
Networking
N NETWORKING uses existing contacts amongst friends, relatives, business colleagues and others, as a foundation for building a new and extended network of further contacts. It provides a proven route to potential employment opportunities
Some one out there is looking to buy your skills and experience.
Your task is to find them, or help them find you
Careers Springboard holds frequent meetings and discussions on how to make the most of your contacts. and teaches the techniques to use when networking by phone
General Guidance
¨
Research
shows that only 30% of all jobs are
ever advertised. So if you limit yourself to
only
answering
job advertisements you confine yourself to the most competitive method of
recruitment
.
¨
Networking
is not about phoning contacts to ask
for a job. It is about seeking
advice
and information
on job opportunities from people who are in a position to give it, and
through them to get
more contacts.
¨
Start
by listing all the people you know, plus all the
people that they in turn know, who
may be
useful to
you.
¨
Include
in your list all your friends, relatives, business colleagues, former bosses,
former customers, former suppliers trade
associations, clubs and professional bodies etc.
¨
Initially
you may feel hesitant about approaching your contacts, but you will find most
are genuinely
pleased to help
and are flattered to be asked.
¨
You
never know when you might be introduced to a useful contact, so prepare and
rehearse a
response to the question “
tell me about yourself “
Have a version lasting about three minutes long for use at an
interview
But have another version, only half a minute long for use on
the telephone
Keep it by the telephone in case a contact rings you
¨ When telephoning use polite persistence until you get through to the person you want .
Get the PA or secretary's name and thank them for their help
Remember that you are seeking help and advice regarding career planning,.
Never ask directly for a job. This immediately puts your contact on the defensive
¨
You may
not get invited to a networking meeting, if so, then before the
conversation ends try
to obtain further contacts by asking “ who else do you
suggest
I
might contact ? “
Then, you will have another contact to follow
up, and you can name-drop without
hesitation - using the first contact as the
introduction to the second - and so on
Ring your original contact back to thank
the for their help and keep them advised of your success.
¨
Keep
a data base, either on a computer or manually of your growing network
Record the date of all contacts made,
together with the outcome.
Link this to a call - back diary and always call back on any agreed dates.
Networking does work, as many former members of Careers Springboard have proved.
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