Why having thousands of LinkedIn and Facebook connections isn't the same as having valuable contacts
How many contacts do you have right now on LinkedIn? How many friends on Facebook? Do you find yourself simply clicking ‘yes’ or ‘no’ to a contact request indiscriminately out of habit, while you’re not really sure how the person knows you? And how many of your contacts do you actually exchange valuable conversations with? Your aunt who you haven’t seen in 20 years? Friends from primary school who you no longer have much in common with? The pizza delivery guy or the person you met at a networking gig on Saturday?
Social media has made us more connected than ever before, yet we report feeling more disconnected than ever before.
We’re so caught up in ‘knowing’ as many people as possible, liking each other’s posts, #hashtagging and @mentioning what we did last night and with whom, that we’ve forgotten how to have deep and meaningful conversations with each other on topics such as how we can help each other in our careers. The question is:
Here’s the bottom line. It’s about quality, not quantity. We don’t need more contacts, we don’t need more friends, and we don’t need to spend more time connecting online. If this was all we needed, then every one of us would be enjoying unparalleled success through the sheer number of opportunities we have to connect.
Don’t get me wrong – this old style of networking is still absolutely essential for business growth, and lead and sales generation. But the problem is that it does nothing to fuel our personal and professional growth.
Building a network that works engages your personal network on a deeper level, and matters more. It is about putting you right in the middle of a network that connects you to people and information that matters for your growth and personal success.
It’s about being small, strategic and smart. It’s about your personal network consisting of the following:
So, while I’m not suggesting you should go away and cull everyone from your LinkedIn or Facebook network, you must take a long, hard look at the way you network now and the way you could network to get ahead.
For most of us, I can honestly say that it won’t be an aunt or the pizza delivery guy.
Janine Garner is the author of It’s Who You Know: How a Network of 12 Key People Can Fast-track Your Success (Wiley). She is a Fortune 500 mentor, a keynote speaker, a partner at Thought Leaders Global, and the founder and CEO of the LBDGroup. Find out more at www.janinegarner.com.au.