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> Get Articles > Networking > Making Valuable Contacts Online

Making Valuable Contacts Online


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Angela Booth
angelazip.com.au

Digital-e
http://www.digital-e.biz/


*Article Use Guidelines*



Use in opt-in publications, or on Web sites, but please include

the resource box.



Please send me a copy, if possible. Many thanks.



***



Summary: It's not what you know, it's who you know, and you need

to network online.



Category: Small Business



Words: 800







Making Valuable Contacts Online



Copyright (c) 2003 by Angela Booth





Remember the old saying: "it's not what you know, it's who you

know"? It's true. Your contacts determine whether your business

succeeds or fails, and for reasons of credibility, that's doubly

true online.



Many people bristle when someone suggests that they network. If

the term networking puts you off, then think of it as making

friends. People do business with people they know, and your

prospective clients need to hear your name many times before they

buy from you.



Networking should be a cornerstone of your business. As my

marketer friend Sally says: "Networking makes all your business

activities more effective."



Sally loves using the Internet to develop new contacts. She

believes that you can establish business relationships more

easily online than you can offline. "I'd rather have someone

email me a proposal, than phone me. And if I'm the one creating

the proposal, I'll do a Web search on their business before I

email them. The more you know about them the more effective your

initial contact will be. I'm flattered if I know that someone has

taken the time to find out about our business before they contact

me for the first time."





= Making new contacts step by step



With several hundred million people online, no matter how tiny

your niche market, you'll find it easy to make contacts online.

Some of these contacts will be people who are in the same

business you're in, others will be suppliers, or prospective

clients.



Note: some people hesitate to make contact with competitors. When

I suggested to a copywriting student of mine that she should

contact local copywriters to see they were charging, she freaked

out. She didn't want to have anything to do with her competition.





This is a short-sighted attitude, because:



* whatever your business, it's a small world. People know people,

and people talk. If people know you because they've had some

contact with you, then when they're asked about you, they're more

apt to speak kindly of you;



* you'll learn what's happening in your industry: who's hiring,

who's landed a big new contract, and who's slow-paying;



* you've got someone to whom you can refer clients, if the

clients want something that you can't provide (and with luck,

your contacts will refer people to you);



* it's educational: you can swap techniques, suppliers, and

shortcuts;



* and most importantly, you can find out what other local

businesses are charging, and why.





So how do you start making valuable contacts online?





== Step One: Do a search for people in the same business you're

in



You'll need to know who's doing what you're doing. Check out

their Web sites, bookmark their URL, and enter the names and

contact details into your contact management program.



(Go to Better Whois, at http://www.betterwhois.com/ to get the

business owner's contact details.)



See whether they offer services or products which are

complementary to yours. You might be able to form a loose

partnership.



If it's appropriate, you could offer them a link on your Web site

in return for a link on theirs. However, be careful with this.

Don't go linking here, there and everywhere online for the heck

of it. Ubiquitous linking makes it look as if you don't know what

you're doing.



== Step Two: In what fields do you want to expand your client

base?



When looking for prospective clients, think in terms of

industries or professions.



If many of your clients are doctors, perhaps you want to contact

more doctors, or perhaps you want to contact dentists or lawyers.



If you're a writer, maybe you've been targeting health and

fitness magazines. What other interests and knowledge do you

have? Perhaps you once worked for a construction company. Trade

magazines pay quite well, so investigate construction magazines.

Enter the magazines into your database, and send the editors a

letter or e-mail message introducing yourself.





== Step Three: Budget time for networking



Networking won't pay off with instantly, and too much networking

can eat up a lot of time. So make a networking schedule for

yourself.



If you're working in your small business fulltime, budget half an

hour or so every couple of days for networking, or put in an hour

a week. If you're a part-timer, try to put in a couple of hours a

month.





== Step Four: Don't be put off by a lack of response



If you send an e-mail message, and don't get a response, don't

take it badly. Like most other people, I've got a rapid-fire

delete finger, and I'm sure that occasionally I delete a valuable

message by mistake. Blame it on the spam circus that e-mail has

become.



Don't badger people, but if you're not getting a response via

email, send them a fax or a letter.





Start making online contacts today, and watch your business

thrive!





***Resource box: if using, please include***



Veteran multi-published author and copywriter Angela Booth crafts

words for your business --- words to sell, educate or persuade.

E-books and e-courses for writers on Web site. FREE ezines for

writers and small biz:

http://www.digital-e.biz/





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