Community Day 13: Keeping your pipeline active.

This is a question which really pertains to all this doom and gloom going on regarding the economy. People are so afraid about not getting business right now, it is scary. Interestingly enough I have been getting a lot of feedback that small business has been doing exceptionally well at keeping their pipeline full.

What has been your experience? What are you doing right now to keep people coming back?

One of the biggest issues that I have is that when I go out networking I end up bringing in so much business that I just simply cannot handle it all. So I get caught up in delivering the service and then I forget to network, and then my pipeline goes dead. After a week or two I’m wondering where everyone went, lol :).

Do you all suffer from this issue? What have you done to keep your pipeline regularly full?

Hit us up in the comments below.

-Coach Kolansky

Community Day 12: How do you stay in touch, personally?

Yesterday a marketing program launched called the Product Launch Forumla. This program has been revolutionary in marketing because it is all about how to use the internet to keep a “personal touch”. It is amazing too, because as the owner of the product says, the people who have purchased it have used it to make over $103 million dollars worth of income.

I’m not trying to make you go purchase it, what I’m really trying to do is illustrate just how important that personal touch really is. It is amazing in today’s day and age because it is possible to have such a personal touch in this impersonal world that you could have people think that y’all have been lifelong friends, yet you have yet to even meet each other. You might not even know their name.

I know Internet Entrepreneurs who have pull that off quite successfully. It is like the old adage goes, it isn’t who you know, it is who knows you.

So with all that said, the question of the day is, how do you manage your relationships? I don’t expect you to have a massive following of people who know everything about you, but I do suspect that there is a group of people out there who you want to maintain a personal interaction with. How do you go about doing it?

-Coach Kolansky

Community Day 11: Finding Networking Opportunities

Today’s community question about finding networking opportunities.

This is more along the lines of the beginner who is getting started with networking, IMHO (in my humble opinion). I know that when I first got started I didn’t even know what a networking opportunity was.

Now I think that a networking opportunity is something along the lines of something that:

  • Connects me with someone who can help me develop my business.
  • Connects me with a group of people who will promote or help the growth of my business.
  • Puts me in a situation where I can help promote people who I am networked to.

I suppose it is about keeping your eyes open and being ready for oncoming networking opportunities.

But I want to hear from all of you. How do you find networking opportunities?

Community Day 10: How many networking events should I attend?

Ooo…. We just went double digit on the 30 days. Go us!

Today’s question is pretty simple, what are your thoughts on how many networking events someone should attend?

I know for me, I have set the number at somewhere around 2-3 a week. But I know of some people that do as many as one every business day. I think that this is pretty heavily tied into yesterday’s question of how many people should you plan to meet at a networking event? Because it all comes down to the numbers. If you know that you need to meet X number of people in order to make enough money then you will need to attend Y number of events where you speak with Z number of people.

Simple algebra. Course, I never was a math guy.

Thoughts? Hit us up in the comments below. How many events do you attend?

Join the Revolution!
-Coach Kolansky

Community Day 9: How Many People Can You Talk To At A Networking Event?

Hey Gang,

I know that this has been an area where I have been pretty bad about in my own personal networking. I know of people who attend a networking event and they buzz around the room meeting all kinds of new people. One person in particular is Marcus White. He’ll be at a networking event and it seems like he meets everyone that is in attendance, even if it is a few hundred people.

It is an incredible skill to establish a personal bond with all of those people because sometimes that means that he is only speaking to them for a minute at best.

For me, I tend to only build a connection with a handful of people. I’ll be doing good if I leave a networking event with five business cards with notes on the back of them. It has forced me to be pretty specific about who I talk to and why I speak with them. I know I should be doing better, but I enjoy deeper conversation so I’m always tempted to talk for longer than I should AT the event (I’ve been taught that the deeper conversation SHOULD come later when you meet the contact a second time.)

How many people do you think you should talk to at a networking event? Do you buzz around the room like Marcus or do you only meet a handful of people like myself?

Hit us up in the comments below!

Join the revolution!
-Coach Kolansky

Community Question Day 8: How do you maximize your networking?

Ok, so yesterday we talked about reducing costs (and what awesome responses all of you had!) Today I want to ask you all about the flip side of that coin which is how do you maximize your networking time?

There are so many ways to go about this but one strategy that I can think of is to make sure that you have done your research before attending an event.

For example, when I first joined BNI a while back I had no idea what I was getting myself into. As Marvin and a few others established in the first day’s answer, the difference between a novice and an advanced networker, I was shooting from the hip and was just happy to see any results.

As I began to learn about networking though, I began to start researching the BNI groups I would visit before I would come. I’d do this in a very simple way, though. I’d only visit groups to which I already knew someone in the group. Then I’d just ask them, “is there anyone in your group that I should keep an eye out for?”

