Networking Information

The 7 Habits of Highly Horrible Networkers


Networking is a term that didn't exist (academically) until almost 40 years ago. It's a word uttered in and around the business world every day, yet is unclear to most as to how it actually works. Still, it's a fundamental tool to the success of any business.

By definition, the term networking is the development and maintenance of mutually valuable relationships. It's not schmoozing; it's not just handing out business cards, selling, marketing or small talk. Those activities are part of networking, but unfortunately, many people's misunderstanding of the term causes them network ineffectively.

The following are The 7 Habits of Highly Horrible Networkers?, and they can stand in the in your way of developing mutually valuable relationships. So, next time you attend your Chamber or Association meeting, keep these ideas in mind so you can offer the most value to your fellow networkers.

Habit #1: Attitude
Much like the development of any skill, networking begins with attitude. Unfortunately, Highly Horrible Networkers have the wrong attitude. If you've ever attended a networking function before, perhaps you've encountered businesspeople who act in the following ways:

  • The hard sell - they believe networking is about one thing and one thing only: selling products and services to everyone in the room.

  • Business only - they're not there to make friends. They're not there to have fun. And they're certainly not interested in developing mutually valuable relationships.

  • It's all about me - they don't take the time to help and share with others, but rather focus on their own needs. In other words, they can't spell "N-E-T-W-O-R-K-I-N-G" without "I."

    Attitude is fundamental to effective networking. In fact, it's the most important habit to understand.

    Habit #2: Dig Your Well WHEN You're Thirsty
    One of my favorite networking books is called Dig Your Well Before You're Thirsty, by Harvey McKay. It's probably the most well known text on this subject. The key to McKay's work is making your friends, establishing contacts and developing relationships - before you need them. Getting what you want by helping others get what they want first.

    Enter the Highly Horrible Networkers, who only network because:

    a) They need new customers
    b) They have a new product or service to sell
    c) Their boss forced them to do so

    Take my friend Lawrence, for example. He's quite successful in the insurance business; however he recently approached me about using networking to obtain some hot leads.

    "My numbers are down. My boss is on my back. I gotta get out there and start networking?or else! What do you suggest?"

    "Networking takes time," I explained, "and you can't expect to come into loads of business or dozens of potential clients without developing the relationships first."

    As you already learned, networking is the development and maintenance of mutually valuable relationships?over time. If you try to dig your well WHEN you're thirsty, you may never find a drink.

    Habit #3: Dealin' the Deck
    Habit #3 is a dangerous one, and it happens all the time. Have you ever seen people distribute 173 of their business cards during the first 5 minutes of the event? They move as quickly as possible from one person to the next. They don't make eye contact, they don't ask to exchange cards - they just deal them out.

    "Here's my card, call me if you need a designer! See ya later."

    "But?I?never even got your name!" you muse.

    This is guaranteed to make people feel puny and insignificant. Notice these Highly Horrible Networkers don't spend time actually meeting and establishing rapport with new people; but rather concentrate on giving out as many cards as possible. It's quantity over quality, right?

    Wrong.

    Dealin' the Deck is one of the most common networking pet peeves. Whenever I give my program The Habits of Highly Horrible Networkers?, I walk out into the audience for a quick demonstration of this habit. I grab a stack of business cards and quickly jump from table to table tossing out dozens of them without as much looking at the audience members I'm handing them to.

    Unfortunately during one speech, it backfired.

    Literally.

    Last year, I was demonstrating Highly Horrible Habit #3 when speaking at a local business meeting. While hopping from table to table as dozens of cards flew through the air and into people's laps and salads, someone yelled out, "Oh my God!"

    I stopped dead in my tracks. I looked back at the head table and noticed that one of my cards landed in the centerpiece?

    ?which was a candle!

    MY BUSINESS CARD WAS ON FIRE!!

    I threw down the microphone, lunged at the table and snatched the burning business card from the candle! As I toppled over the chair in front of me I yelled something to the effect of "Oh my God!" shook the flames off my half burnt card and regained my balance to a roaring applause/laughter from the audience.

    "And?uh?this just goes to show you ladies and gentleman," I fumbled, "When you deal the deck of business cards without eye contact or consideration?uh?people may as well set them on fire - because they're not going to read them anyway!"

    Whew! Nice save, huh? Yeah well, that client did NOT invite me back the following year.

    Habit #4: Unprofessional Information
    It's remarkable how often some business cards will contain unprofessional information. Have you ever received someone's card with one of those ambiguous, offensive and questionable email addresses with AOL, Hotmail or Yahoo? Not only are those email servers frustrating and ineffective for business communication, but just imagine how it looks when someone has to send business emails to:

  • HotLips98@aol.com
  • KaylasMommyRules@yahoo.com
  • Isellcars2U@hotmail.com

    I have nothing against AOL, Hotmail or Yahoo. But if possible, always send and receive emails using the address of your organization's website, i.e., scott@hellomynameisscott.com. If you must use free servers like MSN, SBC and the like, choose a simple username that doesn't question your professionalism, i.e., jackgateman@yahoo.com.

    Habit #4: Sit with the Wrong Company
    I'll never forget my first Chamber meeting. One afternoon I sat down with 6 other local businesspeople for our monthly networking lunch. Naturally, the first thing I did was look at everyone's nametags. (Not only to learn their names but to examine the effectiveness of their nametags' design and placement.)

    But these were the nametags I saw: ADM Financial, ADM Financial, ADM Financial, ADM Financial, ADM Financial, ADM Financial, Scott. (Company name changed to protect the victims.)

