Business Management articles: tips, advice, ideas, strategies & solutions
Follow us at

Subscribe to our Business Management Articles Feeds


Feeds

What's this?

Home > Business Management

Social Networking and Face-to-Face Marketing

Tweet This
thumb it up Barry Siskind
In a recent issue of Trade Show Executive, I read an interesting article about Magic Stick, the winner of the TSE 2009 Innovation Award. Magic Stick is a small gadget, about the size of a computer memory stick that you carry with you. When you see someone also carrying a Magic Stick you can electronically exchange contact information. You each aim, push a button and voila you are networked.
Welcome to the age of High-Tech social networking whose first victims may very well be the handshake and a business card.

Twitter, Facebook, Web 2.0, SecondLife, LinkedIn, Flickr, LibraryThing, Ning, Jaiku, EventPeeps, are here to stay. There is nothing we can do about it nor should we for fear of being labeled Luddites. We should embrace social networking as a positive technology to help us build our personal networks.

This discussion is reminiscent of a time - a decade ago - when the world was a twitter (oops) about something called a virtual trade show and how this heralded the death of face-to-face marketing as we knew it. What happened to virtual exhibitions was that they became an integral part of larger face-to-face events providing year round exposure to products, services and education. What was feared to be an enemy became a powerful ally. The same, I am guessing, will happen to social networking sites.

Face to face marketing needs all the help it can get to maximize its potential and if technology can help, then all the better. But technology cannot replace the power of meeting a vendor or customer and talking about issues eye-ball to eye-ball. Meeting face to face is how we form opinions of people and the institutions that employ them. When we can integrate the technology to enhance our interpersonal contacts then we become winners in this brand new - very old game of networking. Here are a few thoughts as you go about building a productive and profitable network.

• Networks are not mailing lists - Social scientists tell us that each of us has approximately 200 people in our network. When you misuse the technology and build lists that include thousands of contacts you are clearly misusing the tool.

• Find your six degrees of separation - Each of your 200 people also has a network of two hundred, each of their two hundred has two hundred as well. If you take 200 to the sixth power the number is slightly more than six billion which coincidentally includes everyone on the planet. Learning how to tap into these sub-networks opens you to unlimited potential. If you look carefully you can find anyone you want to contact through your six degrees of separation.

• Don't abuse your network - this is so easy when you simply use your network for commercial purposes. The people in your network are folks you have made a personal contact with. They have families, worries and dreams. When you can treat your network as an extension of yourself and treat these people as individuals you cannot lose.

• Stay in touch - there's not much point meeting someone at a trade fair, exchanging information and not staying in touch. Treat your network as a living breathing thing that needs attention or it will simply wilt and die.

• Make it a 24/7 habit - don't just built your network in times of need. You should be constantly looking for opportunities to expand your sphere of influence.

• Give something back - If your network is a living entity then it needs food to survive. The food you provide is in your willingness to give back. This means being constantly on the lookout to offer advice, contacts or a friendly word to your 200 people.

Social networking is quickly finding its place in the face-to-face marketing world. When you combine the power of your interpersonal skills to build your network and then integrate technology to record the experience and maintain contact you have a winning combination.
About the Author:
Barry Siskind is an internationally recognized exhibit marketing expert. He is author of 6 bestselling business books including Powerful Exhibit Marketing and Selling From the Inside Out. Each year he travels the globe helping companies increase the retuirn on their exhibit investment. Barry can be reached at barry@siskindtraining.com
 

 

No. of Times this article has been viewed : 240
Date Published : Oct 20 2009

Most Recently Published Business Management Articles as of

Nov 20 2009    Elements of a Good Business Letter

by BMA Editorial Team

The essentials which go to make up a good business letter may be divided into two classes - mechanical make-up, and contents. Read on to learn more...

Nov 20 2009    Outsource Software Development for Significant Savings

by BMA Editorial Team

Since companies benefit from outsourcing, you would want to consider outsourcing to also be part of your company. However, you first have to know and fully understand how it can help your company and why this service is so in demand in the business world today.

Nov 20 2009    Establishing a Business Identity is Key to Success

by BMA Editorial Team

Taking the time to establish or develop a solid business identity will guarantee a more effective and profitable relationship with the public. It is what the law requires, the public expects, and a goal worth achieving.

Nov 17 2009    Finding Business Success in the Details

by BMA Editorial Team

Whether you have an online business or a brick and mortar, you have to pay attention to the details to find success.

Nov 17 2009    Effective Decision Making in Business Management

by BMA Editorial Team

Taking decision is always a risk. Time, money and other resources will be used as a result of a decision. In business management, taking decisions is one of the toughest jobs.

Nov 17 2009    Women Entrepreneurs and Their Greatest Starting Lineups: How to Hire a Champion Team

by Michele DeKinder-Smith

As a business owner, hiring a team can mean several different things. It can mean delegating, sharing and expanding. It may also mean balancing several personalities, keeping tabs on what everybody's up to and making sure things get done without micromanaging. So how do women entrepreneurs do it?

Nov 17 2009    Is Your Timing Keeping You From Being Successful In Your Business? Part 3

by Michele Pariza Wacek

There's a reason why product launches work and there's a reason why you reach more people (and make more money) if you control yourself, don't race through it and do it right. Here's why.

Nov 16 2009    SWOT Analysis- To Make Your Business More Profitable

by BMA Editorial Team

SWOT Analysis is a well-known method for describing a business or business propositions in terms of those factors that can have the maximum impact. The business owner does this analysis in order to improve the current position of the business.

Nov 16 2009    What You Should Look for When Hiring a Business Plan Writer

by BMA Editorial Team

Hiring a business plan writer has a number of benefits, including helping you to clarify your business expectations and making it easier to find financing and other support for your company.

Nov 9 2009    Performing Effective Collection: Make Sure that Your Customer Pays the Bill

by Adeline Mary

Getting paid is the toughest part to accomplish and it is the crucial phase of running a business. Especially during extenuating circumstances like a recession, most businesses are faced with a major disaster with debts not getting paid back by their customers.

Nov 6 2009    Buying a School

by Ronald White

Seldom thought of as an investment, private occupational schools can be a rewarding business for owners. This article analyzes the investment and provides due diligence and administration tips for owners.

Nov 6 2009    Does an Applicant's Education Predict Job-Related Intelligence?

by Michael Mercer

This article discusses the issues of pre-employment tests, intelligence and education as prediction for job success.

Nov 6 2009    Hiring a Winning Team: How Three Types of Women Entrepreneurs Put it Together

by Michele DeKinder-Smith

When it comes time to hire a team to implement a business' game plan and strategy, the business owner often has to have in place her own system for creating a team that will not only carry out what she wants, but will complement her unique style and mindset.

Nov 5 2009    Why Plan Anything?

by Colin Fell

Planning is simply a means to an end, with the aim being to influence the future by acting in advance. A sound business plan ensures that all key decision-makers have a solid understanding of the business, common fact base, and agree on important assumptions.

Nov 2 2009    Useful Benefits of Business Credit Card for Small Business

by Pamela Williams

Are you applying a business credit card for your small business? First, maybe you should try to look the best advantages that you can get a small business credit card.

12345678910...
Search for ebooks on Management & Business