ashleysarticles.com ashleysarticles.com
Home About Us Privacy Terms of Service Place Your Link Submit Article
Search:   
Add Url
 

Vehicles & Automotive

Relationship & Lifestyle

Adventure & Sports

Creative Arts

Issues & News

Research & Science

Malls & Shopping

Academics & Education

Investment & Finance

Self Management

Business & Services

Children & Teens

Food & Recipe

Estate & Realty

People & Communities

Recreation

Careers & Employment

Travel & Accommodation

Fitness & Health

Medical Care

Law & Politics

Online & Indoor Games

Home Family & Garden

Computers & Networking


 

Home » Business & Services » Business Network Links
 

8 Ways To Develop Confidence In New Situations

 
Author: Maria Marsala

Do you enjoy one-on-one networking, however, the thought of walking into room full of people you don't know horrifies you? You're not alone. Yes, even a social butterfly, President of the Social Committee in High School and avid networker knows how you feel. Here are some of my tricks. And they have all worked!

~A great way to network at a conference is to volunteer at the registration desk. Why? You get to say hello to everyone who registers in your line and everyone who registers gets to see you behind the registration table. At the event, you'll feel more comfortable talking with people because you've "met" them already. And if those aren't enough benefits, people will "recognize you" from the registration desk, and be more likely to come talk with you.

~If you teach a class or speak, go into the room early. Get a feel for it, change it around if need be, and greet everyone who walks in with a big "hello my name is ...". Bring name tags or recycle the tops of old manila folders, have each person put their name on it, and put it on the table in front of them.

~When you are planning to attend a meeting for the first time, call up whomever you can from the organization. Ask them if you can meet them at the meeting. Then you'll "know" someone that you can look for when you arrive.

~Carry a nametag in your glove compartment. Make one for personal use, another for business use. Then people will feel more comfortable walking up to you in meetings.

~Put your notes on the back of duplicates of pictures (photography) you've taken. Then they won't stick out so much from the podium (like white paper or index cards do.)

~Practice some opening lines and your handshake before you attend the event. Practice using a mirror and ask your family to let you practice on them, too.

~Develop two a 30-second commercials (also called elevator speeches, USP - unique selling propositions). One is for personal use, and the other would be for business use. On a recent telelclass I attended, provided by Jay Levinson of Guerilla Marketing fame, suggested creating a 7 word commercial, too.

~Remember that everyone in that room is a human being, too. Everyone has their own fears to deal with... and they might even be the same as yours.

Find other ways to build your confidence, too. Let me know the ones that work for you.

Author Bio:

Maria Marsala

© 2005 Elevating Your Business. Since 1998, Maria Marsala, a former Wall Street Trader, has worked with more than 1000 owners of Internet and service businesses to increase their profits, save time, and live rich, fulfilling lives. Visit http://www.ElevatingYourBusiness.com to request your 2 business reports and join our business building newsletter and forum.

You can search for this article using: business to business network, business networking, network marketing business
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Aspects to Consider When Setting Up An E-commerce Website
 
All Small Businesses Need to Gather Community Intel
 
Small Business Owners - Form a Relationship with Your Bank Manager
 
3 Fast and Easy Ways to Boost Online Profits Right Now
 
Sales Prospecting - How Effective is Your Elevator Pitch?
 
The Effects Of Printing Press: Society Speaking
 
The "Wall of Defensiveness": 7 Ways to Tear It Down
 
MLM Training- The Secrets to a Recruiting Conversation Anytime with Anyone
 
Creative ways to Save Money In Small Business
 
Increasing Employee Retention Through Employee Engagement
 
 
 
Home >> Privacy >> Terms of Service
Copyright © 2008 www.ashleysarticles.com