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September 25, 2009

8

How to Grow Your Business by Becoming a Cage Rattler

girl_thinkingCage Rattle Tuesday! Actually it doesn’t have to be a Tuesday, but a great business technique is to plan one day a week to check in with some of your contacts, rattle their cages. Why? Because most of the opportunities that happen will come from keeping yourself on the minds of others. If you are like most entrepreneurs and creative producers, you network in person, make connections on the web, add peeps to your address book and have stacks of business cards. If you initially follow up with people, you may leave it as a “let’s keep in touch, I am sure there are some things we can collaborate on”. Perhaps then the weeks go by, maybe months, and there is no contact. The other person has dropped off your radar and you have dropped off theirs. But try to reboot the connection.

You could come up with a list, nothing fancy, just a list of people you want to revisit. I have a few categories in my management software named “brewing” and “connect”. Brewing is for projects and people that are more simmering, we may not have an immediate plan to collaborate, but down the line there may be some stuff. I also have a connect category, which are people I have met online or in person. Initially there may be no immediate reason to be in contact, but I do like to check in with them periodically to see what they are up to.

If you mark on your calendar to once a week go through your contacts and just rattle a few cages, you may be quite amazed at the response. You could hear “oh I was thinking about contacting you recently” or “I wanted to get your advice on something”, often they will be glad you are back on their radar. You may hear of a new project they have coming up that you both could collaborate on. If nothing else you’ll get a scope of their current projects.

Everyone is usually working on so many different things that if you don’t talk to someone for a whole month, you miss a ton of developments. Developments that could, or should, include you.

Are you a cage rattler?

Facebook comments:

  • http://fjpalacio.wordpress.com Francisco Palacio

    Rattling + Follow Fridays = Moo-lah?

    [SCRATCHES CHROME DOME...]
    [LIGHTBULB GOES OFF!]

    Makes sense!!!… Serendipitiously, I was just thinking to myself whilst walking the dogs (great time to think, IMHO!) about the parallels of memes such as FollowFridays and our regular “real” patterns of socializing on weekends and what not…

    … and that’s off just reading the synopsis!…

    [READS BLOG... PLUCKS...}

    "If you are like most entrepreneurs and creative producers, you network in person, make connections on the web, add peeps to your address book and have stacks of business cards. If you initially follow up with people, you may leave it as a “let’s keep in touch, I am sure there are some things we can collaborate on”. Perhaps then the weeks go by, maybe months, and there is no contact. The other person has dropped off your radar and you have dropped off theirs. But try to reboot the connection..." (McMahon, 2009)

    [THUMBS UP!]

    Love the reboot simile!… I for one realize that computer “maintenance” routines (i.e. defragmenting, emptying your recycled items, etc) when translated to real life, well… they do work!

    So yeah, I do rattle some cages… via Twitter’s #FollowFridays, for example… and via networking events such as NetHispanos, which I just joined… BNI is definitely “organized” Cage Rattling… what with their emphasis on referrals… and Toastmasters? that may also be a way of organized Cage Rattling… not a member, but I’d say that clubs such as Rotary and Lions, they may have been the pre-internet ways of executing such ‘reboots’ in an structured fashion?

    Whaddayathink?

    At that, what’s been your experience with Tweetups… Prof. De Carvalho (University of Miami) highlighted them yesterday… tips? (or is there a blog entry I have not read yet on the topic?)

    As always, appreciated!

  • http://www.performancehypnosis.com Robert Monteux

    Great post Franklin! Thanks for reminding us that networking is an ongoing process, not an occasional activity.

  • http://fjpalacio.wordpress.com Francisco Palacio

    FYI:

    Here’s a sample of how I’m organizing myself to rattle a few, even after Follow Fridays is over… by posting them all together in my blog…

    http://wp.me/pDp6I-2a

    (And yeah, thanks for the ‘plug’!)

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  • Franklin McMahon

    Rattle Fridays? I picked Tuesday because that seemed like a good day where people were in the mix of their biz..not as hectic as a Monday or Friday

  • Franklin McMahon

    Actually…follow friday now that I think of it could be a cage rattling task since you are mentioning others and they see the post

  • Franklin McMahon

    Thanks Robert…yeah we all need to keep on top of it!

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