The number one way to secure to new clients is
through networking. So it’s a good idea to always be
expanding your network. And what better way than to strike up
conversations no matter where you are – on a plane, in a
restaurant, at the bus stop – because you truly never know
where it will lead.
Take my friend, Jack. He travels quite a bit for
work. He is a friendly guy and he doesn’t like to eat alone.
So he often sits at the bar instead of a table, in the hopes of
striking up a conversation. But he’s noticed something
fascinating about the first few seconds with a stranger: if he
doesn’t say something right away, it’s much more
difficult to initiate a conversation later on.
Jack recently sat next to a guy at the bar of a
barbecue restaurant in Western Massachusetts. He must have been tired
that day because when he sat down, Jack didn’t say anything
-- not “Hey, how ya doin’?” or a simple
joke about being addicted to good barbecue. He didn’t even
acknowledge the bartender. And Jack is convinced that’s why
he found it impossible to strike up a conversation later on.
“If you sit down in silence and miss
that tiny window of opportunity,” he told me, “the
whole thing seems to get 50 times harder, because then you have to
break a pre-existing silence with some kind of opening line.
And that triggers a whole useless monologue in my head -- ‘He
doesn’t want to talk to me. He’s got things on his
mind’ -- instead of a conversation with this other
person. And even worse, it feeds into the voice that says, ‘I’m
so bad at this,’ and puts the focus on something
that is totally unimportant.”
I love Jack’s story because it focuses
on a very small networking action that every one of us has the
potential to use – or not.
You see, the first moment with a stranger
– at a bar or even at a networking event – is a
very important one. Will you ignore each other or will you talk?
We all know that a first impression takes hold in
those first few seconds. And that’s also when the stage is
set for whether you will initiate a conversation -- a conversation that
could lead to a new project…a new consulting
arrangement…a new collaboration…a new
friend…a new idea… indeed this conversation could
go anywhere. But not if you stay silent.
This window of opportunity goes by very fast,
often before anyone even notices it, and if you miss it, you
can’t get it back. Fortunately, that doesn’t
necessarily mean the opportunity is gone. You can still initiate a
conversation; it’s just more difficult. Jack says
it’s like first-strike battle tactics, where if you
don’t hit hard right at the beginning it will be a longer
slog later.
So from now on, remember to approach strangers
with the awareness that this important moment is coming and be ready to
seize it by saying something to break the ice.
Don’t use the excuse that you
“just don’t know what to say.” The truth
is that almost anything qualifies as an icebreaker. You can:
- …simply say, “How are you
today?”
- …comment on something you see. If
they’re reading, ask about the reading material. If
they’re eating, ask about the food.
- …offer to share something you have,
whether it’s food (I always carry good dark chocolate just
for this purpose) or a newspaper.
And here are two other things to keep in mind:
1. The content of your opening line is
irrelevant. It simply serves the purpose of saying “I am
available to talk if you are.” A simple acknowledgment and
“hello” can do the trick. It’s like
sticking a wedge in the door so it won’t close.
2. The other person may be self-conscious too. So
be sensitive to their openness and proceed accordingly. He or she may
appreciate your effort or may not be in the mood to talk. If the
response you get is a perfunctory one, don’t push. But you
should absolutely not take it as a personal rejection. It has nothing
to do with you.
Talking to other people is one of the best ways to
learn things and set down the foundation for a relationship that could
go anywhere. You don’t need to know right away where
it’s going or what is possible. People’s needs are
constantly changing, so even if you can’t envision any
potential in that first conversation, you should still always exchange
contact information (one more reason to carry your business cards
everywhere you go) and stay in touch.
Plenty of amazing contacts can arise out of
meeting a stranger. Take me, for example. Last year, while waiting for
a client in a hotel lobby, I struck up conversation with a man who
worked for a major accounting corporation. It turned out he was in the
market for someone to teach a networking workshop at his
company’s upcoming training conference. You can bet
I’ll stay in touch with him!
This idea is also important to keep in mind when
you attend events where networking is the order of the day. Recently, a
web designer I know attended a seminar (that he didn’t feel
like attending, by the way) and ended up sitting next to an Art
Director from one of the largest Web design agencies around. Instead of
not saying a word, he said, “Hello,” and struck up
a conversation. Now that agency is his biggest client. And all he said
was, “Hello.”
Here’s the thing to remember: the more
people you talk to, the higher the odds that something wonderful and
unexpected will come out of each conversation. The more people you talk
to…the more irons go into the fire…the more
opportunities you’ll have to grow your business and improve
your life.