I write this from a train heading into London. I am on my way to a 'Digital Mindset' workshop from Ecademy founders Penny & Thomas Power. The purpose of the event is billed as 'to look at why a "Digital Mindset" and Digital Coaching will grow your business.' The tag line for the Ecademy website is now 'Learning, networking and business development for the digital age'.
If we are in a 'digital age' what does this mean for the Owners, Directors and Partners of small specialist businesses and professional firms? It is mainly these people who go networking as their primary route to market.
Most of the people I meet in this category are passionate about what they do and are open and transparent about what they do and why. It is this passion, openness & transparency that gives them an advantage in this digital age. It is exactly the right approach online.
Contrast this with the news furore over the last few days about wikileaks. Whatever the rights or wrongs the revelations, if true, show some of our politicians, diplomats and representatives of big business taking the opposite approach. Saying one thing in private and another thing in public. The internet has made it easier to judge openness, honesty and transparency. The very things that small business is mainly better at that big business.
You may have heard the expression 'people buy people'. The approach for the digital age is the same as what came before.
Be yourself!
Good Networking!
Tuesday, November 30, 2010
The small business advantage in the Digital Age
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2 comments:
Dave:
I own a little business and I tell people that I'm "all in" leterally, my house is on the line. We are three years into it and there is still no room for errors, mistakes or letting people down. The best way to ensure we can press forward is to be real, not perfect, just real. There are some things the big guys do very well, but we have found when we have great relationships and we communicate honestly we get the business. It's funny, we're small, but our best clients are huge.
Cheers,
Ken Tudhope
www.networkingnote.com
I concur with Ken. The leverage in a small business is an intimate, authenticate capability to develop trust in client relationships.
Kenneth
www.kenneth-lapointe.blogspot.com
(business innovation and sustainability blog)
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