Networking and Manners
By brendan at 9 September, 2009, 1:04 pm
Last week I met with a woman who facilitates cultural change within large enterprises. The discussion was around business development for sole practitioners, plus a small Joomla based website that we were deploying for her to manage some communications issues. She had realised that her client base was starting to thin out a little whilst she was distracted working on a large project for 12 months, and consequently needed to give things a push along. Since her offering is what I would call “soft” she needed to get some new relationships happening (as compared to spending her bucks on SEO for her website).
Because of this, I decided to connect her up with another woman I had been dealing with recently who worked in a similar field. My thinking was that there were some potential synergies and I was amused by the fact that they both had man’s names so there was a potential surprise for both of them.
My email went like this:
Hi X &Y.
1. I like both of you, and am working with both of you.
2. You are both sole practitioners operating in similar areas.
3. I think you should meet / have coffee / see if there are any synergies.
X is in Inner West, Y is in Inner East. Ball is in your court.
X’s Contact Details
Y’s Contact details
Cheers
Brendan
I do this kind of connecting at least once a week as I am a big believer in paying it forward. Sometimes I even do it on demand, but only if asked nicely, as per this great HBR article . An interesting side effect of me doing this connecting is I get an almost instant insight into the character of people. From some people I get an immediate thank you, a note that lets me know whether contact is being made and another downstream to let me know if there is any outcomes from the connection. From others I get silence, then usually an email two months later asking for the contact details again. So guess who I feel obliged to help out and will connect up again?
Just a reminder in a time of social media and personal brand, that manners matter. And its difficult to measure opportunities lost, when you never knew they existed.
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