Be Visible and Valued

Wednesday, September 05, 2012 - by Anne Baber, Lynne Waymon

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To make yourself visible and valuable, join organizations where your peers and potential clients or employers congregate, like ASTD.  Be sure you avoid the biggest mistakes most people make.

  1. They join, but don't go. They show up so sporadically that they can't see many benefits from their membership.
  2. They skip the networking portion of the meeting, arrive just in time for the meal, and duck out just as the speaker is winding down. Then, they wonder why networking doesn't work for them.
  3. They appear, but don't interact. They eat another olive, listen to the speaker, and leave.
  4. They wait for others to make the first moves.
  5. They talk and sit with people they already know.
  6. They think handing out business cards is networking.
  7. They make no effort to be visible, instead they try to blend into the crowd.
  8. They arrive without any idea of what they have to give or what they want to get.
  9. They have "non-conversations" ("Hi, how are you?" "Not bad. How are you?" "Not bad. What's new?" "Not much. What's new with you?") with other members, rather than productive conversations. They violate "good networking" protocols or are unaware of "NETiquette" within the group.
  10. They forget that the best way to show their character and competence is to contribute time and energy.

 

Be Visible and Valued

Communities of Practice:   Career Development

Authored By:

  • Ann Baber headshot
    Anne Baber

    Anne Baber is co-founder of Contacts Count LLC, and a nationally known expert on building business relationships. She presents keynotes, workshops, and customized training programs for professional services firms, corporations, associations, and government agencies. Anne is co-author, with Lynne Waymon, of a dozen books, tapes, and networking and career aids. Their most recent book is Make Your Contacts Count.

  • Lynne Waymon
    Lynne Waymon is co-founder and CEO of Contacts Count LLC, an international training and consulting firm specializing in business and professional networking and is a thought leader on networking and collaboration, building social capital, career management, and presentation skills. With Anne Baber, Lynne is co-author of Make Your Contacts Count (NY, AMACOM, 2nd edition) and of the Networking Competency Assessment, which is used by individuals and organizations to test mastery of networking skills.