So you want to significantly
increase your personal productivity and success in all areas of your life? You
can go it alone or enjoy the help of others.
Networking is a major Time
Management tool helping us to learn from others, getting introductions more
easily, and saving precious resources of time and money in the process. I have
accumulated five “Neat Networking” suggestions that might help.
1. Make the List. There
is power in writing things down rather than trying to remember everyone you
know. I use a software contacts program to help. Who do you include? Everyone.
Everyone you know, everyone you have met. Don’t just copy the white pages from
your local telephone directory. “Contact” means you have had “contact.” Add
everyone to the database. Leave no one out. Include name, address, and
contacting information. The average person can easily come up with an initial
list of over 1,000 contacts. Sounds unlikely? Start with your family, then your
neighbors, and co-workers. How about the co-workers from your last job(s)? Your
high school and college graduating classes and the teachers you had. You belong
to a professional association, a club, a church? The bank teller, your dentist,
your bookie, they all go on the list.
2. Categorize the List. This
is when a contacts software program is really useful. Identify those who are
friends, those who are acquaintances, customers, suppliers, politicians,
professionals, or those who enjoy golf or tennis. The more categories you can
place people in, the quicker you can access the right contacts. Through my
database, there is not a problem I cannot get answered for myself and those
whom I want to help.
3. Feed the List. Once
you create the list you have to continue to feed it. Update, correct, and add
more and more people as you meet them. We probably meet dozens of new people
every week. My database has grown to over 4,000 now. I spend about an hour
every Friday to feed my list. It’s a chore. It’s not convenient but it’s worth
it.
4. To
Have a Friend, Be a Friend.
Here’s how you make all this data work for you. Networking is not a selfish
technique. If you want this tool to work, you have to be like a good
Congressman. You do things for people. You help them first. I’m always clipping
articles I come across and sending them to people I know. I send a lot of
birthday cards. I call the majority of the people in my database at least once
a year to talk about them, how they are doing, what they may need that I can
provide for them. Then when it comes around “election time,” when I need
something, I feel no hesitation to ask for a return favor.
5. Use
it. Whenever I start anything, a new marketing
program, a career move, buying a house or a car, I think of my network first
and talk to those in my database who may be able to give me some answers. I
have saved tons of time and money and advanced my success in so many ways by
tapping into my Network database first.
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