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51 Thoughts on Networking
by Scott Ginsberg
- The Federal Bureau of Labor did a study a few years back
indicating that 70% of all new business comes from some form of
networking. I think it’s higher.
- So, no matter where you go – the Mall, church, out to dinner, the gym – you better have at least five business cards with you.
- And be able to give an UNFORGETTABLE personal introduction in 10 seconds, 30 seconds and 6o seconds.
- When someone on the phone says, “May I ask who’s calling?” get
excited. Say something unique that makes that person say, “Um,
okay…please hold.” Be unexpected. Be cool. Be memorable.
- Get Google alerts on yourself, your company, your area of expertise
and your competition. If you don’t know what a Google alert is, just
Google it.
- Networking isn’t selling, marketing or cold calling. It’s the
development and maintenance of mutually valuable relationships. Don’t
mix those things up.
- The most important four letters in the word NETWORKING are W-O-R-K, because that’s exactly what it takes.
- If you give your business card to somebody and they don’t reply,
“Hey, cool card!” get a new card. (Thank you, Jeffrey Gitomer.)
- When attending networking events, come early. Check out the
nametags. See if you know anybody, or find people you’d like to meet.
- Sit in the back so you can scan the room for specific people you’d like to connect with.
- Email articles of interest, links or other cool stuff OF VALUE (not spam) to people you’ve met.
- Publish a newsletter or ezine. Interview people from your network
and feature them as experts. They will take ownership of their inclusion
and spread that publication to everyone they know.
- Spend an hour a week reading and commenting on other people’s blogs. If you don’t know what a blog is, you’re in trouble.
- When you read an article you like, email the author. Tell him what
you liked about it and introduce yourself. He'll usually write back.
- Have an awesome email signature that gives people a reason to click
over to your website. Just be careful not to have TOO much information
included.
- Get involved with social networking sites like LinkdIn, MySpace and Squidoo.
- Remember that networking doesn’t have to be in person. The Internet
is a great place to connect with people just like you! It’s called
Internetworking. (Yep, I made that word up.)
- Make your own words up. It’s really fun.
- Have business lunches at least once a week.
- Attend local events once a month.
- Figure out where your target market hangs out (online and offline). Then hang out there.
- Or, create your own regular “business hangout,” like a copy or
coffee shop where you can regularly be found working, networking,
reading or connecting with other professionals.
- Talk to everybody. Don’t sell them; don’t probe them, just make
friends. Make friends with everybody. Because people buy people first.
- Take volunteer positions with organizations that are relevant to
your industry. Be a visible leader to whom others can come for help.
- Every time you meet someone, write the letters HICH on their business card: how I can help. Then think of five ways to do so.
- Go to Borders and spend one day a month reading books on networking,
interpersonal communication and marketing. I highly recommend The Power
of Approachability and How to be That Guy. (I hear the author is super
cool.)
- Publish articles or a blog or both based around your expertise. Use
titles such as “Top Ten Ways,” “Essential Elements” and “Success
Secrets,” that grab the reader’s attention. Publish them on www.blogger.com and www.ezinearticles.com
- Be funny, but don’t tell jokes.
- Discover the CPI, or Common Point of Interest with everyone you meet.
- Carry blank business cards with you in case someone forgot theirs. They’ll thank you for saving their butt!
- Never leave the house without a pen and paper. Sounds dumb, right?
It isn’t. It’s genius. Nobody keeps napkins with scribblings on them.
- Every week, introduce two people you know who need to know each other.
- Wear your nametag above your breastbone and make sure it’s visible
from 10 feet away. Nobody cares what side of your chest it’s on. Just
make it big. And if you don’t like wearing nametags, then you probably
don’t like people knowing who you are, either.
- Oh, and it’s not who you know – it’s who knows you. (Thanks again, Jeffrey Gitomer.)
- And people will like you the minute they figure out how much they ARE like you.
- Fear not to entertain strangers for by so doing some may have entertained angels unaware. (Hebrews, 13:2)
- If you don’t have www.yourname.com, get it. It’s ten bucks.
- Find local professionals with whom you share common interests,
customers, ideas and products. Introduce yourself to them, get together,
share ideas and find ways to help each other.
- orm a mastermind group. No more than four people. Meet regularly to set goals, keep each other accountable and brainstorm.
- Also, set your own networking goals each month for:
o Events to attend
o People to meet
o Emails to write
o Calls to make
o Articles/physical mail to send
- Go onto Google and type in “articles on networking.” Read on!
- Speaking of Google, Google yourself regularly. Find out what people
are saying about you. If you don’t show up, you’re in trouble.
- If you think you don’t need to network, you right. You don’t need to network: you MUST network!
- And stop calling it networking. Ignore the title of this post. I
only used that word in the title because my client made me. Networking –
as a word – is tired and old and cliché and it makes people think
you’re throwing around a bunch of cards trying to sell, sell, sell. No.
All you’re doing is making friends. Not schmoozing, mingling or any of
those stupid catch phrases. You’re making friends. That’s it. Friends.
Make them every day.
- If you think you suck at networking, don’t worry. You’re not alone.
But also remember that anyone can develop their networking skills.
That’s right, skills. Because it’s not something you’re born with or
just plain “good at.” Anyone can do it effectively. You simply need:
o To develop attitude of approachability
o To read books on the subject
o To practice
- So, when strangers ask, “How are you?” don’t say fine. You’re not
fine. Nobody’s fine. Give a real answer that’s memorable and magnetic. I
suggest, “Business is kicking ass!” or “Everything is beautiful!”
- Come to every networking event with three great questions ready to
go. Be sure they begin with, “What’s the one thing?” “What’s your
favorite?” and “What was the best part about?”
- When someone asks where you’re from, don’t just say “Austin.” Use
the H.O.T technique: “Oh, I’m from Austin, home of the best college
football team in the country.” Get creative. Get unique. Watch what
happens.
- Put your person before your profession. Your personality before your position. Your individual before your industry.
- Don’t be different – be unique. Don’t be friendly – be approachable. And don’t be memorable – be unforgettable.
- Think about the last five “luckiest” business contacts you
encountered. Figure out what you did right, realize that there IS NO
SUCH THING AS LUCK, then repeat as often as possible.
© 2006 All Rights Reserved.
Scott Ginsberg, aka "The Nametag Guy," is the author of three books and a
professional speaker who helps people maximize approachability, become
unforgettable and make a name for themselves. To book Scott for your
next association meeting, conference or corporate event, contact Front
Porch Productions at 314/256-1800 or email scott@hellomynameisscott.com
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