Archive for Networking & Business

business networking, making business connections, building business relationshipsIn today’s market, it’s not enough to just have a good idea and a solid business model. Given the rough economic ground we’re currently treading, your competitors are certain to possess both in spades. So how can you help your company stand out from the crowd? Through effective business networking.
 
Before we go too much further, let’s define “business networking” for those of you who may be new to this topic or practice.  According to About.com “business networking” is the “process of establishing a mutually beneficial relationship with other business people and potential clients and/or customers.”
 
Every time you engage in networking, you have the potential to impress someone new, and if you go about it in the right way, because of the nature of “mutual benefit,” you can tune them in to what you and your business are doing.
 
So how can you improve your current network reach, and catapult your business further into success? Simple, start focusing less on what your network can do for your business, and start focusing more on what your business can do for your network. Effective business networking involves building real relationships with real people, instead of just viewing the field from the detached perspective of an income generating entity. Keep your network close and allow yourself to really care about everyone in it as an individual, and you should already be well on your way to networking success.
 
“But if I’m only concentrating on building respect, friendship, and trust within my current network, how can I expect it to grow?” Read More→

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Say the words “business networking” and what likely comes to mind? Well, if you have been involved in business for any time at all, you probably have a vision of a few dozen people in a hotel ballroom, all clutching business cards and hoping to make as many connections as possible.  It didn’t even matter if the connections were high-quality – the belief seemed to be that it was all about the quantity of business cards you were able to collect. Somehow “more business” was merely a matter of numbers.

But that really isn’t the way it works. If you approach networking in the typical way, your attitude is working against you.  You see, it’s not about YOU and how many connections YOU can make; successful networking is about what you can do for others.

“Wait, a minute,” you’re probably thinking at this point. “I’m networking to develop more connections for MY business; I’m not there to give someone else a boost.”

But that’s my point. Virtually everyone approaches networking from the “what’s in it for ME?” mindset. And, because most people take this approach, you’ll just be another one in a sea of “seekers.”  You’ll get lost in the noise.

Instead, consider a different way: put yourself in the shoes of the person with whom you want to network.  If someone approaches you with the attitude of selling you on something – even if you are being sold on them as a person or what they can do for you – you have a natural repelling reaction. We all do. We have an instinctive aversion to being sold. So, if someone approaches you, and they take the position of “let me tell you all about ME,” you’re less likely to listen.  If they lead off asking about you, what you do, how you came to be there, you’re more likely to engage in a discussion. Because they are asking about YOU, not just telling you about themselves.

How do we connect this with business networking? Well, if you think about what you have to offer someone or an organization, purely and simply, without pressing what YOU can get out of them, you have a much better chance of actually making a connection.

Leading with an approach something like… Read More→

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Sep
19

Need a job? Mind your Manners!

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Recently, I had the opportunity to attend one of the largest Job Fairs here in the Seattle area. No, I wasn’t LOOKING for a job… I was helping a business partner staff their booth. It was eye-opening to me because I’d never attended one before. Yes, certainly I had the basic idea of what occurs in one, but having never attended, I wasn’t certain.

My business partner is in the “business” of providing career development services to individuals and organizations. And, because of that, “we” were in the position of giving candidates advice on their job search. As a content-development partner for them, I had a first-hand look at how the advice I give professionals about their social skills is truly a strategic tool in their job search, and, frankly, at any point in their career.

Some of it is SO basic, or should be. Yet, too many people just don’t have the right tools. For example, it takes 27 seconds to make a first impression. I had several job searchers approach our booth and the first sentence out of their mouth was, literally, “What jobs are you hiring for?” Uh, where’s the foreplay? You could at least start with “hello” or introduce yourself. Of those valuable 27 seconds you had to make that impression, what picture did your opening sentence present to me? It is so simple to just use a few different words, a slightly different approach, and you’d have a better chance of getting a foot in the door.

Others asked what advice I could give them about being more successful at the job fair. Well, it became patently obvious that with 3600 job seekers coming through in a 4-hour span, not a single person was going to get hired on the floor. And nearly everyone was there to try to get their foot in the door with a prospective employer. It was gun-shot fashion.

So, my best word of advice was: don’t do what others are doing. Everyone is there pitching themselves, and as I explain in my book, people have a natural aversion to being “sold.” So, don’t go to the Job Fair with the plan of trying to sell yourself.

Instead, consider Read More→

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