Here's how to stand out when you're introvert AF
Being an introverted business owner kinda feels like business suicide. Unless you stop playing the visibility game and start building a brand that does the heavy lifting for you.
As you’ve probably figured out already, when you joined my Substack; I’m an introvert.
Not the “I just need some alone time after a party” kind. The kind where posting a single Instagram story feels like I’ve run a marathon. The kind where the thought of going live makes my whole body tense up. The kind where I’ve closed apps mid-scroll just because the pressure to “show up” felt like too much that day.
I’ve built a business anyway. And if you’re reading this, you probably have too—or you’re trying to.
But here’s what I’ve learned the hard way: most business advice isn’t built for people like us. It’s built for the ones who get energy from being seen, who feel alive on camera, who can pump out content all day and still have fuel left in the tank.
That’s not me. And I’m guessing it’s not you either.
So I had to figure out a different way, a way to stand out without being “on” 24/7, a way to build visibility without burning out, a way to let my brand do the talking so I don’t have to perform constantly.
That’s what my Substack is about.
Not All Introverts Are the Same
Before we go further, let’s get something straight: introversion isn’t one thing.
Psychologist Jonathan Cheek identified four distinct types of introverts, and understanding which one you are can help you figure out why certain business advice feels so wrong for you.
Social introverts prefer small groups or solitude over large gatherings. They’re not shy or anxious; they just genuinely prefer less social stimulation. Big networking events? No thanks. A quiet coffee chat with one person? Perfect.
Thinking introverts are introspective and self-reflective. They spend a lot of time in their own heads, processing ideas, daydreaming, and analyzing. They’re not necessarily avoiding people; they’re just deeply engaged with their inner world.
Anxious introverts feel uncomfortable in social situations, not because they prefer solitude, but because social interaction triggers anxiety or self-consciousness. The discomfort doesn’t go away when they’re alone either; they tend to ruminate on past or future interactions.
Restrained introverts (sometimes called reserved introverts) operate at a slower pace. They think before they speak, take time to warm up, and prefer not to act spontaneously. They’re not unfriendly, they’re just deliberate.
Most introverts are a mix of these types. I’m somewhere between social and thinking, with a healthy dose of restraint thrown in. I don’t hate people, I just need a lot of space to recharge, and I process everything internally before I’m ready to share it externally.
The point is: if “just show up more” advice feels exhausting to you, it’s not because you’re broken, but because your nervous system has different needs than the people giving that advice.
Why I Want to Help Introverts in Business
Here’s the truth: being an introverted business owner kinda feels like business suicide.
Everything we’re told to do requires energy we don’t have an unlimited supply. Post daily, go live weekly, show your face on stories, be visible, be present, be “on.”
The whole system is designed for people who gain energy from output, not people who get drained by it. And when you can’t keep up, you start thinking something’s wrong with you. You’re not disciplined enough, not committed enough, not cut out for this sh*t.
I believed that for a long time. I thought I had to force myself into a mold that didn’t fit, or accept that I’d never be as successful as the extroverts dominating my feed.
Then I realized something: I don’t have to play their game, I can build a different one.
That’s why I do what I do now. I help introverted founders build brands that stand out without the constant visibility grind. Because being “on” 24/7 is draining the fuck out of us, and there has to be another way.
Well, there is.
The Strategy I’ve Worked Out: Disruptive Branding
After years of trial and error, burning out, recovering, and trying again, I landed on something that actually works for the way I’m wired.
It’s called disruptive branding.
Disruptive branding isn’t about being loud or controversial. It’s about creating intentional contrast. Standing out by refusing to follow the unspoken rules everyone else in your industry follows.
Instead of relying on constant visibility (which drains us), you build a brand with enough meaning, clarity, and distinctiveness that it attracts people without you having to be everywhere all the time.
The brand does the heavy lifting, so you don’t have to.
There are four models of disruptive branding, and each one creates contrast differently:
Anti-Branding rejects the polished, curated aesthetic. It’s raw, minimal, deliberately unbranded. It builds trust through apparent honesty instead of slick production. If you’re exhausted by the pressure to look “professional” and perfect, this might be your lane.
