43 posts categorized "Relationship Geek"

5 tips for connecting with people online and offline

Connecting to people, online and offline, is one of the best ways I know to improve your business, and to improve your life. Frequently when I talk to groups about the power of connections, I’m asked HOW to network.

To me, it’s a natural thing. I love people.

To some, it’s difficult, and a learned trait.

But I’ve thought about what I do, and how I do it, and I thought it might be helpful, for all those who need a little help. None of these are rocket science, they’re just simple, honest tips that work for me.

Know WHY you want to connect to this person - Is it because they are a favorite author of yours, a thought leader in your field, just a cool person, or what is it about them? Let me know that when you reach out, and be honest. If it's just a fan boy/fan girl letter of "Hey, I love your writing" that's great. Be specific about why you want to connect, even if it's just to say thanks for writing a great book or article, or thanks for giving a powerful presentation.

Help FIRST - See what the other person needs and add value to the relationship before you ever ask for help. One of the things I like to do after I attend a seminar is offer an unsolicited testimonial for any speakers that changed my thinking. I’ll email it to them, post it on their LinkedIn profile, or post it up along with a link to their site on my site. And anytime I do that, I make sure and be specific about why I’m doing it, as a thank you for the value they added to my life.

Be authentic – It’s important to be who you really are and most folks will naturally be attracted to that. You won’t attract EVERYONE this way, but those who aren’t attracted to you aren’t folks you want in your network anyway.

Start small, think GREAT - Never underestimate the power of connecting to just 1 person. 1 person can make a HUGE difference in your life. Make it a point to focus on that 1 other person by asking questions about their needs and their wants, and make that 1 relationship GREAT.

Connect others together when appropriate – Now that you know the other person, how about connecting them to someone else they might value knowing? The power of three is more than the power of me! Connect 2 people who don't know each other, share why you think they should connect, and then make the introduction. KEY POINT: Be sure to explain WHY you are making the introduction or folks may feel like you’re stalking them or worse, trying to sell them something.

What are your best tips for connecting with people?

Authenticity -- A Fast Way to Connect

Note from Phil: One of the best ways I’ve found to connect with folks is to be completely authentic and share what’s in my heart and my soul. It works for the team I manage, and it works here on my blog. It often hurts to share as much as I do…until I get out of my own way and realize that by sharing, I’m connecting and helping someone else who might be too afraid to share to learn from me.

When I got this article from Vince Poscente, author of the recently published in paperback book The Age of Speed, I knew I had to share it with all my friends. I hope you enjoy it.

Authenticity – A Fast Way to Connect

Guest article by Vince Poscente, Author of The Age of Speed

"I heard you did a great job connecting with the audience and got all choked up with your acceptance speech for the Canadian Speaking Hall of Fame," said my friend Victoria.

"Yep, when I DO authentic, it works every time," I said with a chuckle.

I was kidding about 'doing' authentic, of course. What immediately connected with the audience was 'being' authentic.

The fact was my introducer, Warren Evans, brought me to the stage with "Welcome home Vince." I was emotional about coming home to Canada with this kind of honor.

I blubbered for a bit, gained composure and then gave an acceptance speech. The single comment I received after was, "I loved your speech. It was you. It was real." The speech wasn't scripted. I had three general ideas I wanted to get across and I made it up from there.

If you are going to give a speech, pitch a product, ask for a date or convince a teenager of something then the authentic approach is the fast way to connect.

Authenticity is truly one of the most endearing qualities in people. And whom do you buy from? Someone thinking of what they should say or someone tells their truth.

Think about it. When you meet someone real. Someone who is being truly authentic; How attractive is this quality?

That's the wacky thing about sales actually. And before you say you're not in sales, remember the quote. "If your lips are moving, chances are you're selling something. So make it good." Making it "good" is simple and tricky all at once.

Think about it. If you're selling something really important you probably want to put your best foot forward. You will likely be on your best behavior and be extremely conscious of saying the right things in the right way. In other words, you don't want to show any vulnerability. You assume that if you show any signs of weakness or chinks in your armor you will loose the sale.

But as Shakespeare once said, "Therein lies the rub."

Think of people you feel most connected to. Have they shown you their vulnerability and authentic selves? YES! Now, in a sale, whom do you buy from? Someone you feel connected to or someone where there is no connection? You buy from people you connect with.

So, here you are spending all this time hiding parts of your personality that has the net effect of disconnection. By trying to speed up a sale by doing everything right, we are slowing it down by being less vulnerable or authentic. The flip side is if you are vulnerable and authentic you speed up the sale.

