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How to master face-to-face networking: Part two

Last week I gave you some things to do at face-to-face networking events. This week a list of some of the don’ts, compiled from my own experience plus advice from my personal learning network – otherwise known as the internet.   1. Can your canned pitch   Don’t use a pre-rehearsed pitch to start the […]
Linnet Hunter

Last week I gave you some things to do at face-to-face networking events. This week a list of some of the don’ts, compiled from my own experience plus advice from my personal learning network – otherwise known as the internet.

 

1. Can your canned pitch

 

Don’t use a pre-rehearsed pitch to start the conversation at gatherings. Most likely it will hit the wrong nerve and be unsuited to what the other person wants to know.

 

My colleague, Matt Church, has developed a brilliant nine-step matrix for this, and I recommend it.

 

His positioning statement has worked wonders for my confidence in being authentic and getting my message across simply and without being pushy. Go to mattchurch.com to find out more about it.

 

2. Don’t forget to balance your business and personal lives

 

Don’t be all business, but similarly don’t get too personal. Talking about your personal problems or what you hated about the job you left to go solo will make an impression, but not the right one.

 

Another way to turn someone off quick smart is spruiking your business in the first line of conversation; so much better to start with something innocuous about the room, the food or the speaker.

 

3. Don’t run out of business cards

 

Don’t run out of business cards. Have them handy, but not in your hand, and ready to give out when invited, and not before.

 

Nothing looks worse than scrabbling around in the bottom of your handbag or jacket pocket to dredge up a creased or smeared card – not that this would ever happen to me (hem hem).

 

Don’t give them out willy-nilly either – it’s just not done. If your conversation has been fruitful, people will ask for your details.

 

4. Don’t spam your business network

 

Don’t use other people’s business cards or details you collect at these events to build your newsletter database.

 

If you think from the course of the conversation that the other person might be interested in the content of your newsletter or blog, ask them if they would like to subscribe or if they would prefer you to add them, noting that they can unsubscribe at any time.

 

Place a tick on their business card to remind you if they say yes, and otherwise accept their no with a thank you.

 

5. Don’t be shy

 

Easier said than done, but if you only talk to people you already know you are wasting a great opportunity.

 

Putting yourself out there requires a certain bravado. One tip is to look at the way you are talking about the experience to yourself.

 

Do you see it as a lion pit? A trial? A job interview or a battle of wits?

 

If so, you may want to reframe the experience by reframing the language.

 

If you think of it as a sharing of experience, a conversation for possibility, a chance to share your offer or an interlude away from solo solitude, it may just feel that bit easier to do.

 

Get out there and go for it – I know you can do it!