Does your network need insuring?

Strategic networks are built on relationships, but what type of networker are you?

Hospitality

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There is no escaping the fact that the word ‘networking’ has a dirty connotation in business. In my opinion, this is because most people have been taught the wrong way to network or not been taught at all! It is an expectation of each role in some capacity or another, but unfortunately most people fear, dread, or simply avoid it. Worse still are those who feel forced to network and put on a different persona to help them cope, making them quite awkward and sometimes even fake versions of themselves – never nice to meet!
 
The financial services industry is one of the most networked, but the last few years have seen the gaps widen and the pressure increase. Having worked closely with some of the market’s biggest banks, insurers, mortgage brokers and financial planners, I know only too well how vital relationships are to success. The good news is: by taking a look at how you network and by making changes to be more strategic, you can increase your influence and operate in stronger networks.
 
Let’s define strategic networking by outlining what it’s NOT:

  • It’s not just having 500+ friends on a social networking site
  • It’s not getting as many business cards as you can at a social or business gathering
  • It’s not about knowing lots of people and wanting to have coffee with all of them
  • It’s not simply wining and dining clients or prospects through expensive hospitality

 
It IS about:

  • Planning and establishing key connections
  • Knowing the right people – and knowing them well
  • Building a set of quality two-way relationships – and not simply collecting a large quantity of connections
  • Becoming a trusted ally of your connections and becoming a hub – the ‘go to’ person in a network

 
Are you and your organization relationship-focused?
The highest-performing companies worldwide are differentiated by their ability to attract, leverage and retain relationships. Networks are more than just your customers; attention must also be given to shareholders, partners, industry, the community, and employees.
 
The questions to consider are:

  • Is there a gap between your intention and how you are perceived in your relationships?
  • How conscious or deliberate are you at creating a network that is aligned to your role?
  • How conscious or deliberate are you at managing a network so that it benefits you and those in it?

 
Networks are powerful and relationships are important. Combine these two things with thought to the future and you have strategic networks – a strong set of relationships which can deliver mutual value to those involved. Built and maintained with care, strategic networks can then go to the next level, allowing you to potentially leverage the power of other people’s networks.
 
What type of networker are you?
Given that we all network in some capacity, it pays to look at how you do this and if it is working. Unfortunately, many people have been taught the wrong skills and may spend a considerable amount of time and effort with no return. On the flip side, we all know someone who is a ‘born’ networker as well.
 
Start by identifying where you fit and then look at the steps you can take to improve:
 
Strategic
This group is the rare few who have invested in two-way reciprocal relationships. Influence, visibility and communication are strong.
 
Involved
This group is active and often has quite big networks. They can lack focus, which impacts the quality and outcomes from their network.
 
Accidental
This group doesn’t really think too much about networking but may be in the right place at the right time, so get occasional rewards from it.
 
Misguided
This group exhibits incorrect skills, and often they are detrimental to relationship building eg, pronounced card collectors
 
Benefits of a strategic network
There is a growing body of research that correlates the importance of relationships with business outcomes. Let’s face it, every time you interact with someone (potentially new or existing to your network) you can either build or lose credibility. The approach you take directly impacts the quality of the networks at your disposal.
 
A strategic network will give you access to people with knowledge and authority. As you build relationships with these people, you will build your own knowledge and also gain authority by association.

A strategic network will deliver you introductions, referrals and endorsements which will lift you above the commodity debate. But you’ll need to deliver real value.

A strategic network will help build your personal brand and allow you to be introduced as an authority, someone who delivers on commitments, as someone worthy of doing business with.
 
In today’s ever-changing world, this is the best insurance against the winds of change any individual can invest in. Your very livelihood depends not only on what you know – but who you know, who knows you, and even more importantly, who is promoting you.
 
This is a slightly amended version of an article written by Julia Palmer, networking strategist and chief executive of the Business Networking Academy. It has been shortened to make it suitable for web publishing.

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