• Home
  • Who We Are
  • What We Do
  • What We’ve Done
  • Contact

Archive for the ‘networking’ Category

The “context” count: July 16, 2009

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

Plug the word “context” into the Google News search box today and you’ll get 30,491 results.  That’s up from the last report, driven by events like the Senate hearings on the nomination of Judge Sonia Sotomayor to the Supreme Court, Microsoft’s launch of Office 2010 and the Major League Baseball All-Star game.

Truly interesting was this bit of advice from an employment blog from Canada’s National Post:

“When networking and interviewing, use any personal information you find about others carefully. If you choose to use personal informaiton about someone, make sure the context is appropriate.  Remember that old saying: Its not how much you know, but what you do with the information that counts.”

The same advice holds for companies, institutions and officials who seek to advocate for a product, plan or point-of-view.

Share

Tags: advocacy, Baseball, blogs, Jobs

Posted in branding, consumer influence, networking | No Comments »

Add this post to Del.icio.us - Digg

In the right context, even a shy guy can network

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

The current business environment has put a premium on peoples’ networks.  Sure, “it’s not what you know, but who you know” may be a bit cynical, but who better to help you through a trying time than a friend?  But these times are so trying that networking only among friends won’t likely get the job done.

This puts pressure on us all, but mostly on we who are, er, shy.  We have to overcome our own reluctance, not just a contact’s skepticism.

The easiest way, of course, is to offer praise or insight by email. If an executive wants to court a business contact (or a public relations professional seeks to curry favor with a reporter), focusing on their work with a supportive comment or, better, a relevant question, can lead to a valuable connection.

Someone who needs to network (don’t we all?) is likely already aware of the value of asynchronous contact from a distance. So, better advice for a shy person is how to network in-person. Tougher, sort of like figuring out how to ask a girl to dance at a junior high school “battle of the bands.” As adults we can learn quite a bit from our experience as adolescents.

For those real-time, face-to-face networking opportunities (e.g., conferences, seminars, industry breakfasts/lunches/dinners) where there is a chance to connect with people who can be helpful in business, here are five tried-and-true methods:

1. Bring a friend

Networking requires an ability to speak to other people you don’t know personally, even if you know them by reputation. Making the first move is made easier if you already have someone to whom you can easily talk. By bringing an appropriate friend (in the same industry or with an interest in the subject), a lot of anxiety dissipates. Bring a friend makes it easy to include or intrude on others.

2. Take advantage of what’s going on

Breaking the ice with a potential business contact if you open with a comment not about you or them, but about what’s going on around you. Every event offers something – a display, a presentation or cause – that can be a stress-free way to make a connection. In a way, it is the difference between playing pool – hit the ball directly into the pocket – and billiards – all angles and placement.

3. Get in line
Networking requires proximity which can be uncomfortable to the shy person. Getting in a line — to the bar, the buffet or the book signing – is a natural way to overcome that hurdle. The wine at the bar, the food at the buffet and the author’s high school picture on the book jacket are all ways to take advantage of what’s going on (see above).

4. Prepare some questions

A hallmark of being shy is being unwilling to express an opinion; so many other people seem so much smarter! There is nothing smarter than asking the right question. Preparing some in advance of the event can help make the good connections. After all, the only thing more seductive than asking the right question is being asked.

5. Revisit people you have met when then reassemble with people you haven’t
Making a connection is hard work. It is a result that can make new connections easier, though. In an event setting, people come together and move on. Keep an eye on the people with whom you’ve met. When they fall into conversation with someone you’d like to meet, re-connect. Perhaps there is one more point you wanted to make, one more question you had to ask or some new bit of information that just emerged that relates to what you were talking about. Good connections, after all, are exponential.

Share

Tags: marketing, networking

Posted in business development, networking | 1 Comment »

Add this post to Del.icio.us - Digg

  • Twitter

    • Privacy's like the head on a beer. Poured badly, it overuns. Flat, salt helps regain its form. If BT's the first, is Privacy 3.0 the last? 2010/09/06
    • RSS feed
    • Facebook
    • Follow on Linkedin


  • Context in Context

    Good products, responsive customer service, smart management and a culture of innovation are only the raw materials of market share. Delivered, they can be refined into trust, the key to market share. Credible Context helps companies tap into the persuasive power of their own story.
    More   

  • Tag Cloud

    advertising advocacy Amazon Apple Baseball blogs brain brand BT CDT CEO cloud Congress consumer context Facebook Fox FTC Google health IBM influence Jobs Kazemi labels legislation lies marketing McNair media Microsoft networking newspapers Obama Oracle Phorm privacy regulation reputation Salesforce.com Sotomayor statistics teenagers Toyota trust
  • Archives

    • August 2010
    • July 2010
    • May 2010
    • April 2010
    • March 2010
    • February 2010
    • January 2010
    • December 2009
    • November 2009
    • October 2009
    • September 2009
    • August 2009
    • July 2009
    • June 2009
    • May 2009
    • April 2009
  • Blogroll

    • Andy Lark
    • Auto Extremist
    • Brand New Day
    • Cheskin Research
    • Consumer insight
    • Epicenter
    • GigaOM
    • Politics in context
    • The Future
  • Context in Action

    • Blogging long-term investment
    • Forbes, Tiger & me
    • Forming a pre-blog blog strategy
    • Internet Goverance POV
    • Launching “Credible Context”
    • Linking deep technology to daily lives
    • NYTimes Tips on Networking
    • Primaries bring a new age of comms
    • Privacy now a public matter
    • Quintaris
    • Rebranding Zeno
    • Trust is a terrible thing to waste
  • Diversions

    • Diversion: Football
    • Diversion: Song parodies
    • Diversion: The art of ideas
  • Home
  • Who We Are
  • What We Do
  • What We’ve Done
  • Contact

Designed by MIF Design - styles by Nancy Rodger
Entries (RSS) and Comments (RSS).