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Why Introverts are Great at Networking

business_people1For years I have watched with astonishment as many of my introvert friends have excelled at social/business networking. If you read most books on networking, (there are hundreds of thousands of them) you continually see information that is geared towards extroverts: how to work a room, how to effectively meet new people, and what to do at association events. The problem is that these thoughts are great, but not necessarily for introverts! By embracing who you are as an introvert and working your personal strengths you can see more success from your network than most extroverts. The secret is to focus on who you are.

Start with Who You Are

Let’s start with two obvious facts: 1) Just like extroverts, introverts are ‘pre-wired’ with a need for relationships. 2) Relationships are foundation of Networking. Based on these two facts it is easy to see that introverts should be able to easily succeed at networking, if only someone would tell them how to do it! You’re in luck, here is the secret:

Learn the key to Networking

With all that has been written on networking I am consistently amazed at how rapidly the central idea behind networking is overlooked. Networking is nothing less than focusing on and helping other people. When we help someone else once, it creates an innate and positive response. When we help someone three times, it creates a desire for them to help us in return; and when we help someone a dozen times, they have a healthy desire to help us in return. The great thing about real networking is that it creates mutually beneficial relationships where two people are consistently looking for ways to help one another. The key to this happening is concentrated effort on a specific group of people that over time develops these multiple mutually beneficial relationships.

The Introvert Advantage

Introverts are natural networkers because they have a tendency to focus on a smaller number of relationships. This same concentrated approach can be developed by extroverts, but it is very natural for an introvert to develop a strong core of relationships that can feed them opportunities and information.

Taking the first steps to start networking

To start networking as an introvert you need to take two first steps: 1) recognize that networking is nothing less than helping other people without expecting anything in return and 2) identify a core group of people (More than 10 and less than 20) that would fit well into your network. For example, if your business was marketing for an architecture firm and your best friend is an astrophysicist, they are probably not the right person for your business network. Then start networking by continually helping that group of people, you’ll be amazed at what happens as others start returning the favor.

To find out more about Networking for Introverts check out the article Network Like an Introvert.

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4 Comments

  1. Excellent insights! So many people don’t appreciate what we introverts bring to the table! Especially with networking!

    Best ~ Diane Darling

  2. Tim Klabunde says:

    Diane-
    Great to hear from you! I have seen your book The Networking Survival Guide and really like how you also focus on building mutually beneficial relationships. Thanks for your comment; I hope we will stay in touch.
    Tim

  3. Anya Breitenbach says:

    Interesting observations on what introverts can contribute, but more than a bit disingenuous to define networking as “nothing less than helping other people without expecting anything in return”… The whole point of networking is to exchange information & resources. If one person fails to be assertive in sharing their networking goals, valuable opportunities can be lost.

  4. Tim Klabunde says:

    Anya-
    Thanks for taking the time to comment! We agree that the idea of networking is to exchange information and resources, we may (or may not) differ on how that should be done. Check out this post and let me know your thoughts… “Building Relationships that Build Business” http://cofebuz.wordpress.com/2008/10/13/building-relationships-that-build-business/
    When building a mutually beneficial relationship it is important to be open about your goals, but that should not be your focus. While an inward focused approach may be great for many business development professionals, most non-sales driven professionals will receive much greater benefit from focusing on “building relationships that build business.”
    Tim

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