|
Cultivating
Lucrative Contacts Requires A Few Memory 'Tricks'
How was it for you?
The Financial Technology Show,
that is.
Even though I am writing this
column well before the event, I know that it will have been
a resounding success for me.
I know that I will have met several
useful contacts – some old, some new – and come
away from the event with several opportunities to follow up
on for my own business.
I also know that, within the
next six months or so, I’ll ‘bump into’
some of the people I meet there and that I’ll be able
to recognize them, remember their name, the company they are
with, and what they do.
How can I sit here and know all
this? I am a conceited little Brit who’s full of his
own importance?
Well, those of you who know me,
I hope would jump to my defence.
The reason I can safely
predict these events is because they have happened before.
Many times before.
And the reason that I know this
to be true is that I spend time working at it.
You see, you never know whom
you might meet at such events; a future spouse, a future supplier,
client, employer, even a future employee.
The ‘trick’ for want
of a better word, is to be thoroughly prepared.
So, how can I confidently predict
that I’ll remember someone I may have spent five minutes
with six months ago and know their name, company, what they
do and other such useful stuff?
It’s because I go to these
events fully prepared.
I make notes about someone whom
I have just met on the reverse of their business card, telling
me something I would otherwise forget about them.
I sometimes take a tape recorder
and discretely dictate myself a few notes between meetings,
or (a really useful one to remember) I’ll use my cell
phone to call my own voice mail and record notes about people
I’ve just met.
Sometimes I’ll get back
to my office to hear ‘You have thirty-seven new messages’
and think, wow, my marketing’s really working, only
to find that thirty-two of them were from me, getting carried
away on my cell at the event I have just returned from!
But the information I retain
and then enter into my database can be priceless.
And how is this useful to you,
in managing your career?
Sometimes it doesn’t, but
when it does, it usually pays off big time.
Let me give you an example…
You met a representative from
a small local company exhibiting at an event. You showed interest
in their product, maybe even booked a demonstration at your
office.
Who knows, maybe you
even bought the product.
Six months later, that company
decides to look around for a new firm of accountants.
They say ‘What goes around,
comes around’ and sometimes truth is stranger than fiction.
Maybe, just maybe, that company
approaches your firm and invites you to meet with them to
discuss their needs.
You walk into the meeting to
meet the owner, and sat by her side is the guy you were talking
with six months ago at a trade show (or some other event).
He is no longer a senior
sales person, but the General Manager of the company.
How do you think that meeting
is going to go (assuming that you remember them, and they
remember you, and that you had a good experience with them
earlier)?
THAT’s why preparation
for such events can have an influential effect on your career
path.
A little time and thought
can go a long way.
Season’s Greeting to all
readers of ‘The Bottom Line’. See you all next
year!
|