Susan 🐝 Rooks, The Grammar Goddess

7 years ago · 2 min. reading time · ~10 ·

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Networkers: Are You Guilty of "Premature Solicitation?"

Networkers: Are You Guilty of "Premature Solicitation?"

Brush Up on Your
American Grammar Skills

Grammar Goddess Communication
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aGBoFor about 30 years, networking has been the word “du jour” or “d’année.” Everyone who is anyone in business networks. And while social media is huge these days, many still love to be part of face-to-face events.

They're all networking.

Or so they think.



Back in the day, I thought I knew a lot about networking.

Before every event, I dutifully packed my business cards in my bag, determined to give every single one of them out.

I practised my "elevator speech," so I could command someone's attention and interest in ME immediately.

I prepared a bunch of examples to show how smart, capable, and worthy I was to be hired by the other person I was talking to.

It was all about me in those days.

And it didn't work very well.

Luckily others taught me the secret.

I learned to stop talking so much.

I learned to start listening a lot more.

It took a while, but I finally "got it."


I learned that networking wasn't all about me.

I learned to relax in the 1-2-1 meetings we all scheduled, and just go with it. Listen and talk. Get to know the other person without trying to sell anything I had, especially in the first meeting.

Savvy networkers know how valuable a 1-2-1 meeting can be as a way to find out about someone else, and even more important, they also know this: Building relationships is the first order of business.

People do business with people they knowlike, and trust.

Liking and trusting are huge parts of any relationship, so if you're not gaining what you want from your 1-2-1 meetings, see if anything below might help:

  • Go with the intent to listen, not to talk. Find out about the other person. Ask questions. Be interested. Be patient. Your time will come to talk about your business. Or it won't. But even if it doesn't, your reputation as a smart, worthy professional will be maintained. And that can lead to others wanting to talk to you -- about actually buying something!
  • Put your products, your brochures, your whatevers away. A 1-2-1 meeting is NOT a sales call. You are not there to sell. You're there to learn, to have a two-way conversation, to see how you can help each other. Give the other person room to ask questions about you, your service, your products. Talking business is fine. Selling is not, unless someone asks.
  • Find ways to help. What professions does that person have synergy with? Who can you introduce them to? How does that other person help others? What can you say or do that will help the other person do better in their business?

If you show genuine interest in the other person, you'll stand out as a business professional worth knowing. You'll be memorable for all the right reasons. You might even make a sale in the future!

Let me leave you with this quote from Dr. Ivan Misner, the founder of BNI, which is as true today as it was years ago:

Networking is not about hunting. It is about farming. It's about cultivating relationships. Don't engage in "premature solicitation." You'll be a better networker if you remember that.

Please share your thoughts on this.


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Thanks for taking the time to read this post. If you enjoyed it, I hope you will . . . 

Find it relevant and/or share it, so your connections can see it and perhaps learn too. 

Comment, so you can be seen by my connections. You never know who would be interested in YOU! (Ask Deb Helfrich how well it worked for her!) 

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My previous posts can be seen here, and they're easy to find because they're categorized. Just type in a word in the search box on the topic you're looking for and see everything I wrote on it.  

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Do the associates in your company look and sound as smart as they are? They would if they could take one of my Brush Up on Your Skills workshops right where they work. If your company hires outside experts to teach any topic to its associates, I would appreciate your sharing my posts and website with your Human Resources or Training Manager. 

Are you a member of an association or other group that is looking for a speaker for one of its meetings? There are many communication-based topics that I could talk about that would make for a lighthearted and interesting presentation. 


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Comments
#10
Thanks so much, @Barbara Henslee! I first heard it thanks to Dr. Ivan Misner's talk when he was the head of BNI, and I loved it! It was worth remembering, right?

Lance 🐝 Scoular

7 years ago #7

🐤🐳🏍
#4
Thanks, @Ryan Simmons! Was there anything specific that stood out for you?
#5
Thanks, Aaron Skogen! I'd been mulling it over for a few weeks ever since I recharged my networking batteries and went out to find a decent meeting to attend regularly. I got "trapped" by someone in a 121, but I didn't want to make it too personal because I was so afraid that person might read it . . . trust me, I will never buy anything that person sells, if only because I don't like him/her. And I know I did (and occasionally still do when I'm being dumb) come on a little bit too strong . . . it just doesn't work. Thanks for your comment!
#3
What's funny, Kevin Pashuk, is that I know Dr. Misner, having been a BNI director for over ten years. I'd heard that quote a long time ago, and I was hunting for one that would make sense in the article. Then I got lucky and found that specific one, and I knew I had to use it as the hook. I mean, really. Talk about a gift horse and all that!

Kevin Pashuk

7 years ago #3

What's the grammar term for when you use a word like 'premature' to hook in a reader? I don't know myself but can attest it works. Another great reminder that people aren't 'prospects', they are first and foremost people. Relational rules should trump the sales manual. Another delightful post by Susan Rooks

Laurent Boscherini

7 years ago #2

Thank you Susan Rooks for sharing your insightful consistency, always uplifting with your amazing fancy sabor to make me smile and learn new things.
@Laurent Boscherini! Thanks so much for sharing my post! I appreciate your taking the time.

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