Networking in a digital age
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Networking is an important skill
As the tide of social media has
continued to grow there has also been a growth in the number of people discussing
the need for face-to-face meetings and nurturing those so-called softer skills
of networking and developing relationships. Interestingly, Julia
Hobsbawm has long
heralded the need for businesses to maintain more face-to-face contact and the
need for employees to “come out from behind their screens “ and actually meet
people. She has such weight within the business community that the Cass
Business School
based in the City, London have recently made her their inaugural, honorary
Professor of Networking. Julia has long argued that the process of building networking
skills is integral to the development of a solid, productive team, that
networking is less of a soft, additional skill and that is should be brought to
the forefront of business skills that firms should be demanding from their
employees. Proving that an ability to network matters and can make a difference
to the bottom line of a firm takes the skill swiftly away from its lightweight
roots or comical images of standing alone in a conference room with a handful
of business cards and takes it into the realms of relevant, contemporary
business thinking.
Larger firms recognise the need to network
Hobsbawm argues that, in fact, it is
a disservice to think that employees don’t want to or aren’t capable of networking
in this way. Large businesses such as BT and Regus have proven business
techniques that show that in order for employees to work at their best, face-to-face
contact is required. They ensure that new managers go out and meet all their
teams – even though their corporate policies rail against “unnecessary travel”.
To run a successful business is obviously a far more intricate operation than
employing people to sit behind desks connecting through their PC’s. Employees
should, and need to be encouraged to take the opportunity to network as and
when they can. Hobsbawm comments that these opportunities may also come from
the most unusual of places, but are necessary in order to push those employees
onto the next stage of their career (and prevent them from becoming
disillusioned). Businesses themselves need to aspire to be dynamic and forward
thinking – they must remember to look beyond their own walls and engage with
the wider world.
Networking whether it is in your
social circle, with peers at a curated external networking event (such as those
run by the CIPD), or at a focussed business to business conference
or exhibition
should be a firm and regular fixture of any business. Starting a relationship online
is great, but the cement that will hold and build that business relationship into
a longstanding, mutually profitable one will be done face-to-face.
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