    Highly Horrible networkers not only attend meetings with their friends and/or coworkers, but they talk and sit with them the entire time! These are people with whom they've worked 5 days a week, 8 hours a day for the past 3 years! This is not a good technique to maximize your company's visibility.

    This habit creates an elitist, unfriendly attitude. And think how uncomfortable this makes the one or two people sitting at the table who don't work for that company! It's unfair to them because they're unable to meet a diverse group of people with whom to develop mutually valuable relationships! Remember: If you're sitting with YOUR company - you're sitting with the WRONG company.

    Habit #6: Small Talk is for Suckers
    Highly Horrible Networkers forget about the small talk. It's a waste of their time. They don't ask or answer about "New and exciting things happening at work" or "How Thanksgiving was," they simply jump right into (what they believe to be) the most important part of the discussion: selling 17 of their products before the salad arrives.

    Has this ever happened to you? For example, has someone ever introduced themselves, breezed right through the conversation and flat out asked you for a referral?

    Refer you? I don't even know you!

    Reciprocating self-disclosure is the most effective way to build rapport and ultimately develop trust. The people you want to do business with are those with whom you have built that rapport and trust. So, small talk is not for suckers. Debra Fine, author of The Fine Art of Small Talk put it best when she said: "Small talk is the biggest talk we do."

    Habit #7: Limitations
    Finally, Highly Horrible Networkers believe there is only one specific time and place for networking. It's called "A Room with A Sign Posted Outside That Says So." In other words, they only network when someone forces them to. They don't believe networking opportunities in places like elevators, busses, supermarkets or parks.

    That's it? A measly half hour for networking? Doesn't give you much time, does it?

    The truth about networking is that it can happen anytime, anywhere. There is a time and a place for networking - it's called ANY time, and ANY place.

    © 2005 All Rights Reserved.

    Scott Ginsberg is a professional speaker, "The World's Foremost Expert on Nametags" and the author of HELLO my name is Scott and The Power of Approachability. He helps people MAXIMIZE their approachability and become UNFORGETTABLE communicators - one conversation at a time. For more information contact Front Porch Productions at http://www.hellomynameisscott.com.


    MORE RESOURCES:

    Meeting / networking, week of May 19
    Newsday, NY - 20 hours ago
    Business referral and networking group-- Commack: Business owners looking to grow through qualified referrals are encouraged to attend, sponsored by ...


    Rolling Review: Layer 7 SecureSpan XML Networking Gateway
    InformationWeek, NY - 16 hours ago
    By Erik Pieczkowski CLAIM: Layer 7's SecureSpan XML Networking Gateway is a hardware-accelerated XML firewall and service gateway. ...


    TopNews

    Vodafone Acquires Social-Networking Platform Company
    New York Times, United States - May 16, 2008
    By MIKAEL RICKNÄS, IDG News Service\Stockholm bureau, IDG Vodafone is acquiring ZYB, a Danish company that has developed a social networking and online ...
    Vodafone to buy Danish-based social networking site for mobile users TelecomTiger
    Vodafone moves in Mobile Social networking with ZYB acquisition ITProPortal
    Vodafone to buy online social networking site for £25m Mobile Today
    Economic Times - GigaOm
    all 45 news articles


    Broadcasting & Cable

    Comcast Buys Social-Networking Site Plaxo
    TheStreet.com - May 15, 2008
    Comcast CMCSA will acquire social networking site Plaxo in a move aimed at unifying social media across the Internet and television. ...
    Comcast buys social networking site Plaxo Bizjournals.com
    Comcast to Buy Plaxo for Social Networking PC World
    Comcast To Acquire Plaxo, Add Social Networking To TV Mediapost.com
    ZDNet - Forbes
    all 225 news articles


    The top 10 social networking annoyances
    ITworld.com, MA - May 16, 2008
    For some folks, social networking sites such as Facebook and MySpace seem nearly as indispensable as e-mail, but creating and maintaining these virtual ...


    myfoxny.com

    NJ sex offenders charged for MySpace, Facebook use
    The Associated Press - 20 hours ago
    MOUNT LAUREL, NJ (AP) — Three convicted sex offenders have been arrested for surfing social networking Web sites and are believed to be the first charged ...
    Sex offender on MySpace, say officials Gloucester County Times - NJ.com
    Three sex offenders arrested for trolling forbidden websites The Star-Ledger - NJ.com
    Three Sex Offenders Caught on Facebook and MySpace eFluxMedia
    New York Post - Asbury Park Press
    all 103 news articles


    Google Shakes Up Social Networking
    Motley Fool - May 14, 2008
    By Anders Bylund May 14, 2008 Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) is chasing the social-networking opportunity, very much in the spirit of its corporate tenets. ...
    Professionals, politicians tap social-networking Web sites MLive.com
    Google offers to imbue all websites with social networking AFP
    Google 'Salts' Web With Social Networking Red Herring
    guardian.co.uk - Bizjournals.com
    all 462 news articles


    MEF launches localised mobile social networking scheme
    Telecom Paper (subscription), Netherlands - May 16, 2008
    The Mobile Entertainment Forum (MEF) has unveiled the next stage if its mobile social networking initiative launching simultaneously in France, India, ...


    SkillWho.com Launches Networking Site to Share and Find Skills and ...
    PR-CANADA.net (press release), Montenegro - 4 minutes ago
    Today SkillWho.com officially launched an innovative new Web 2.0 networking site (see www.skillwho.com). The site enables members to share all their skills, ...


    Employers using networking sites to check on prospective hires
    9NEWS.com, CO - 4 hours ago
    McNeeley says many employers have become wise to the world of social networking. "We're finding that a lot of people who are interviewing are Google-ing ...

    Networking - Google News

  • home | site map
    © 2006