networking - ugent doctorate schools 5 february 2015
TRANSCRIPT
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What DON’T you like about networking?
• You can't be yourself
• It's forcing yourself upon others
• Only for loudmouths
• I hate selling myself
• The really important people don't come and/or don't care.
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• Personality (IN)
– Your work, interests
– Your communication preferences
– What you believe and value
• Being able to communicate, market (OUT)
– Being able to start, carry and finish conversations
– Presenting oneself
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How I DON’T network…
• Receptions every night.
• ‘Working the room’.
• Talking to stranger after stranger
• Advertising my services.
• Spamming my business card.
• Sending friendship requests to strangers.
• Busting into conversations and taking over.
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How I network
• Organise my own events, and speak at events.
• Publish regularly: blog, e-books, newsletter
• Ask my best clients to recommend me.
• Proactive with leads and information.
• Know who I am and what I stand for.
• More and more selective in my contacts.
• Don’t try to please others.
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How TOM networks
• Dislikes ‘events’, he prefers insider gatherings.
• He doesn’t do Facebook let alone Twitter, or receptions, or calls.
• Knows few people, very well.
• They’ll do anything for him, includingrecommending him to everyone they know.
• Pleasant and accommodating.
• Has a hard time stopping conversations.
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Introverted – Extraverted
• Preference and energy; not behaviour
• Extraverted
– Group talk
– Needs attention and social time
– Speaking > Listening
• Introverted
– One on one talk
– Needs time alone to think, and recharge batteries
– Listening > Speaking
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Other Networking Styles
• Push - Pull
• Organising - Attending
• Deep - Broad
• Hoarding – Cutting
• Formal – Informal
• Specialist – Generalist
• Offline – Online
• …
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Ball’s Value Axiom
Value <> Networking effort
• Creating Value: Fun – Content – Power
• Situational – Positional
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Creating Situational Value (1)
Sell yourself and others
• Elevator pitch
– Don’t try to be complete
– Be memorable & ‘juicy’
– Newspaper article: roll it out
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Ball’s Vision Axiom
Decision
Vision
Energy
Attraction
Network
• Weak vision = weak network
– “See what happens” = “I’ll take whomever”
– “THIS is what I want”= “I want YOU!”
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“Finish my doctorate” is just planning, NOT a vision!
People connect to and buy vision, not planning.
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Question Time
VISION – Who cares? Who/What am I doing itfor? What’s the eventual use of this?
ACTION/PLANNING – What’s the first concrete step towards my vision? Which difficulttask/decision should I tackle now?
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Define your vision
• My vision is that one day people will(values/benefits) have all the food they need
• My vision is that one day (metaphor) the world will be a full and healthy orchard
• My vision is that one day XXX will betransformed into YYY. Energy into dinner
• My vision is that one day (specific example) everyone will have a food converter.
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My vision: I want to play a role in how peopleadapt to new ways of working and living.
How?
By training and coaching them in a personalised, concrete way.
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Ball’s Purpose Axiom
• Talking to strangers is uncomfortable foreveryone, yet people do it all the time – why?
PURPOSE
• Everyone has it, no-one talks about it
• Great networkers make use of it
• Creating purpose is about giving yourselfpermission to be relevant.
– Ex. Ask for a pen, the way to the food…
– Ex. Having a common goal, interest…
– Ex. Sharing something valuable, funny, interesting
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The Axiom of Purpose: How To Use It.
• Forget about your own fears and needs.
• Give yourself permission to be useful andrelevant.
• Think: “What do these people need?”
• Think: “What can I do to help them?”
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What can you GIVE RIGHT NOW?
• Be Useful
– Organise things: drinks&food, coats, welcome…
– Introduce people to each other.
– Share your knowledge and insight.
– Give stuff away.
• Be Likeable (think Carnegie)
– Remember names and greet people you know.
– AND greet people you don’t know
– Be interested.
– Learn to speak in group (eye contact, body…)
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Thank you!
www.yourcoach.be/en/