Personal Brand · Beginner

Building your athlete brand from zero

📖 6 min read✍️ 11media

Zero is not a disadvantage

Starting from zero means you have no bad habits to undo, no inconsistent old content to clean up, and no audience expectations to manage. You get to build deliberately from the beginning — which is actually a significant advantage over athletes who have been posting casually for years with no strategy.

The only real disadvantage of starting from zero is the temptation to skip steps. Don't.

Step 1: Define your brand identity before you post anything

Your brand identity is the answer to one question: what do you want people to know, feel, and remember about you as an athlete?

  • Your sport and position — non-negotiable, must be immediately obvious
  • Your values — what drives you beyond results? Discipline? Community? Resilience?
  • Your story — where you're from, what you've overcome, what you're working toward
  • Your visual style — colour palette, editing style, tone of captions

Write these down before opening any app. Your posts should be expressions of this identity, not random moments.

Step 2: Set up your platforms properly

You don't need to be on every platform — you need to be on the right ones, set up correctly. For most athletes, that means Instagram as the primary platform and YouTube as a secondary archive for longer content.

  • Professional profile photo — not a selfie, a proper photo in kit or training gear
  • Bio that states sport, position, and level in under 150 characters
  • Link in bio pointing to your highlight reel or athlete profile
  • Highlights covers that are visually consistent
Your profile is your first impression. A new follower decides whether to stay in under 8 seconds. Make sure those 8 seconds tell the right story.

Step 3: Build your content library before you launch

Before you start posting publicly, spend two weeks filming everything. Training sessions, warm-ups, match days, recovery, your environment. Don't post yet — just capture. This gives you a library of raw material so you never have to face the blank-content panic that causes most athletes to go quiet after a promising start.

Step 4: Post with a system, not inspiration

Inspiration-based posting creates an inconsistent profile. System-based posting creates authority. From day one, commit to a minimum posting frequency — three times per week is a strong starting point — and maintain it regardless of whether you feel inspired.

Consistency is the single biggest differentiator between athlete profiles that grow and those that stall.

Step 5: Measure and adjust after 30 days

After your first month, review your analytics. Which posts got the most reach? Which content format (video, carousel, static image) performed best? Which topics got the most saves? Double down on what's working and quietly drop what isn't. No explanation needed — just evolve.