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Networking For Dummies: 10 tips for starting business relationships that last

Whether you work for yourself or are growing a studio, if you don鈥檛 master networking, progress will be hard going. But if you can strike up a relationship from a standing start, prosperity will naturally follow.

Image licensed via Adobe Stock

Image licensed via Adobe Stock

Ben Kench - author of , the UK鈥檚 bestselling book on sales technique - let me in on a few top tips for meeting people and being remembered. To become a networking don, always remember Ben's top ten tips.

1. The game鈥檚 hard enough, without beating yourself up

If you tell yourself, 'oh I鈥檓 no good at this, networking is purgatory on earth,' it鈥檒l show on your face and in your body language. Tension repels friendship; who wants a tense new friend? No, you want a relaxed friend who feels good to be around.

Ben Kench says: "If you look around the room and see someone relaxed and visibly enjoying the network, and you think, 'oh I could never be like that,' then you probably never will. If you take the attitude, 鈥榠f they can do it, so can I, they鈥檙e just a bit more experienced than me, I can learn the ropes soon enough鈥 - then you鈥檙e well on the way to being more comfortable talking to strangers."

2. If you鈥檙e nervous, get there early

The last thing a nervous networker wants is to do walk into a room that鈥檚 already hopping with noise and energy. If you get there early, you can make the room, rather than feeling you鈥檙e having to infiltrate it.

Ben Kench: 鈥淏e an active host, even when you鈥檙e not the official host. Stand near the entrance, say hello to people when they walk in, point them in the direction of the coffee bar or the cloakroom or toilets. This sort of 鈥榤arshalling鈥 establishes you like a friendly, helpful person and sets you up as one of the 鈥榝aces鈥 in the room. This means people will gravitate back you later on, as if they already know you.鈥

3. Be a sharp badger

Practice being eagle-eyed on the delegate badges, even when it鈥檚 a moving target dangling from a lanyard; being quick on the uptake will reap the rewards when you鈥檙e attempting to make friends.

BK: 鈥淭ell yourself this truth: my best friend was once a stranger. If you approach a friend, they鈥檙e more likely to become a friend. So by spotting the name on their badge, I can say 鈥楬i Glenn, how are you doing?鈥 like I already know you, and it puts the other person at ease. Most people do like talking; they find it hard getting started.鈥

4. Positioning & props

Finding the ideal starting position opens up a world of possibilities because sparks of inspiration for opening gambits come much easier if you鈥檙e stood somewhere with ready-made common ground.

BK: 鈥淚f you鈥檙e stood near the coffee, or in a canap茅 hotspot, then you can catch someone鈥檚 eye and say something casual like, 鈥榬eally need the caffeine today, it鈥檚 so hectic in here鈥 or 鈥榯hese canap茅s are great. I would shake your hand, but my fingers are all sticky鈥 - anything that鈥檚 a bit quirky would be a good start. Provided your hands aren鈥檛 too sticky, offer a handshake with a sunny hello, good eye contact and introduce yourself by your first name 鈥 sounds basic, but it鈥檚 easy to get wrong.

鈥淚f you鈥檙e manning an exhibition stand, it鈥檚 wise not to stand right in front of it. Much better to park yourself close by, and keep a watchful eye out. That way, you don鈥檛 have the perennial problem of people shuffling past avoiding eye contact, trying their utmost not to get sold to. If you stand nearby, anyone lingering in front of your stand, you can bounce over and say hello.鈥

5. People first, business maybe

Forget putting pressure on yourself to tout your wares. The best thing you can do is be interesting and interested.

BK: 鈥淲hen you鈥檙e off to a network, get prepared to talk to people. Have some stories. Know the latest news, both in your industry and more generally. Keep an eye out for the lighter, funnier stories; recounting these is more likely to make an impact than waffling on about your business. Be prepared to talk about yourself, but mention your work briefly and passionately, then take the conversation elsewhere. Friends first, pitches later.

鈥淔orget about selling: that shouldn鈥檛 be your objective. Networking isn鈥檛 a job interview. Set yourself the task of trying to learn something from everyone you meet. That鈥檒l be much more natural than trying to find angles to big yourself up. Getting a chance to play teacher makes people feel wise, which makes them good about themselves - and people who make you feel good are the ones you want to talk to again. Go into each encounter with an enquiring mind and a strict policy of actually listening, not just waiting for your turn to pitch鈥sk intelligent questions, ones which expand the discussion and unlock more knowledge. You want to make the person you鈥檙e talking to feel like they鈥檙e the singular person you鈥檙e interested in, in the whole venue. And for the time you鈥檙e with them, make sure that rings true.鈥

6. Give and serve

One of the best ways to make friends at conferences and meetups is to make yourself useful.

