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Networking – 10 Do's and Don'ts Reading

The following are the 10 Do's and 10 Don'ts for business management. Read on and know more about business networking.

Maple Media Ltd
0118 9261669
411 Wokingham Road
Reading
World Advertising Research Centre
01491 411000
Farm Road
Henley On Thames
Claremont House
0118 9773912
Bearwood College
Wokingham
Townsend Group Ltd
0118 9472008
Unit 4B Paddock Road
Reading
Cooney & Bains Holdings Ltd
01235 831100
Kings Wharf
Reading
Interactive Advertising Ltd
0118 9773763
30 Greenacres Avenue
Wokingham
M R James Ltd
01628 823645
5 Honey Lane
Maidenhead
Energies In Action
0118 9796833
31 Shefford Crescent
Wokingham
Blue Banana
0118 9572846
193-195 Cardiff Road
Reading
Tma
01491 415500
Remenham Hill
Henley On Thames
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Networking – 10 Do's and Don'ts

10 Do’s and Don’ts of Networking

DO

  1. Have a plan for networking and stick to it.
  2. Ask for a business card when you meet someone new, and always carry lots of your own cards.
  3. Think through what you will say when someone asks the question – ‘Well, what do you do then’ or ‘Who do you work for.’
  4. Develop a healthy interest in other people’s businesses, ask lots of questions and keep abreast of what’s going on in the world in general. People like to talk to others with shared knowledge and interests.
  5. Keep in touch with your network – but not in a forced way. They need a gentle reminder that you exist but a phone call to say ‘Oh – I just thought I’d give you a call’ is very unlikely to be successful. Instead keep yourself abreast of business issues that might affect people in your network, send them articles that might be of interest to them and point them to websites (especially your own) that contain things that contain helpful information.
DON’T
  1. Network with the wrong type of people – this is quite difficult to determine, especially when you first start out. Some people only want to talk about themselves or their business, never a good sign. We all know people who are really not reliable – no matter how much we like them we’d be reluctant to refer them to others.
  2. Lose touch with contacts.
  3. Flood your network with useless information, nagging phone calls or irrelevant facts.
  4. Spend all your time, with members of your network, talking about yourself or your business.
  5. Give up. Networking like anything else is about patience and persistence. Just because you don’t get any business from a member of your network over the first month or so of contact don’t stop networking with them.

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