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You know,
people with great connections
don’t have them by accident.
Indeed,
when you come across another
person who has lots of connections
in different places, that
asset of “human capital”
was built at a price. Someone
had to work to build that
asset.
This perspective
was shared with me recently
over a coffee visit with Frank
Agin, founder
of AmSpririt
Business Connections
and co-author (with Lewis
Howes) of the
FANTASTIC book LinkedWorking:
Generating Success on the
World’s Largest Professional
Networking Website.
If you are new to LinkedIn,
this concise, easy read is
exactly what you are looking
for. Get it now.
“One
of the things people tend
to forget about networking
is that it is work,”
Frank asserts. “That’s
why we call it networking…hence
also the title of our book.”
Networking
is not—nor should it
be—a low priority activity.
The beauty of LinkedWorking
is that it shows how timeless
fundamentals in “face-to-face”
networking apply equally to
connecting online.
For example,
one of these timeless tenets
is the notion of being a giver.
Share your expertise. Share
your knowledge. Give advice
when appropriate. It’s
a networking fundamental,
and where better can you do
this than on LinkedIn by answering
questions posted by other
members?
This feature
is not unique to LinkedIn…it
is found on countless sites,
including another one I contribute
to, CollegeRecruiter.com.
Yet it is the personal stories
that Frank and Lewis uncover
in their book I find compelling…other
people just like you and me
who have built worldwide brands
by simply paying it forward
once per day.
That’s
the “nugget” I
took from my first reading
of this great book—not
entirely new to me, but “relearned”
with greater emphasis and
a personal admission that
it is one simple activity
I should improve upon.
Want
to be a giver? Is the thought
of writing an article too
overwhelming? Then don’t.
Answer a question, and improve
someone else’s life.
One answer per day will bring
people your way…

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