You have everything to gain and little to lose by being authentic. Vulnerability is not that old Budweiser commercial where you break down crying while saying, "I love you man!" Vulnerability is a state of mind. It is a clear signal to your prospect or person you are talking to with, "This is who I am. This is real. I'm not hiding anything."

If you're new to a situation, then be honest. If you're unsure of an answer, admit it. If you disagree, beg to disagree. If you messed up, say sorry, skip the excuses and move on. If you think you have spinach in your teeth, come out and say it, "Do I have spinach in my teeth?" You get the picture. If it is authentic and honest you are vulnerable in a very good way. This will take you further and faster. People appreciate that in the Age of Speed.

Recently I spoke to a large franchise and the message the organizers kept hitting home was how "important the client experience is." The new approach they would take is to listen to the client and give a specialized experience. Not a "by the book" agenda. They wanted the client to feel that it was a real, authentic encounter.

What struck me funny was how scripted the entire event was. They had every single executive speech on a teleprompter. The underlying message I felt while listening was incongruent. The leaders offered advice they weren't truly demonstrating.

How much different would the audience's experience be if the VP's were trusted to deliver a few key points from an extemporaneous approach? How difficult would it be for the executive s to give up control of the exact outcome?

When it's your turn to speak to one person or a room full of people stand back from trying to be perfect and decide to be you. Knock your script down to key touch points and trust that you authentic self is more than enough.

Be authentic. It's the fastest way to connect and it works every time.

©2008 Vince Poscente

Author Bio

Vince Poscente is best known for his ability to provide an invigorating message to organizations across the corporate landscape. Company leaders call on him to inspire employees to embrace speed when they feel compelled to resist it and to produce faster results in ways they find rewarding. When companies come face-to-face with speed, Poscente helps them understand the challenge and turn speed to their advantage.

To learn more about harnessing the power of speed, join the ever-increasing community of people who subscribe to Full Speed Ahead, a weekly eBrief that will help you discover how the force of speed can be put to use in your life and business.

Attention LinkedIn Users: Read these posts

Phil Gerbyshak and Jason Alba

My friend and CEO of Jibber Jobber Jason Alba wrote what should be a wake-up call to all folks who use LinkedIn. Please do yourself a favor and read LinkedIn Maintenance I and LinkedIn Maintenance II, and do what Jason recommends. You should also buy a copy of his book I’m On LinkedIn Now What, but at the very least, please read his posts.

Here are the highlights for those of you who don’t want to click through:

1) Back up as a PDF your LinkedIn profile and export your contacts regularly.

2) Never have your work e-mail address as your primary LinkedIn email address.

Wondering why or how? Read LinkedIn Maintenance I and LinkedIn Maintenance II.

Trust me. It’s WAY worth it to take 10 minutes and do what Jason suggests.

Hanging at SOBCon

Levenger Store

Stephen Hopson, Susan Quandt, Stephen Smith and I started SOBCon yesterday with a trip to the Levenger store in downtown Chicago. Good conferences start by being and thinking productively.

Now that it's Saturday morning, I've listened to Anita Bruzzese and Brian Clark thus far.

The biggest thing I've learned from the presenters and my fellow participants is one big thing:

Honesty and integrity are critical to successful business ventures.

Glad to know I'm headed in the right direction!

Meet me in Chicago May 2, 3, 4

Business School for Bloggers


I love Chicago. It's a fun city, at least when you have fun people to share the city with. And if you read this blog, you know that I would LOVE to get to know you in person, as Chicago is in the center of the US, why not come visit me when I'll be there May 2nd through the 4th.

Why will I be in Chicago? For SOBCon08.

For those who don't know about SOBCon, I think of it this way:
Put a room together with 100 or more of your best friends, many of which you've never met in person, and you get a week's full of hugs in about 3 minutes. Then, you get to hear a bunch of folks who are experts at what they do share their stuff. Your brain hurts a little (ok, it hurts a LOT) and you get so many ideas, you don't know which to implement first. But the relationships you built by sharing a meal, a smile, a hug, a conversation, go on for well after the event ends. You've now firmed up these friendships, and now you actually KNOW them in person, so you've got friends for life.

And more.

I didn't even mention the fact that this year's theme is Business School for Bloggers.

Unless you're dead, I expect to see you in Chicago at SOBCon08. Click through, sign up, and get to Chicago May 2nd through May 4th. Trust me, it'll be worth it.

