Posted by Onlee Bowden on March 2nd, 2011 at 12:55pm
I bristle when someone says, “I’m networking!” These two words just hit me the wrong way. In fact, I’ve reached the clear conclusion that I’m not a fan of networking as a verb. I have no desire to go into a room full of strangers with the sole purpose to “network,” and if you agree… give me an “amen.”
You may be thinking, “Wait a minute! Aren’t you the communications pro, the one teaching people about presenting, attending events, and the one I meet for coffee?” I am! I am that person… and I feel this makes me a reasonable candidate to suggest that we finally throw, “I’m Networking!” out the window.
For the record, I truly enjoy meeting people. I love laughing and joking -hearing stories and telling stories. In short, I love the whole thing of making friends. What I don’t like is walking into a social situation where people are more worried about collecting cards and working the room then actually meeting someone. I hear the same reaction from clients whom will freely admit they hate networking because of the pressure, the fakeness, and the hype.
I think what creates this feeling of dread with networking is the same culprit that creates our feeling of dread toward public speaking. Like public speaking, when we engage in the act of networking we feel pressure to become someone smarter, smoother, and bigger than we are. We feel tremendous pressure to impress so we try too hard and overshoot. Often the very act of ‘trying’ leaves us feeling a little fake and superficial. Then we look around and notice others doing exactly the same thing - quick conversations, eyes not making real eye contact but darting over people, overzealous handshakes and very little real interaction. We begin to feel disconnected, stressful, and unreal.
Not that many years ago large face-to-face networking events was THE WAY to touch many people at one time. In fact the widely taught strategy to effective networking was to move through the room with the goal to replace all your business cards with the business cards of others. Today over four hundred million people are on Facebook alone, not to mention all the other forms of social media. It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to figure out that if you want to touch many people at one time social media is the medium, not face-to-face events. Social media in all its forms allow you to promote, promote, promote…your business, my business, any business or any thing for that matter. The internet allows us to have at our finger tips resources and information within seconds.
The good news:
This shift in social media turns networking on its ear. It freed us… it released us from the burden and the fear of attending events to “network” and places the focus on attending events to build friendships rather than to promote brands or make the pitch. Even better news…the communication skills we use to make friends are the skills we take with us to events and conferences. It’s sometimes hard to believe and even harder to accept but the vast majority of us has the necessary skills inside us already – the skill of making friends. So take some pressure off your next conference or social event and consider some of the following ideas:
Go to events to meet one person, not a crowd. Go prepared to smile and relax. If you’re uncomfortable walking into a place by yourself take a good friend - someone you really enjoy – your ‘event buddy.’ Then go with the sole purpose that together you’ll befriend someone who either looks interesting or looks like they could use a friend.
Attend events because you want to and you’re interested. Volunteer your time and help others because you feel moved. Be involved in activities that reflect your values and you’re automatically surrounded by people who share some common goals.
Don’t feel any pressure to talk about your service or businesses when you first meet someone instead concentrate on striking up something real. You’ll know when to talk about your business because that person will ask; “What do you do?” Then be gracefully short about your response, and get back to the business of building relationships. When you become genuinely interested in others people will sense this and will become more interested in you. Honestly, free yourself of the sales pitch because events are neither the time nor the place.
Focus your energy on talking about what others do and introducing people. This will get you out of the frantic I need your business so here’s my elevator pitch – which feels so fake! I mean think about it, how many people would say they didn’t need more business? Exactly… we’re all in the same boat so let’s just chill and enjoy the journey and friends make the journey worth while.
Building friendships is just plain good business. We all prefer to do business with people whom we know, like, and trust. When a client becomes a friend both parties are motivated to promote and do business with one another. Through social media we have a free stage to promote one another and that my friend is the power of the network in action. A network is the natural outcome of interconnected people and strongest when it’s based on friendships. I say ditch the pitch and the networking – throw them right out the window and go out there and be real and meet some other real people.
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