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Networking
Face 2 Face to advance your career
The reason many people
live in the ‘City’ is to have "access"
other people, a network of fellow professionals that can be
so useful in our day-to-day work.
There are trade shows,
seminars and membership organizations, special interest clubs,
local chapters of our professional bodies, training and development
courses, board of trade meetings and so on.
Last issue, I wrote
about how to make these events more fruitful for you, and
it seems I hit upon a nerve.
What stuns me is to
see how many professional people simply aren't marketing themselves
in these venues. I guess it’s because they’ve
never been shown how, so let’s look at ten quick tips
to help you go one step further - and actually start to develop
those networking skills;
1. Have your
20 second elevator pitch down so you can recite it
in your sleep but not seem canned when you do so. The question
people are really asking when they say "So, what do you
do?" is how do you make money, except that that's impolite
to say.
BUT please, oh please,
do not simply respond by saying ‘I’m a CA/CGA/CMA’.
As I mentioned last
time – and I’ll say it again, that’s what
you ARE, not what you DO.
Interpret the question
as really being, ‘How do you add value to people’s
companies in order to warrant a fee?’
I have a client who
used to introduce himself, when asked what he did, by saying
“I’m a Brain Surgeon” and after a double-take,
he’d smile and say, ‘Just kidding, I’m a
CGA really, but that’s nowhere near as interesting,
is it?”
While he had the right
idea, the application was terribly wrong. He was remembered,
for sure, but not for being a tax genius, he was remembered
as the Brain-Surgeon-CGA!
Think of an interesting
way, in three sentences or less, to describe what it is that
you actually do – and include some benefits to the client
in them – so that the natural response is ‘That’s
neat, how do you do that?’ Because then, guess what?
We have a real conversation going!
2. Use both
sides of your business card! Point out that your
card has two sides. It will differentiate yours from the rest
and allow you to present more information.
Europeans have been
doing this for years.
3. Write crib
notes on the back of their business card –
when you get one (assuming they haven't read these tips or
use both sides already). I'm bad with faces and bad with names,
but can easily make the mental association when I have a couple
words that spell out what to do with this person.
4. Don't eat
anything while standing and talking: We humans do
not have the three or four hands necessary to take notes,
hold drinks, dispense our own cards and shake hands, let alone
eat. Anyway, what are you going to do when you've
got a mouth full of guacamole and someone asks for your elevator
speech?
5. Bring your
own badge. This way you can control how large your
name is and pump up your affiliation, or tone it down for
that matter.
6. In your elevator
speech tell them about your email newsletter (you
do have an email newsletter, don't you?). This way you can
offer to have them subscribed and open up a channel for ongoing
communication, assuming you want that.
7. Get out of
your comfort zone: Don't just hang with your buddies.
You can see them anytime.
8. Study magnet
people: You know how people circle around certain
characters? Study those characters and see what makes them
so charismatic and emulate that in your own way. Don't be
them; that would look too weird. Instead, find a way to take
what they do and make it yours.
9. Don't say
you're an independent consultant who gets $2500 a
day: Talk about your benefits and deliverables. Don't have
language for this yet? Get it fast.
10. Kill off
the redundant words:
Use action words and declarative sentences without tentative
hedge-words like "maybe" or "I guess"
or "I think" or "possibly" or "sometimes."
These can make you sound unsure of yourself.
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