BK: 鈥淗aving something to give away will make you stand out. Whether it鈥檚 a physical thing, or some knowledge, like statistics or a report, or just a great piece of online content you know about and can offer to share. If you can make an offer to add a little bit of value for nothing, you鈥檝e got an excuse to get in touch, and you鈥檒l be received positively, and remembered as someone who isn鈥檛 grab-grab-grab, but someone who gives first and puts people and relationships first. These are the sorts of people that businesses want around, so give without expectation of reciprocation, and you might be surprised what comes back.鈥

7. Make sure your cards are the business

Business cards are an area where many SMEs and freelancers are missing a trick, through naivety and lack of effort. Ben Kench collects thousands of peoples鈥 cards in a year, so he knows what it takes to come out on top of the pile.

BK: 鈥淎n unusual, informative business card is a powerful ally. So many people鈥檚 cards are an abject disaster, having a good one will get you remembered. Think about it: someone goes home with a pocketful of cards, and when they shuffle through them, if yours is a bit different, their mind will race back to the conversation they enjoyed with you. I鈥檇 recommend putting a picture of you on there, especially for freelancers, when it鈥檚 yourself that you鈥檙e selling. Any way you can, make your card stand out - perhaps a joke or a cartoon or even a quiz - is well worth the extra creative and financial investment. A quirky business card will also keep the conversation moving through those early tentative moments, and might even make the moment that properly melts the ice.

鈥淚鈥檇 also advise using a one-way system for business cards - and if you鈥檙e collecting a lot of them, a method of sorting them on the spot, to save precious time after the event. I keep my cards in my jacket pocket, and the ones I receive, if I feel there鈥檚 some spark of connection with the person, their card goes in one trouser pocket, if not so much, then the other. But I would still follow up both piles nonetheless because you never know鈥︹

8. Diplomatic exits for dummies

Not everyone is going to be a barrel of insights and a right good giggle. If you鈥檙e a frequent flyer on the networking scene, you鈥檙e going to get stuck with the occasional droning bore.

BK: 鈥淚f you鈥檙e stuck talking to someone you feel no connection to, and you don鈥檛 want to do business with, there will come the point when you need to back away gracefully. You can do this by offering to help them find someone more appropriate to talk to. Asking who they came to see - or if they know anyone else here - will send out the message it鈥檚 time to move on. If they don鈥檛 take the hint, you鈥檝e got two options. Ask again, and walk them to their person of choice, or say 鈥渨e鈥檙e here to network, and it鈥檚 rude of me to hog you - bye.鈥

9. If you don鈥檛 follow up, it wasn鈥檛 worth going

If you鈥檙e offended by rude words, look away now.

BK: "When I coach on networking, I preach the mantra, FUK IT. It鈥檚 an acronym borrowed from a very good friend of mine, Will Kintish that stands for follow up, keep in touch - this is the real lifeblood of networking. Following up is where relationships are forged. If you don鈥檛 follow up, you shouldn鈥檛 bother going to networking functions. But if you keep in touch, sending roughly five 鈥榯ouches鈥 over six months, the next time you bump into the person, the interaction will be like you know them. If there鈥檚 been an obvious conversation, something you鈥檝e got to share or want to learn more about, follow up on that. The others, send them an email telling them you鈥檙e not going to bombard them, but you鈥檇 like to send them some stuff once in a while.鈥

10. Do you want a good newsletter or a bad newsletter?

Keeping in touch means moving from the physical to the virtual world, but the same principles still apply.

BK: "Some of the 鈥榝ive touches鈥 will involve sending a newsletter. It鈥檚 essential to make sure yours is worth reading. Content marketing is all the rage, and it鈥檚 about not being pitchy, instead of giving away something that people will value, in the hope that they鈥檒l ask for more. So make your newsletter enjoyable in and of itself - industry news, opinion pieces, a calendar of events that you鈥檙e going to be attending. As always, try and be fresh and a bit original.

鈥淵ou鈥檙e going to be following people on Twitter and hooking up on LinkedIn too, so remember the golden rules again. Ask good searching questions, and be prepared to take responsibility for being interesting - you鈥檙e not going to enhance relationships if all you do is talk about yourself and your business."

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