Successful Networking in 7 simple steps. Clare Dignall
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Название: Successful Networking in 7 simple steps

Автор: Clare Dignall

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Зарубежная деловая литература

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isbn: 9780007556793

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СКАЧАТЬ The contents of a business card How to plan networking effectively Tools that will help shape network planning How to become physically prepared for networking events

       Step 2

       NETWORK EFFECTIVELY ONLINE

       ‘Let’s get real about this. Connection is what humans crave.’ — Stephen Fry, Actor, Author, Presenter and Social Media Enthusiast

       Five ways to succeed

       Check your network’s social media updates every day.

       Keep your social media personal profile information up to date.

       Maintain your online brand consistently and with integrity.

       Customize all default social media invites.

       Be mindful of social media law.

       Five ways to fail

       Prioritize social media over face to face interaction.

       Use your personal Facebook page to do business networking.

       Post anything, whether business-related or not.

       Respond immediately to upsetting social media activity.

       Never meet social media contacts face to face.

      

      Networking relies on keeping all your important relationships in a state of health and good repair. It’s a time-consuming activity that needs planning and motivation, especially if your network is a growing one. To help manage large networks while still staying in touch, more and more business people are complementing traditional networking methods with the use of social media such as Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn® and others. Such sites offer simple ways of keeping in regular touch that take up little time and don’t cost money. They allow you to update your whole network, or a group within it, with what’s new in your world – all in a single action. Such ‘push updates’ can help keep your contacts to feel valued and up to date.

       What are the options?

      While there are hordes of social networking sites out there to choose from, three could be said to be the ‘big players’ – at least at the moment.

       Facebook

      You may be acquainted with Facebook, so we won’t go into any detail. For personal use, Facebook allows you to create your online profile, find and add other users as friends, post photos, send messages and join like-minded groups online. In this arena, its core premise is friendship or shared experience: it’s likely you’ll know, or at least have met, everyone you add as a friend on Facebook. For professional and business use Facebook is a flexible hub for contact details, product or services information, engaging content and interacting with clients. See www.facebook.com.

       LinkedIn®

      Presence on LinkedIn® is increasingly seen as a ‘must-have’ in the world of business. Users create a personal profile including their curriculum vitae, key skills and expertise, detailed work experience and more. Literally designed to extend and enhance the process of networking, registered users can invite anyone with whom they have some level of professional relationship to become a ‘connection’, effectively providing the user with a database of contacts and their specialist knowledge. Business people use it to stay in touch, stay abreast of the job market, or seek work. Employers use it to list jobs, search for, and check out potential candidates. By showing the user the connections of their connections, LinkedIn® also demonstrates opportunities for introductions through mutual contacts. See www.linkedin.com.

       Twitter

      Twitter is a social networking service whose core premise is that of ‘micro-blogging’, where users post and read messages or ‘Tweets’ of 140 characters or less. To receive Tweets, you must follow people or groups that interest you, whether they be friends, celebrities, brands, columnists, newspapers – or interesting strangers. Tweets are presented in a timeline, creating a concise and immediate digest of what’s happening in the world that interests you. Unlike Facebook, there’s no assumption that you need to know someone before following them. It is acceptable to follow, say, a celebrity, and open dialogue with them by replying to their Tweets. It is perhaps this lure of instant access to high-profile people that has been central to the ever-increasing popularity of Twitter. If you follow someone and they then choose to follow you, a further layer of communication is offered in the form of ‘direct messaging’ or the ‘DM’. These Tweets are not public, but can be exchanged between two parties who follow each other in addition to default public Tweets. See www.twitter.com.

       What are their intended audiences?

      LinkedIn® is strictly professional – the work-life you, always at your best; Facebook, though most used for personal updates, is increasingly being harnessed by people to profile their business or profession entirely distinct from their personal Facebook account. Twitter can be used judiciously to post updates that may appeal to both personal and professional contacts – you could think of it as ‘first-date you’ – the whole story, but at its best.

      

      We’ve identified the options, but what, in real terms, do you ‘do’ with social media? What functions can they carry out to enhance and extend your face to face networking?

       How should I use them?

      Looking СКАЧАТЬ