
In my first post I asked the questions about being entertained as opposed to the idea of being entertaining.
How do you become entertaining?
A few years ago I was watching an episode of Saturday Night Live. Jim Carrey was the guest host. He appeared in a skit as Jimmy Stewart while another actor took on the role of “Jim Carrey”. I thought this was hilarious and realized maybe Jim Carrey doesn’t take himself too serious after all. During the skit the actor playing “Jim Carrey” would often interrupt and do ridiculous antics during the pretend interview. At one point the real Jim Carrey - who was now Jimmy Stewart - jumped up and grabbed the actor playing “Jim Carrey” and started smacking him around. Then in Jimmy Stewart’s voice said, “You’re pathetic! All you can say is Look at me!! Look at me!!! I need attention 24 hours a day!!!”
Have you ever felt like you were networking with the pretend “Jim Carrey”? They corner you and like a magician with a deck of cards start firing off their business cards...until you feel like they are coming out of your ears, right?
To become a great entertainer...or to be entertaining...your audience must come first. They may be there to see you, but really, as the performer, you’re there to see them. How can you put a smile on a face? Who can you make laugh? Who will tell their friends about you and bring them back to see you?
A talented entertainer will include the whole room in their performance. He will play to the audience in the front row. The price of those tickets paid for the band. He will play to the audience in the back. The price of their tickets paid for the venue in which he’s performing. He will walk to his right and play to the audience in the right section. The price of their tickets paid for his entourage. He will play to the audience to his left. The cost of those tickets paid for the meals for everyone involved in his show. And he absolutely must play to the audience in the balcony. Those tickets are his take home pay.
I just mentioned five sections in a theatre. As you network at different events, map the room. Who is the front row, who is the back row, who is the balcony? Meet at least one new person from each section. If you cover all five sections, take a bow, that’s five new people in your Contact Manager.
When the event is over, it’s time for the encore...or time for the follow up! I have found the more I talk about what THEY do I can include bits of that conversation in a SendOutCard. To go a step further, find a card that relates to their profession. They will know you heard what they said which is just the start to developing that relationship. They will bring their friends to you because they sense that you care.
And that, my friend, will keep you from closing the show on Opening Night.
Even in the theatre, Givers Gain.
Awesome, you're such a great writer! Keep it up!
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ReplyDeleteA very interesting perspective on networking. It sounds like you wrote it from the perspective of the High I behavior style. They love to entertain the room and network with high energy most of the time. Wow, and I was just got my next four blogs from reading this......I love it! Http://hazelmwalker.com.
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