Archive for Networking

Always Be Networking

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The time to start networking, locally and online, is immediately. The frequency is as often as possible.

Maintain your network over the course of your life. As you age and transition to various phases in your life you will have created over time a broad and diverse networking group. Maintain the connection even if you retire. You may not be as active in some areas as you once were but find a way to reach out. As your lifestyle changes, so will your field of interests. I look to stay in touch and updated with connections in business via phone, email, the occasional written card or note, LinkedIn, Facebook, and other online social media. Twitter is a great place to have a quick conversation.

Create a personal brand for yourself that incorporates your business, passions, and interests. You already have one so identify it and decide if it is the one you want to grow and expand, or determine to create a different one. Start by writing down how you see yourself and ask others how they see you. Compare the two and make adjustments to your brand as you see fit. Take pains to not destroy your brand by engaging in unethical, aberrant, or criminal behavior. It may take years to recover your reputation. Remember, what goes on the internet stays on the internet!

Map your network. Most of us have better networks than we think. If you have ever applied for a sales position, you already know how this works. You are asked who your immediate “warm market” is. Start with family, then friends, then extended family, then school, then jobs, etc.

Next, pick out the people you have identified and look to see who is in their network. Now identify who you may want to connect with and go from there. Facebook is an excellent example of this strategy. Serious entrepreneurs who build and maintain great Facebook profiles make it a point to connect with other entrepreneurs. A lot of great partnerships and products have come from people connecting on Facebook!

Third, network daily. For example I reach out to clients, colleagues, friends, and people of like interests daily. Many times I use a social networking media such as LinkedIn or Facebook but also I make it a practice to try and attend industry events in my field as often as possible.

There are many articles related to professional networking at Monster.com you may find interesting. Below are just a couple. Do yourself a big favor and visit many of the legit job sites such as this one they tend to have a great deal of useful information for free.

Social Networking Online

Broadening Your Network

Create a Personal Networking Plan

Remember to be an effective networker you need an active system. Having a stack of cards with a rubber band around them may look impressive to the uniformed but is a signal that you are letting opportunity go to waste. You can’t remember all of the people in the deck and they most likely won’t remember you. Be smart, get organized, make a plan, and stay connected. Utilize online social networking to meet people you would otherwise not have the opportunity to meet. It is a wonderful tool and one that should not be neglected.

© 2009 THJ & Associates, LLC

What is Social Media and Why Do We Need It? – Pt II


In a previous blog posted titled “What is Social Media and Why Do We Need It?”  I discussed how social media can be applied to a method of delivery or types of information and what those delivery types consisted of.  This post will cover additional delivery methods for getting our message out across the internet as we will be discussing blogs, TXT and Wikis. 

BLOGS

Blogs are among first ways that allowed the average or casual user to create and distribute their message online in a broad based manner.

The beauty of a blog is that you are able to create a website or web presence quickly and efficiently without being technical. New content can be added quickly and stress free. RSS and XML feeds let you distribute content quickly. Many websites and blogs have links labeled “XML” or “RSS” or “Atom”. All of these are ways of saying that you can find out about updates to that site without having to visit the site in your web browser. Simply look for a RSS button that looks like the image above or a small orange button like this  and subscribe to their feed. In this manner you will be able to keep up with websites whose content changes on an unpredictable schedule.

My blog is a WordPress platform blog. WordPress is a state-of-the-art publishing platform that I highly recommend for its ease of use, and it is also free. You can publish your blog to your own domain or you can go to WordPress.com and set up a free blog. Be sure to educate yourself on the differences.  WordPress.com has a LOT of restrictions. I suggest that you publish your own WordPress blog using either a free or purchased template.

TXT

Combined with blogging and social networking, text messaging and SMS are the most used technologies used by adults for communication.

WIKI

Communities that are established so that anyone who is part of the community can add a site and edit content.  Sometime they are wide open and in other instances an administrator controls them. The collaborative encyclopedia Wikipedia is one of the best-known wikis.

PRESENCE APPLICATIONS

These are hybrid-messaging applications.  Through a mobile device or web presence you can instant message.  They are generally limited to 160-character limit. Most of the messaging presently revolves around people texting the world about the minutiae of their lives.  However it is easy to the evolution towards more substantive and diversified communication across all areas of our personal and
business lives. Why? Because presence applications ultimately are real-time communications, messaging and routing supporting collaborative applications for user-to-user interaction, but also communication between applications and users.  Now you understand why we should all be excited!  It’s a communication
revolution outside of corporate infrastructure easily accessible by a mobile device if a computer isn’t available.

Some popular Social Networking applications are:

Twitter

Pounce  Now part of six apart.

Haiku  Requires a bit more tech savvy as Haiku is an open-source operating system designed from the ground up for desktop computing. Haiku aims to provide users of all levels with a personal computing experience free of any unnecessary complexities.  Considered in some circles as an alternative to Linux.

At present I’m a “Twitterer” and loving it! Please follow me here.

©THJ & Associates, LLC 2008

Holiday Time is Networking Time

Professional Networking

Professional Networking

Do you wonder why networking does not seem to work for you? Imagine this scenario. You are in line at a bank, restaurant, trade show or conference and you don’t speak to the person in front of you or in back of you.  You then follow this action up later by complaining that you find it hard to meet people and you are a poor networker.  Guess what?  You are 100% correct!  You aren’t going to meet many people and you will be a poor business networker behaving this way.  Remember networking is you interacting with other people and you should make it part of your everyday life.

Networking is not mindless small talk with strangers.  Instead it is an initial foray into a relationship.  Personal and business networks are your windows into new and exciting opportunities.  We are living in extremely difficult economic times where a strong business network is invaluable not only to find a new job, but also to connect on potential business opportunities.

The last thing a good networker does is approach someone only when they need something.  That tells them you are not genuine in your desire to be of mutual benefit.  Instead you are in “what’s in it for me”" mode.  This will turn off the other party as quick as it would turn you off if the roles were reversed.

You should daily think of new connections to be made across the various areas of your life.

Some Networking Guidelines:

Be real. 

Be confident and approachable.  This includes smile, posture, initial conversation, etc.

Always introduce yourself in a genuine manner anywhere.

Be giving and add value to others.

Stay in touch.

Deliver on your promises.

Send a quick “how are you?” note to people you know periodically.

Now that you have your courage up it’s time to break the ice, and remember you don’t need be a phony extrovert.  All you have to do is be genuine and take the lead in making contact.  Don’t prejudge another’s reaction to you.  Instead, interact and you’ll most likely be surprised at how easy it is to connect with other people and how interested they are in what you have to offer.

If you are going to a business event then take the initiative and Google people you think may be there ahead of time.  Take a couple of notes about them and use the information to break the ice if you run into them. People are always delighted to know that you are aware of what they do, what they are interested in, and they will be impressed that you took the time to become more informed about them and their industry.

After meeting people, if you don’t have an active reason to stay in touch use LinkedIn, Twitter, Facebook, or another electronic medium to stay in touch.

Happy Holidays and Happy Networking!

©THJ & Associates, LLC 2008