Strategic Planning, Performance Improvement, Training, Public Speaking, Professional Speaker, Business Articles

Strategic Planning, Performance Improvement, Training, Public Speaking, Professional Speaker, Business Articles

Strategic Planning, Performance Improvement, Training, Public Speaking, Professional Speaker, Business Articles

Strategic Planning, Performance Improvement, Training, Public Speaking, Professional Speaker, Business Articles

 

 

 

 

Habits of Highly Effective Christians is a book about leading an effective and influential life by Ron Meyers.

 

 

Strategic Planning, Performance Improvement, Training, Public Speaking, Professional Speaker, Business Articles

 

 

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Effective Strategies E-Zine

Volume 2, Issue 4

Effective Strategies is devoted to sharing ideas that can improve your business performance. This issue, we discuss networking communication tips — the language of the power networker.

The Language of Power Networking

It’s All About Them

If you broke down every networking transaction, you’d find that the single element that determined success of that transaction was your ability to communicate. If networking isn’t working for you, take a hard look at your ability to get and convey your information. With the right information, you know exactly what that contact needs, whether they are a good prospect, who they know, and how you need to proceed with them next.

So what do you say? Part of the anxiety of networking comes from not knowing what to ask. Networkers often default to talking about themselves because they don’t know how to initiate interesting dialogue.

Enter a networking conversation with the purpose of finding out as much about the other person as possible. You ideally want to know many of these critical details.

bulletName and company
bulletRole they play in the company
bulletDetails about their company
bulletTheir ideal prospect
bulletWhat city they live in
bulletInformation about their family
bulletCommunity activities

This is a general list. Some of these items may seem nosy, but they have genuine value. Everyone you meet has a network that includes their family members, friends, and volunteer and professional contacts. You obviously want to know all the details about their company so you can provide good referrals. However, knowing information about their network will help you structure what you tell them about your company.

Creating Power Networking Dialogue

This is the Networking Zone template.  Use it as the foundation for your own power networking dialogue template.

Hi! I’m Danny Mason. [They will respond with their name]

What company are you with?

What is your role with your company?

How long have you been there [or owned it, etc.]?

Tell me more about what your company does. [Listen to understand; ask questions about the company until you understand their business]

Who is a good prospective client for you?

Are you from this area? [They usually offer information that tells you where they are from, and you can ask about their family located in other geographical areas.]

[If not from your area] What brings you to this area?

[If the last question yields information about their spouse] What does your spouse do?

Do you have family here in the area? [May reveal children, spouse, or parent information]

Are you involved in any local charities? [Question further if they answer yes. They may also reveal they want to volunteer but don’t know where they fit in. Make sure you keep up with local charity activities so you can offer ideas.]

Begin your close: “It was great to meet you. Do you have a business card so I can refer you if I come across anyone who needs your service?”

Normally, at this point, they want to know more about you and your company because you have been attentive. If they don’t, it’s probably because they are just nervous or not very skilled in conversation. In a rare case, they may be self-centered and don’t care about anyone else. Those people soon disappear off the business landscape. Think the best of those people anyway.

Here’s why this works: You aren’t just leading the conversation to gather the information you need — you are placing the other person in the spotlight. They feel flattered that you care enough to get to know them. You appear genuine, interested, and gracious — all virtues of the kind of person people like to do business with.

This and other networking strategies are covered in Networking Zone: The Business Referral Network Construction Guide. For more information on the book, go to Networking Zone.

Reader Ideas

Your Opinion Please

Do you have a great small business management idea you’d like to share with our readers? Share your ideas via e-mail at carrie@soarhigher.com.

Closing Notes

If you have specific questions and topic ideas, please submit them. I would be glad to address them in upcoming issues. For more articles, click here.

Feel free to forward this e-mail to anyone who can benefit from this information. To sign up to receive this e-zine, send an e-mail to carrie@soarhigher.com.

You are on this distribution list because you signed up and you may request to be removed at anytime.

Carrie Perrien Smith
President, Soar With Eagles
Release Your Potential
479.636.7627


Soar with Eagles equips individuals and organizations with the tools they need to improve their performance by creating powerful strategies, improving communication, and strengthening employee commitment.

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