This strategy works pretty well because any decent BNI chapter will have guests from other BNI chapters at any given week. So when I’d visit a new chapter I knew who to focus my attention on because they’d have been pre-qualified as a potential client/contact by one of their other chapter members :).

So yesterday was trying to be smarter about spending your money, today I’d like to hear what strategies that you have used to be smarter about your time.

Hit us up in the comments below ^_^.

Join the Revolution!
-Coach Kolansky

Community Day 7: How to reduce the cost of networking

I was the original person to ask this question at Coffee Tea You and Me, and I can tell you that I got an incredible answer from the Coach. For those who attend the actual event, you know that Coach Powell asks for Panera Bread gift cards if you get something out of the event. Well, needless to say, I owed him a coffee card!

The question stemmed from a situation that I saw a while back. There was a business person that I knew from all the networking events that I was attending. He was middleaged and was trying to jump from one end of the IT field to the other by starting his own business. We had been bumping into each other at networking events for upwards of 6 months when at a networking training event someone asked him to give a story about how he had gotten some business through networking. His response was “I haven’t.” And I about fell out of my chair!!

To reveal a little personal information, my networking costs average about $300-$400 a month, and I know that that is low. If I was to really push the limits I’m sure I could double that (I just don’t think I could handle all the business!) But I tend to make more than I spend when I’m out networking. In fact, a handful of jobs would put me into the black. So when I heard from this gentleman that he wasn’t making ANY money off of these events but I knew that his expenses were around the same as mine, my jaw dropped.

So, instead of asking the Coach how to make networking more effective (thats for another day), I ended up going the other direction and asked how to make networking cost less. We’ll post up the Coach’s fantastic answer next Monday, but let me give you one strategy that I know of and then I want to see your input ^_^.

I learned this strategy from Jon Graft a great networker and estate planning attorney. (Also a really funny guy who seems to keep turning up in the paper’s style invitational.) He told me about a friend of his who was a BNI member. Not all BNI chapters do this, but this guy’s BNI chapter charged for the meeting. There was a weekly charge of about $15 per member for food and the meeting space. As you might expect that can add up! (think $780 a year!) But this guy figured out an ingenious way to solve his problem with paying this cost every week. Every week he’d contact another member of his personal network and invite them to BNI, all they had to do was pay for his breakfast and he’d introduce them to 30+ business professionals who could explode his guests profits.

Sounds like a fair deal to me! And thats a NICE way to clear out several hundred dollars worth of expenses and enjoy a LOT of free breakfasts! Hehe :).

Now it is your turn, what are some ways that you can lower the cost of networking? It is an expensive sport (kinda like golf… in fact I’ve seen that networking often involves golf!) There are ways to keep your wallet from melting away to networking heaven.

Post in the comments below :).

The meaning behind the logo

The logo here at the Ninety Day Power Play has a LOT of significance to Coach Powell. We recorded a short video talking about what this means for The Coach and also for all of the people that he is working with. Check it out here:

httpvh://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R1bHM2I1tro

Join the Revolution!

-Coach Kolansky

Community Day 6: Starting with networking when you don't know anyone.

This is a fantastic topic. A year and a half ago I showed up at my current BNI group, and despite having lived in Northern Virginia for years I didn’t have ANY connection to the members of that chapter. My current network was relatively small and there was no way (at least that I knew at the time) to leverage my current network to break into this entirely new networking scenario.

So the answer to this question held a special interest to me because I have really been able to expand my networking, especially from what I have learned from sticking around Coach Powell :).

I have since gone into entirely new networks and worked hard to make myself known in those networks. But I have often been able to leverage my current network to usher that process along.

If you were suddenly without your current network, what are some strategies that you think that you might employ to get a new group of people to know you, like you, and trust you?

I know that I would work very hard to establish my competancy before anything else. That way people would be encouraged to try out my services or products and then I would have a chance to show them my character as a person. Thats what I have done with countless BNI chapters that I have visited and it has worked pretty well so far.

What are some strategies that you have used?

God Bless,
-Coach Kolansky

Where should I go to network?

So we have come to the last topic from week one of the 30 days of Coffee Tea You and Me. I’m sure that you are wondering why we are ending the week on a Tuesday (actually the final topic from week one will be posted on Thursday when the Coach answers the upcoming question), that is because the event of Coffee Tea You and Me is on a Friday. So we are moving in sync with the actual event of Coffee Tea You and Me.

Today I want to get some feedback from you guys about locations that you go to network. Much like what we discussed yesterday about groups that we can go to in order to network, there are also places which aren’t “networking events” that we can become a part of.

What are some places that you have had opportunity to network in? Hit us up in the comments below. Be sure to be on the mailing list to get Coach Powell’s answer two days from now :). And as always, practice your networking skills by sharing this discussion with your fellow colleagues!