That link again: SOBCon08

Valentine's Day Gift: An Interview with Karinna Kittles-Karsten

If you've been part of the Make It Great! community for any length of time, you'll know I love books. And I love people. So when I was approached to review a book about love and people, I knew I had to learn more about the author, and then share our conversation with you.

 

karinna_kittles_karsten Karinna Kittles-Karsten is the author of the new book Intimate Wisdom The Art of Sacred Love, and of the Sacred Love blog. Her writing is from the heart and touched me in a very deep way. Maybe it's where I am in my life right now. I don't know.

 

When I got the book, I knew right away I needed to talk more to Karinna and learn about her philosophy on life, and on why she chose to write such a meaningful book.

 

I think you'll really enjoy the interview, as she is so deep and full of meaning. She's also got a very special offer for the month of February for us, so I encourage you to read all the way through and check it out.

 

And if you're nice, I just may have a copy of this wonderful book to give away to 1 lucky Make It Great! reader. You'll just have to read all the way to the end to see what I've got cooked up for you, dear reader and friend.

Continue reading "Valentine's Day Gift: An Interview with Karinna Kittles-Karsten" »

1 Way to Be More Like Seth Godin

a.k.a. How to learn from Seth Godin about titling your blog posts.

Seth Godin riffs today about "how to title stuff" and shares 3 simple ways to title stuff, like books, blog articles, and the like.

1. Pick something descriptive, generic and boring that tells you what's exactly what's inside.
2. Pick a more clever name that gets folks interested in more.
3. Pick a name that gets talked about.


Obviously Seth has done a great job of creating the 3rd, a name that folks talk about. Like Purple Cow. Meatball Sundae. The Big Moo. Sneezer. Idea Virus. You get the picture.

How does he do it? If I knew that, I'd be Seth Godin, only not so bald. Like you can be "kinda bald." Whatever.

What I do know, from reading Seth's books, his blog, watching him on video, and trying to "think more like Seth" is that it's different for each one of us. It's different because we all have different audiences to talk to. It's "who" we're talking to, not "what" we're saying.

You know your audience. You know what they want.

Think about who is listening to your message. Think about what they are interested in. Then develop a cool new term that they can grasp hold of and talk about.

I also know that Seth would say, long term, it's much more fun to be remarkable, than it is to be boring.

So be like Seth! Try to inject a new word into the vocabulary of our lives.

My word is Relationship Geek and I encourage you to click the link and listen to the podcast attached. Maybe it will be remarkable, maybe not.

What are you willing to try to be more interesting and have more people talk about you?

Shift Your Thinking About Conflict

Today's guest writer is Tammy Lenski.

Genuine dialogue isn't about talking. Though we tend to think of dialogue as the act of conversing, it's not.

Genuine dialogue is about learning. It's about inviting your curiosity to the table instead of your tongue. It's not possible to talk and learn much at the same time.

The trouble with teaching how to engage genuine dialogue is that most people I run across have limited time, limited resources, and limited patience. You want pragmatism, not philosophy. You want technique, not framework. You want to do, not think about doing.

It's understandable. Reasonable even. And doomed to failure.

It's doomed because technique often fails the test of real dialogue in real conflict situations. Sure, I can teach anyone the best techniques that any top mediator, diplomat or negotiator uses to achieve quality outcomes. And virtually anyone can learn them. But most don't go out and use them responsibly or effectively.

The majority simply apply the new tools as a recipe: I'm in situation X, so I will apply technique Y.  The minority figure out that a tool used in the wrong way or in the wrong circumstance is a useless tool. This minority understand that the way you think about conflict and dialogue influences the success with which you use the tools you've learned to manage it. Read my story, What Everyone Ought to Know About Conflict Management Skills for an illustration of this.

It's also doomed because our time-starved culture is setting you up. "Practical techniques" are often code words for "I don't have time to set a real foundation, so just give me what I can use right away." Sometimes you have to slow down to go fast and my story about the apple cart will show you why.

So for years I've worked to teach people something more powerful than techniques: I've taught people how to think and feel about conflict and dialogue. People who succeed in changing the frame of mind with which they approach their difficult conversations usually find out that they don't need to learn new skills or tips at all...they discover their good skills are accessible to them once they change how they think.

If you want to begin to shift how you think about conflict, I offer the following three phrases for helping you begin the change. Use them in any situation where you want to improve communication, even if there's no overt conflict. Practice in low-stakes situations so you're used to them when things get tough.

I developed the three phrases over the past decade of dialogue-building, coaching and training work. They're a simple first step to begin teaching your mind how to approach conflict effectively, bravely and diplomatically.

