There are certain people we meet who stay with us long after the interaction is over.
Sometimes it is someone we met briefly at a networking event. Sometimes it is a colleague we worked with years ago. Sometimes it is a leader whose influence continues to shape our thinking long after we have stopped working with them.
What is interesting is that these people are not always the loudest in the room. They are not necessarily the most accomplished, the most charismatic, or the most stylish. In fact, if you were asked to describe exactly what they wore or the specific words they used, you might struggle to remember.
And yet, you remember them.
You remember how they made you feel.
“People will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel.” — Maya Angelou
In a world that constantly encourages us to be visible, there is often an assumption that being noticed is the goal. Social media rewards visibility. Professional networking rewards visibility. Even career advice frequently focuses on standing out, speaking up, and being seen.
But being noticed and being remembered are not the same thing.
Being noticed can happen in an instant. Being remembered requires something deeper.
It requires connection.
When I think about the people who leave lasting impressions, I rarely think about what they achieved. Instead, I think about how they interacted with others. They were fully present during conversations. They listened with genuine interest rather than waiting for their turn to speak. They made people feel valued, respected, and heard.
There was a sense of ease around them.
Not because they were trying to impress anyone, but because they were focused on connecting rather than performing.
This is where the ABC framework becomes particularly powerful.
Appearance may capture attention initially, but behavior builds trust. Communication deepens the connection. Together, these elements create an experience that people remember.
The reality is that every interaction leaves a trace. Every meeting, presentation, conversation, and introduction contributes to the story people tell themselves about who we are.
The question is whether that story is one we are intentionally creating or one we are leaving entirely to chance.
The professionals who build strong reputations over time are rarely those who focus exclusively on being impressive. More often, they are the people who make others feel comfortable, understood, and valued. They understand that influence is not built through self-promotion alone. It is built through relationships.
And relationships are built one interaction at a time.
If you want to become more memorable, perhaps the question is not “How can I get people to notice me?”
Perhaps the better question is “How can I make people feel when they interact with me?”
The answer to that question may have a far greater impact on your professional presence than any personal branding strategy ever could.
Think about someone you have never forgotten meeting. What was it about them that stayed with you? More importantly, what can that teach you about the impression you leave on others?





