Sunday, May 24, 2020
Nurturing Your Networking Skills - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career
Nurturing Your Networking Skills - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career One of the benefits of networking is that itâs a great way of improving your interviewing skills. The logic is simple. If you want to become a better actor, act. To become a better writer, write. And to become better at interviewing, interview. Networking conversations are like low-stress, high-impact, self-initiated interviews. By having lots of these mini-conversations when you arenât under pressure, you get better at explaining what you want people to know about you. And the more you do it, the more skilled and focused you become. âBut I hate small talk,â people sometimes protest. Then donât engage in small talk. Talk about things of interest to you and others. One sure-fire way of feeding a conversation is to try to discover whatâs of keen interest to the other person, then talk more about that. Offer some helpful ideas. Donât assume, âOh, sheâs probably already thought of that.â Maybe not. And of course you can steer the course of the conversation by inserting information about your own interests also. Pay attention to what people say. Care about what they say. Listen hard, and practice reading between the lines. As management guru Peter Drucker says, âThe most important thing in communication is to hear what isnât said.â Another secret of effective networking is to give at least as much as you take. If you only take, youll get a reputation for that, and in time people will avoid you. If you give â" especially if you give first, without knowing whether or not youll receive â" people will be attracted to you. âAn offer of reciprocity gets my attention,â says Alan Grafman, CEO of Modelwire. âItâs my personal secret to always ask the person Iâm networking with, âHow can I help you?ââ Why not try this technique right now? Think of a couple of people that you know who might benefit from knowing each other. Call them up, and explain that you think so-and-so would be beneficial for him or her to meet. I recently wanted to use the professional services of an artist I know. I didnât feel I could afford his top-drawer price, but I wanted his top-drawer work. So I explained that to him. I added, âI know youâre worth it, I just canât afford it at this time.â Then I volunteered, âI know someone who could use your services. When we finish talking, Iâll call him and suggest that you two meet.â And I did. The second person then called and made an appointment with the artist to discuss some business. Later, the artist called me and said, âThanks for the introduction. Weâre meeting next week. And donât worry about the price for your project, Iâm going to give you what you need for a price you can afford.â The more you do to help someone elseâs career, the more willing that person will be to help yours. You know the expression, âWhat goes around comes around.â With technology, what goes around comes around even faster. By the way, if youre a âgrayâ â" older than forty â" make an extra effort to get to know and network with young people, who tend to be more in tune with new trends. In return you can make the relationship mutually beneficial by providing insights and advice based on your years of experience in the business world. What if you find your efforts to network stymied by intense shyness or anxiety? Most of the time, you can reshape your behavior and thought patterns to control and overcome shyness. Everyone has some degree of social phobia; most people feel nervous meeting and talking to strangers. If you are excessively shy, you have to deal with it. The truest and best way is to understand that others experience it, too. Other people feel just as nervous as you do at times, maybe more so. So if you bravely act first and help those around you relax, youll get more out of your time together. This doesnât mean you need to become a social butterfly to network successfully; it does mean that you canât be lazy about making strong, diverse connections on an ongoing basis. Sometimes itâs necessary to draw limits on your networking activities. As you get better known, you will be the person with whom others will want to network. You may have to guard your time. A simple statement such as, âIf you have any other questions, just send a note,â can be a helpful way of ending a conversation and giving yourself a chance to move on. If youre pressed for face-to-face time, you can say, âIâll be happy to spend a few minutes on the phone with you.â Larry Feld, president of Human Performance Strategies, has developed his own techniques for controlling his networking time. âI qualify [people] up front and then determine how to best manage the situation,â he explains. âI inquire about the subject, assess how much time is required to deal with it, whether on the spot or whether to schedule amore convenient time. If someone wants me as a source but I donât want to be, Iâll say, âI am not comfortable in making such a recommendation because Iâm not that familiar with your work.ââ Keith Johnson, a vice president with ThinkArena, adds this advice: âIf people are blatantly trying to me to get themselves somewhere, sometimes Iâll still direct them to the right people. But I wonât give the kind of introduction that they would get if they had at least faked some friendship or mutual respect⦠And when people send others to me, Iâll almost always talk to them. You just never know.â
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