The three phrases help stop your mind from doing some of the things people typically do ineffectively early on in a conflict situation: Telling your view... over and over. Demonstrating how right you are...or how wrong they are. Freezing and not knowing what to say. Judging and diagnosing and concluding. Fleeing. Competing to win. Shutting down. Putting your foot in your mouth. Lashing out. Prematurely solving a problem you do not yet understand sufficiently (though you're sure you do).

The three phrases help make your mind to do some things that tend to work very well in conflict situations with people who you must or want to be in continued relationship with, such as family members and co-workers: Listen in the right way.  Learn something that changes your understanding of the situation and makes problem-solving much more effective. Keep your balance. Keep your emotional brain from running amok. Confront conflicts in a way that they're not anxiety producing. Reduce the post-conflict debris.

Don't be fooled by their simplicity. If you commit to using these phrases and experiment with them more than a few times, you'll discover they have tremendous power to change the conversations that matter most to you.

Phrase 1: Tell me more.

"Tell me more" invites the other person to stay in conversation in a non-threatening way. It invites your own curiosity to the table. It conveys genuine interest in their perspective or story. It creates the opportunity for new insight to be shared and heard. It stops you from telling and judging, and reminds your mind and heart that you're trying only to understand at this point, not solve or win.

Cautionary note: You need to listen to their response. If you're not listening to the response, you're techniquing them.

Phrase 2: Help me understand.

Miles Davis is credited with saying, "If you understood everything I said, you'd be me." In conflict, it's tempting to wear your "all-knowing" hat, but it's much more effective to wear your "uncertainty" cap. "Help me understand" conveys that you recognize you don't fully understand yet, that you're interested in doing so, and you're all ears.

Cautionary note: Understanding is not the same as agreeing. Stop worrying that "help me understand" will convey you're agreeing with them. You can decide whether or not you agree after you really understand.

Phrase 3: Why is that?

"Why is that?" focuses your mind on understanding the "why" behind their position, their solution, or their perspective. When you learn the why, you learn powerful information for problem-solving because you learn the underlying interests that are informing the other person's solution. And when you know their interests, and can add your own, you have a powerful way to see solutions that were invisible when you were focused only on winning or on the dubious game of "compromise."

Cautionary note: Tone of voice matters. "Why is that?" asked in a skeptic's or challenger's voice will yield little that's helpful. Asked from an orientation of curiosity, though, this question can yield diamonds in the rough.

Tammy_social_media [Dr. Tammy Lenski jump-starts genuine dialogue with individuals and organizations nationwide. You can find her blog about dialogue-building and conflict resolution at Jump-Start Genuine Dialogue with Tammy Lenski.]

Networking = Learning + Sharing

Benjamin Bach is guest blogging for Phil today

I had a profound revelation recently.  Josh Hinds was interviewing me for his excellent site, and he asked me what 'networking' meant to me.  I answered:

Networking for me is all about meeting people and seeing if I can be valuable to them. Maybe I know someone who they should meet, maybe I read a book which can help their business - however I can help, I'm glad to do so.

Part of my enduring purpose is 'to give freely,' and I really try to live up to that when I'm in a 'networking' setting.

After I wrote that, I realized something.  For me, 'networking' means I have someone to talk to about everything I'm learning - and maybe what I'm learning can help them.  Networking = Learning + Sharing .

Without life long learning, I have nothing to share to new people I meet!

Have you made Learning & Helping the foundation of your relationship building?  If not, today is a great day to start!

Ben_bach_agent_photo_3 Benjamin Bach is a speaker, writer, Relationship Geek and wealth building Real Estate agent in Kitchener Waterloo, Ontario, Canada.  He wakes up every morning excited to fulfil his purpose of building wealth and contributing value for his friends, family and clients.

Benjamin would love to hear from you - please write him at Benjamin AT benjaminbach DOT com.

You can find his blog at http://www.kitchener-waterloo-real-estate-investments.com/

Relationsheeps and Birthday Wishes

Relationsheep_geeks In honor of Liz Strauss's second blog birthday at Successful Blog, the amazing Lisa Gates and I decided to record our first record. Loosely titled "Relationsheep Geeks," it was done just for Liz, and there's no telling if we will do a second recording or not. Let me know what you think. You can play it below with Evoca, or if you get this via RSS or e-mail, click on this link.


It's about 12 minutes long, and well worth the listen. Don't worry, I'm not really singing.

Leave me a comment if you're a relationsheep like Lisa and me. :)

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