Cult Branding builds intense loyalty by creating a sense of identity and belonging. People don’t just buy from you; they join you and they identify with what you stand for. If you have a strong worldview and want to attract people who share it, this is worth exploring.
Disruptor Branding changes how things are done. It introduces a new model or approach that makes the old way feel outdated. If you’ve genuinely built something different, not just better, but fundamentally different, this model amplifies that.
Challenger Branding picks a fight with the status quo. It names an enemy - a belief, a norm, a system - and positions itself as the alternative. If you’re frustrated with how your industry operates and want to lead a rebellion, this is your path.
None of these requires you to be constantly visible. None of them requires you to be loud. They require you to be clear; clear on what you stand for, who you’re for, and what you’re against.
That clarity becomes your brand. And that brand works even when you’re not posting.
Images First, Hook Second, Then Voice.
Here’s something I’ve learned that changed how I think about visibility: you don’t need to show your face to stop the scroll. You need to stop the scroll with meaning.
And the fastest way to do that is through imagery.
Humans process visuals 60,000 times faster than text. Before anyone reads your hook and caption, they’ve already decided whether to stop or keep scrolling based on the image alone. That split-second decision happens in the gut, not the brain.
So if your visuals look like everyone else’s: same Canva templates, same stock photos, same safe aesthetic, you’re invisible before you’ve even had a chance to speak.
Disruptive branding flips this. You use imagery to create contrast, to trigger an emotion, to make someone pause and think, “Wait, what is this?”
That pause is everything. It’s the opening, it’s your chance to actually be heard.
Once you’ve earned the pause, your words take over. Your hook, your brand voice, your messaging, your point of view, that’s what builds trust and connection. But the image gets you in the door.
Think of it as a one-two punch:
Imagery stops the scroll and earns attention
Language builds trust and earns the follow
Most founders focus all their energy on the second part and wonder why no one’s reading their carefully crafted captions. It’s because no one stopped scrolling long enough to see them.
Using AI to Create Scroll-Stopping Imagery
Here’s where it gets practical.
You don’t need to be a designer or photographer to create distinctive visuals. AI tools like Midjourney have completely changed what’s possible for solo founders with no design background.
I use Midjourney to create images that look nothing like the typical content in my space. Unexpected compositions, striking contrasts, visuals that make people stop because they’ve never seen anything like it on a business account.
This isn’t about making “pretty” images. Pretty is everywhere and pretty blends in.
This is about making images with meaning. Images that communicate your stance before anyone reads a word. Images that feel like your brand, not like a template anyone could use.
The process isn’t complicated:
Get clear on your strategic enemy and stance (what you’re against, what you stand for)
Translate that into visual concepts (what would this look like as an image?)
Use AI to generate options that match your brand’s energy
Use those images consistently so people start recognizing your visual world
When your imagery is distinctive, you don’t need to post as often. Each post carries more weight because it’s unmistakably yours. You’re not competing on volume anymore; you’re competing on meaning.
And that’s a game introverts can win.
The Introvert Advantage
I want to leave you with this.
Being an introvert in business isn’t a disadvantage. It’s a different advantage.
We think deeply. We observe patterns others miss. We’re not interested in surface-level connections; we want the real thing. We build with intention, not impulse.
Those qualities are exactly what disruptive branding requires. You don’t need to be loud. You need to be clear. You don’t need to be everywhere. You need to mean something.
The founders who post ten times a day and still get ignored? They have a volume problem disguised as a visibility problem. The founders who post twice a week and build loyal audiences? They have contrast, they have meaning, and they have a brand that does the work.
That can be you. It doesn’t require becoming someone you’re not. It requires building a brand that works with your wiring instead of against it.
You’re introvert AF. That’s not a limitation, but your starting point.
Hi, I’m Jessica.
So glad you’re here reading my stuff. Thank you for that!
I help quiet founders build brands that stand out without the constant visibility grind. Disruptive branding, sharp positioning, and strategy that works even if you hate being on camera. Most strategists talk about alignment. I talk about opposition.
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What stands out here is the shift in perspective. You almost minimised it. Then you chose not to.
That decision is as important as the number itself.
You’ve given me a different perspective Jessica. Thank you for the post.