring out who actually benefits most from those strengths. Not everyone. There’s always someone specific who needs exactly what you bring.
A positioning statement isn’t something you publish everywhere. It’s something you know deeply — it’s your internal north star. Here’s the structure that actually works:
Your specific target audience (be narrow here)
Your unique position or title
The specific value you deliver
What makes you different from alternatives
Example: “For mid-size B2B companies struggling with their sales messaging, I’m the positioning consultant who cuts through confusion and gets your team aligned on what actually matters to clients. Unlike generic marketing firms, I’ve been inside three successful exits and know exactly what buyers are really evaluating.”
That’s specific. Memorable. It tells someone immediately if you’re the right person for their problem or not. And that’s exactly what you want — you’re not trying to be everything to everyone.
Positioning doesn’t mean anything if nobody knows it. You’ve got to actually show up where your audience pays attention.
For most professionals in Canada, this means LinkedIn becomes your primary real estate. Not because it’s flashy — it’s not — but because it’s where decision-makers are actually looking. Your profile needs to immediately communicate your position. Your headline shouldn’t be your job title. It should be your position: “I help tech companies hire engineers who actually stay” beats “Senior Recruiting Manager” every single time.
Beyond LinkedIn, you’ll want to pick one platform where you share your actual thinking. A blog. A newsletter. Twitter/X. Whatever matches how you naturally communicate. The consistency matters more than the platform. Post about your positioning, not your feelings. Share frameworks you use. Write about problems you solve. After three to four months of consistent visibility, people start recognizing you for something specific.
Here’s where positioning actually becomes powerful: when you’ve got evidence that backs up your claims. Not bragging. Evidence.
This could be case studies showing specific results you’ve delivered. Client testimonials that describe outcomes, not just how nice you are. Speaking appearances at industry events. Articles you’ve published. Certifications in your area. A portfolio that shows your best work.
The specificity matters enormously. “I’m good at project management” means nothing. “I’ve delivered 12 projects on time and under budget for companies with $50M+ revenue” means something. “I speak French and English fluently and worked in Montreal’s tech scene for 7 years” positions you differently than “Bilingual professional.”
When someone finds you, they should be able to see immediately why your positioning is true. The evidence should be obvious, not hidden in a paragraph somewhere.
Strategic positioning isn’t a one-time project. You’ll refine it as your skills grow and your market evolves. But starting with clarity — knowing exactly who you serve, what problems you solve, and why you’re the right choice — changes everything.
The best part? Once you’re clear on your position and actually visible with that position backed up by evidence, the market starts working for you instead of against you. Opportunities come through referrals. People seek you out. Your positioning becomes your competitive advantage.
You don’t need to be the best at everything. You just need to be known for something specific, and genuinely deliver on that promise. That’s how careers actually accelerate.
This article is educational material designed to help you understand positioning strategy concepts. Career development is highly individual, and what works depends on your specific situation, industry, and goals. The frameworks and ideas shared here are based on common positioning practices, but your actual implementation should reflect your unique circumstances and values. Consider consulting with a career coach or mentor in your field for personalized guidance on your specific situation.