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Anyone who has been to a
networking event has met business card thruster guy. Won’t leave you alone,
thrust their card in your face, every attempt at conversation gets quickly
turned into a sales pitch. These people aren’t networking, they’re selling.
Badly.
Let me share with you some of
my thoughts on what puts the ‘work’ in networking.
Networking is a form of
marketing, and any form of marketing is most effective when you don’t come
straight out and say “buy this!” The best marketing techniques work on
building relationships – courting trust, showing your intentions to be
honourable in what you are offering. And there are certain market
characteristics too:
People buy people.
People work with (and refer)
people they like.
People don’t like being sold
to.
That’s why the best networkers
aren’t the great sales gurus, they’re the archetypal ‘people person’. They
are interested in other people and what they do. They want to help as well
as be helped, not just because it will see them get business in the future,
but because they like helping others.
And most importantly, they
don’t talk – they listen.
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Many networking events involve
a ‘round robin’ of everyone there, which certainly has its uses – you get to
tell everyone who you are and what you do, and if there is someone there who
is looking for the service you provide, they will very likely come up to you
for a chat. But that’s not networking, that’s hit and miss, and it’s very
important to understand the difference.
What I call hit and miss is
what I just described above. You tell as many people in one go what you do
in the hope that one of them is looking for it – the social equivalent of a
mailshot, and just about as effective.
When you network, it involves
who you get to know, and who they know, and who they know. This is called
Six Degrees of Separation, the theory of psychologist Stanley Milgram.
Milgram theorised that there was a chain of six people or less connecting us
to everyone else on the planet, and this is also where Six Degrees Network
gets its name from. This, to us, is exactly what networking is about:
working that chain, getting your details through to the person at the other
end, by getting to know people who can pass that information on.
Word-of-mouth marketing relies
on this being a small world, and networking makes it even smaller. This is
also why the IT consultant, for example, shouldn’t ignore the mechanic or
the florist – firstly it’s rude, and secondly who knows who they know?
So how do you get your name
down that chain? It’s unfortunate but true, that meeting a truly nice person
is a rare occurrence these days. People remember meeting them when they do,
and they feel an obligation to do something nice for them in return.
Business card thruster guy will be bunched in with all the rest that person
has ever met, but you, the sincere, friendly person who they chewed the fat
with for half an hour about their business, their family and life in
general, will be remembered. And if someone ever mentions your type of
service to them in the future, you get the all-important “You know, I met a
really nice guy/girl who does that called…”
Just in case business card
thruster guy is reading this and wonders what my point is here, this is
called a referral. Its ok, I know you haven’t seen one before. Don’t be
scared.
Gill Fernley and Justin
Baker are the founders of Six Degrees Business Network, a group organising
networking events with a social slant in Manchester, UK. You can find out
more at
www.sixdegreesnetwork.co.uk. |