Well, it’s been a great experience pulling together this three part series. I hope that in reading it, you have found some insight in to your Personal Network – I certainly have in writing it.
I’ve reviewed three new products/service – from MyWebCareer, Connected and Nimble. I have also had the privilege to interview the founders of each business.
The first step with each of these solutions is going off to the “cloud” and pulling together personal information from the likes of Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn and Google. However, each solution has a different angle on aggregating this information.
I started this series of posts by asking a series of questions? They were:-
* What impression am I making?
* Who do I know?
* What do I know about them?
My exploration of the value of Personal Networks constantly throws up questions – and these are only three of many.
What impression am I making?
MyWebCareer, undoubtedly answers this question. Although, like everything in life – it’s only an opinion.
If you are developing and cultivating your Personal Network – you should be concerned about your “brand” and how you are perceived by your network. I don’t see any reason for not giving it a try – and using its clever scoring system to bench mark your Personal Brand and on-line presence. I’d also recommended this service to Personal Brand consultants (like Beth Campbell Duke) – it’s a simple way to get clients thinking about how they shape up … and how they can improve. I will certainly diary time each month for a brief review of which direction my MyWebCareer score is moving – and why.
So, this is the easy bit of the post – if you want this question answering .. then just log in to MyWebCareer.
Who do I know? What to I know about them?
This is a tough one. The undoubted, sure fire winner of the commercial race is Nimble! It’s driven by an inspirational founder, Jon Ferrara – with the conventional CRM customer base waiting with open arms for a Social CRM solution. It will work for SMEs (Small & Medium Enterprises) at all levels from management to sales staff to customers.
However, my interest is in Personal Networks. As regular readers will know, my favourite quote is from Mick Cope, who wrote the FT book, “Personal Networking”:-
“By professional networking I mean a set of close contacts or associates who will help deliver my value to market. The key thing is that these are people who will ‘help’ you in the market, THEY ARE NOT THE MARKET. Sorry for the full-on letters, but my definition of a network is ‘people who will help amplify my personal capital in the market’, not a bunch of friends and colleagues to whom I try to sell under the guise of giving them a great opportunity. Active management of these people is not networking; it is client relationship management, a whole different ball game…”
This is the third time I’ve quoted this in my blog – it sums up the idea of a Personal Network for me. Mick will be charging me royalties soon….
During the interview with Sachin Rekhi, the founder of Connected, we discussed who was his customer. He said: “We looked at delivering this products to companies – chasing the VP of Sales. However, we decided that Connected is a more personal product – and we’re committed to take the harder track of acquiring customers one at a time.”
So, for someone with the long-term/life-long strategic goal of cultivating and developing their Personal Network – I think Sachin has set the best strategy. Unfortunately, this does not make it a sure fire commercial winner like Nimble! Getting people to stand back, take stock, work out where they are going – and recognising that their Personal Network is the key to long-term development will be a challenge.
While writing this series of posts, trying out the software and interviewing the founders, I’ve started to get a much better feel for the support needed for a Personal Network to function. The “Who do I know? What to I know about them?” is a fundamental building block in this.
I’ve also taken a look back my blog post “Personal Networks, Soloware and ‘The Individual is the new Group'”. In summary, that post makes the argument that the power of the individual through “Soloware” is much greater than that of the Enterprise through “Groupware”.
From all this deliberation, I am starting to understand that the Linchpin society put forward by Seth Godin in his book (indispensable, unique people are the future) – means that enterprise driven CRM systems are not the solutions required for the social media connected 21st century.
I always believe that when I am getting to grips with a complex issue, if I can visualise it (or in my case create a block diagram) that I am getting near a solution. Here’s my first iteration:-
Here the individual has their Personal Network, gathered from the “cloud” – which we see in solutions like Connected and Nimble. However, the significant difference that I envisage is that the enterprises we engage with as “Linchpins” to deliver projects will need to give access to their corporate information in the same cloud based way.
This will demand a whole new level of trust between individuals and enterprise – and a shift of power. In our new world – The Personal Network is king!
Thank you to Nip, Sachin and Jon – I’ve really enjoyed connecting with you … and wish you and your ventures every success.
Phil,
Thank you for taking the time to provide your readers with your great post on Personal Networking. I believe that Relationships are the key to business and that they all start on a personal nature. Nimble is, at it’s core, a Social Relationship Manager that enables an person to build relationships. The beauty of Nimble is that you can then “join” with other people to form teams and share those relationships including the activities and communications involved with them.
People, no matter how small of a business, cannot exist in a vacuum, they will eventually collaborate as part of larger groups and Nimble will enable them to grow and connect with others empower them to become effective teams.
Hi Jon
Thanks for commenting, as well as all your help. You are totally right – life is all about building relationships. I am sure Nimble will do exactly that for its customers and their customers.
I suppose that my indulgence in this blog is to take a step back and recognise that an individual’s Personal Network is their greatest asset – and the root of so many things in life, not just commerce. The “Who do I know? What do I know about them?” applies to family, friends, ex-colleagues, mentors, enemies, acquaintances and customers. I’m keen to find a way that people can get to this point, then define their objectives – and then select the appropriate tool. If a person’s goal is to build a business, grow customer relationships, engage in social media conversations – then they will find no better tool than Nimble.
For my part, I’ve recently done an audit of my Personal Network. Analysing in particular who I knew – and the cross over into social media. During this process, I also mapped out my objectives – and several weaknesses.
1. I am moving my family across the UK to Bath – and I only know a handful of folk there. Action – use social media to check out the noise and ask friends if they know anyone who they could intro me to.
2. I’ve got a passion for understanding Personal Networks, I believe there is an opportunity somewhere within – but I’ve no academic background & no contacts on the periphery. Action – write the blog and try to engage with people in and around the sector.
3. I do want to create another business in the next couple of years – but don’t have mentors to help me with that (I’ve spent the last 5 years doing that for others – and forgot myself. Action – go and meet interesting, bright people from all different areas. Find that support network.
You can see, how these don’t fit in to a CRM (or sCRM solution) – but when I start another business they will.
I am in the fortunate position to sit back and think “in the vacuum” – and through the blog I will share my thoughts to hopefully help others. You are right though – nobody can exist in a vacuum. Coming up for air soon…
Thank you for sharing information about these 3 platforms, each is rather new to me and now I am excited to learn more about each and how they might fit within my world.
Hi Jeff. I appreciate you taking the time to read and comment. Please do come back after you have had a try and offer your opinion. Best wishes. Phil