Profile picture of Emmanuella Ugochukwu
Emmanuella Ugochukwu
LinkedIn Ghostwriter helping agency, SaaS & media founders build personal brands as bold as their companies | Personal Brand Strategist
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September 25, 2025
Be careful not to fall into this trap, especially if you're just starting out. I see way too many new founders trying to copy bigger names when it comes to personal branding. Especially on X (Twitter). Scroll for five minutes and almost every post looks the same: Fake shock value. “Unbelievable” numbers. Overnight success stories. From where I'm standing, this is only hurting your credibility. When a new founder suddenly comes out and claims they made crazy numbers in their first two weeks, most people can smell the exaggeration. Sure, you might rake in engagements, but what happens after that? Bigger founders might share numbers like that, but they’ve been in the game for years. They’ve built trust and receipts. So it’s believable coming from them. But when you’re just starting out, trying to play that same game makes you sound unrealistic. So what should you do instead? 🟠 Play the field first. Give yourself 2–3 months of consistent posting (that’s 40–60 pieces of thought leadership posts). This helps you find your rhythm and your voice. 🟠 Talk about your story. Share your struggles, lessons, and the small wins your peers can actually relate to. 🟠 Give value. Share your POVs, give out helpful tips, talk about your expertise. Educational content that helps people will always land. 🟠 Find your people. The right audience will connect with your authenticity, not your highlight reel. Don't build your personal brand around shock factor, unless you have the receipts to prove it. Focus on trust, consistency, and building actual connection with your audience. And honestly? That’s way more powerful than chasing clout. Do you agree with me?
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September 25, 2025
Tomorrow, I start a new job. But not just any job. This opportunity came from my very first inbound LinkedIn lead. And that changes everything. Six months ago, I was drowning in cold emails and job applications. Despite being intentional with my outreach, response rates were low and conversion rates were even lower. I was energetically drained, looking for scraps, and freelancing felt unsustainable because I had no system in place. Then something clicked for me: I realized I wasn't attracting opportunities, I was desperately chasing them. So I made a decision. Instead of constantly reaching out, I would start reaching in. In May, I began building my personal brand by sharing my thought processes, my approach to marketing and content strategy, and my story. I also started a professional Medium blog that has ranked my blog posts on Google's first page, attracting traffic from organic search. This was my mini-inbound system for attracting leads. And soon enough, I started getting inquiries and booked calls. Was I consistent? Honestly, no. Even as a content strategist, I faced moments of creative drought where I would stare at my screen or go days without posting because I didn't know what to share. Life happened. But here's what did happen: This month alone, I received 3 job offers in the same week. I had to turn down 2. That's a big change for someone who, just six months ago, would have been grateful for any response at all. The opportunity I'm stepping into tomorrow (as I enter the second half of the year) came from nurturing a relationship that started right here on LinkedIn. And if there's one thing I've learned time and time again, it's this: nurturing relationships is the real marketing. That's where the real conversion happens. June has been my month of nurturing; nurturing my skills, my mindset, my content, and most importantly, myself. As I close out the first half of 2025, I'm not just grateful for this new role. I am grateful for the shift from scarcity to abundance, from chasing to attracting, from depleted to renewed. To anyone currently in that "chasing" phase: your breakthrough might be just one authentic post away. Stop trying to get people to notice you and start creating space for them to find you. Keep showing up, keep sharing your perspective, keep showing who you are. Here's to the second half of the year! Stepping into new opportunities with clarity, confidence, and so much more to give. 🧡 Cheers 🥂 #CareerGrowth #ContentStrategist #PersonalBranding #ContentStrategy #LinkedInSuccess #ProfessionalGrowth #BuildInPublic #InboundMarketing #OrganicLeadGeneration
37 comments
June 30, 2025
