• Home
  • About
  • Practice Areas
  • Contact
Sanford Rose Associates ® - Burnett Group

(972) 421-6305

facebook
linkedin
twitter
  • Our Firm
    • About Us
    • Our Team
    • Global Reach
    • How We Are Different
  • Our Practice
    • Mission and Philosophy
  • Employers
    • Our Process
    • Dimensional Search®
  • Candidates
    • Career Opportunities – Submit Your Resume
    • Links & Resources
  • Video
    • For Candidates
    • For Clients
  • News
    • SRA Updates
    • SRA News
    • Candidate Chronicles
  • Contact

How to Strengthen Your Professional Network – Featuring Jack Smith, President of Sanford Rose Associates® – Milwaukee

December 20, 2012
by Darren
How to Strengthen Your Professional Network, human resource tips, Jack Smith, President of Sanford Rose Associates® - Milwaukee, retained executive search, top executive recruiter, workforce trends
0 Comment

BY LEKAN OGUNTOYINBO | DEC 17, 2012

In these tough economic times, getting a job often depends on the strength of your professional network. Working that network regularly is just as essential as managing your career — even when you’re employed.

“It is very tempting in these understaffed times to do the work at hand simply to get through the day,” says Marcia Finberg, a healthcare marketer and administrator in the Phoenix area for more than 20 years. “Unless you nurture your network, you can be caught short if, say, your hospital goes into red ink and heads roll.”

The bottom line: If you lose your job tomorrow, you want to be in a position where you have a reliable professional network that can help you back on feet. Study your network and ask this question: Do I have enough contacts to help me accomplish that?

If the answer is “no,” then it’s time for some changes.

Strategies for strengthening your network

Get a clear idea of who you want in your network. “Begin by writing a list of words and phrases that would describe the people you want to meet, get to know and with whom you want to build positive and helpful professional relationships,” says consultant Patti DeNucci, author of “The Intentional Networker: Attracting Powerful Relationships, Referrals and Results in Business.” She says, “Reflect on yourself and be sure you are also exuding those characteristics. You want to be someone that others want to know as well. Solid networks are built on mutual trust, respect and helpfulness.”

Position yourself as a resource to others. “Helping others is one way to get into good graces with them,” says Suzanne Garber, chief networking officer for International SOS, an international healthcare, medical and security assistance company. “Share your expertise and knowledge in your particular area. Connect people with others in your network to help advance their business. Take the focus off of you and put it onto others. You know that guy “Bob” who only calls because he wants something and the feeling of dread that ensues? Don’t be ‘Bob.’ You want people to be happy when you walk into a room, not when you exit.”

Be organized. Consider developing a good electronic filing system for your contacts. “Don’t rely on sticky notes and handwritten chicken scratch in various notebooks to help you remember who you met when and where,” says Garber. “Invest in some simple technology like CogniCard or Scan2Contacts to help you compile the business cards and contact information into an organized space that’s easy to use, compartmentalize and share. Then keep in touch with your contacts via LinkedIn, Twitter and other forms of social media. Networking is an all-season sport where there is no championship playoff.”

Jack Smith, president of Sanford Rose Associates, an executive recruiting firm in Milwaukee, suggests categorizing contacts in order of importance to your career aims. As your contacts balloon into hundreds or even thousands, he says, they become harder to manage. You could have contact with those on the A list more frequently than those on the B or C lists, he says.

“If you haven’t contacted them over time, they really aren’t contacts,” he says.

Read the full story.

Source http://career-news.healthcallings.com/2012/12/17/how-to-strengthen-your-professional-network/

About the Author
Sanford Rose Associates: Finding People Who Make a Difference® The Sanford Rose Associates® Executive Search Network is comprised of independently-owned firms who are committed to “finding people who make a difference®”. Executive Search Review has recognized the totality of the Sanford Rose Associates network as being one of the Top 10 Search Firms in North America. Sanford Rose Associates network has 100+ offices worldwide.
Social Share
  • google-share

Leave a Reply

Recent Posts Widget

Building Materials Sales Talent
Find Meaning in Your Work: Job Satisfaction in Building Materials Sales and Marketing
Jul 11, 2024
Building Materials Sales Talent
Casting A Wider Net: Search For Building Materials Sales Talent Beyond Traditional Channels
Jun 06, 2024
Building Materials Leaders: How to Make the Right Choice When Hiring Sales and Marketing Talent
May 21, 2024

Categories

  • Blog
  • Candidate Chronicles
  • Current Postions
  • SRA News
  • SRA Updates

Recent Posts and News

  • Find Meaning in Your Work: Job Satisfaction in Building Materials Sales and Marketing
  • Casting A Wider Net: Search For Building Materials Sales Talent Beyond Traditional Channels
  • Building Materials Leaders: How to Make the Right Choice When Hiring Sales and Marketing Talent
  • CEO of Hazeltine Executive Search Partners, Chad Spencer, Featured in Rigzone

Global Resources

SRA Recruiting Network

Sanford Rose Associates® - Burnett Group | P.O. Box 5184, Kendall Park, NJ 08824 | (972) 421-6305 | Privacy Policy