I wish I started doing this earlier in my career. I wish I took LinkedIn seriously in Uni. Maybe I wouldn't be in this "trying to figure it out" stage that's equal parts humbling and exciting. I was 17 and studying biomedical engineering when I got caught up in the wave of people singing "digital skills" left, right, and center. Everyone was talking about it, learning it, so naturally, I jumped on the train too. And this is where I stumbled upon copywriting. And honestly? It felt natural to me. I'd been writing since Junior Secondary School. English essays were my favorite thing in the world. All those years of turning 20-leaf notebooks into short stories made copywriting feel like the professional version of something I’d always loved. So when I discovered copywriting, it wasn't really like learning a brand new skill; it was like finding the professional extension of something I'd been doing my whole life. That became my first digital skill. Soon, I was landing internships and volunteer opportunities with corporate event organizers. Writing scripts, doing voiceovers, creating content. I was this quiet biomedical student secretly side-hustling as a writer, and I loved every minute of it. Those experiences shaped my storytelling abilities before I even knew I'd end up specializing in digital marketing. I'm genuinely grateful for that foundation because it's everything I do today. But here's my biggest regret: I did it all in silence. I joined LinkedIn two years ago and only started posting a few months back. Why? Imposter syndrome had me in a chokehold. I was scared of being seen and terrified of putting myself out there. I was trying to build in secret, which, let's be honest, is just a fancy way of saying I was hiding. If I had documented that learning journey... If I had shared the scripts I was writing, celebrated the small wins, even talked about the moments when I had no idea what I was doing... I probably would have built a community by now. Instead, I'm still trying to figure it out. And sometimes it can get overwhelming because it's literally building from scratch. Here's what my journey taught me 👇🏼: 🟠 Your journey IS your content. Every script you write, every course you take, every interesting or confusing moment when nothing makes sense — that's your personal brand happening in real-time. 🟠 Don't wait until you've "made it" to start sharing. Show up constantly. Talk about what you're learning, what you're creating, what you're struggling with. 🟠 Share your wins AND your losses. 🟠 Talk about what's actually going on in your career journey. This is exactly what makes your brand PERSONAL. Not the polished final results, but the messy, honest, human process of becoming who you're meant to be professionally. 🔸🔸🔸 Tell me something you wish you had learned earlier in your career. Let's openly learn from each other's experiences. #LinkedInStories #MyLinkedInJourney #BuildInPublic
33 comments
June 14, 2025
I learnt this the hard way. Now you don't have to. No one comes across a brand for the very first time and buys instantly. Not even you. Their interest may be piqued, yes. But instant sale? That’s <1% chance. Picture it yourself – what was the first thing you did when you came across an interesting brand or offer? If it was a SaaS tool, you probably created a free account to try the product. And if it was an offer from a personal brand, you most likely signed up to get their swipe file or templates. Now, what does this tell you? It should tell you that people need a pathway, not a pitch. They want to explore, experience, and evaluate before they commit. That’s why your content needs to do more than attract. It needs to: 🟠 Build trust over time 🟠 Offer low-barrier ways to engage (free trials, lead magnets, swipe files) 🟠 Nurture interest with platform-specific content 🟠 Guide them step-by-step toward conversion Your funnel matters. Because nobody buys on first contact, but everyone remembers how you made them feel at each touchpoint. Map your content like a journey, not a billboard. That’s how conversion really happens. 🔸🔸🔸 P.S. Are you a SaaS founder or personal brand frustrated with low conversions from your content or even ads? I have a something special for you. I’m offering a free content audit. I’ll personally review your content and highlight exactly where you're losing attention, trust, or sales. Request your free content audit here → https://lnkd.in/dWs6z8Gh Let’s fix what’s holding your growth back.
29 comments
May 22, 2025
SEO works!!! Don't sleep on it. Your tiny startup CAN rank on Google. SEO isn’t just for the big dogs, it’s exactly what you need to get in front of the right audience. When people search the internet, it shows that they're actively looking for help. 🟠 That’s free, high-intent traffic just waiting to discover you. Exactly a month ago, I launched a new Medium blog and published just one post. That blog currently has 0 followers, so I knew my first post had to pack a punch in order for it to rank. And by following SEO best practices, today that single blog post is ranking #5 on Google. Right beside giants like HubSpot, Kit, Cognism and Justin Welsh. It's sitting pretty on Page 1– bringing in views, building trust, and proving one thing; ✅ SEO works! ✅ Even for new pages. ✅ Even without a huge following. ✅ Especially when your content solves a real problem. In another post, I’ll break down the exact process I use to write authoritative blog posts that rank and attract the right people organically. But if you’re a startup or business wondering whether SEO is “worth it”... Let this be your sign.👌🏼 🔸🔸🔸 I'm Emmanuella Ugochukwu, the Content Marketing Specialist you need for smart content that gets you visibility and leads online. What’s been your biggest struggle with getting found on Google? #SEOWriter #ContentStrategist #ContentMarketer #ContentMarketingTips #StartupSEO #BloggingForBusiness #SEOContentWriting #SEOForStartups #ContentMarketingTips #SEOGrowthTips
27 comments
June 9, 2025