Business cards may be on the way out. How are you connecting?
I’m in Las Vegas at The Venetian having coffee at Espressamente Illy where they serve (arguably) the world’s best coffee. At the bar, I recognize someone obviously not from America. (Fashion reveals all.)
"Where are you from?" I asked. "Belgium," he replied triumphantly and with pride. "I’ll buy your coffee," I said. "As a welcome to America."
He said, "I’m also buying coffee for two of my friends." I said, "Fine, put it on my bill!"
We began to exchange cultural information, and I discovered all three of them were in sales, like me. Their name badges revealed they were attendees of the same conference I was to be a featured speaker at the next evening.
Now we had a link.
They wanted to know what I knew, and I wanted to know what they knew.
Marcel’s (one of the group) first question to me was one I have been asked a thousand times, "What’s the secret of selling against fierce competition?" My immediate answer was, "Differentiate with value, or die with price."
He said, "I agree. I’m a value provider."
I said, "Hey, let’s tweet it," and immediately we turned the conversation to social media. I asked them how many followers they had on Twitter. The first guy had none. The second guy had none. The third guy, Marcel, said, "Not too many," and sheepishly smiled.
Turns out they wanted to use social media, but they just didn’t know how to use it.
NOTE: I am amazed at how many savvy business people don’t take the AHA! or impactful information shared or exchanged in a business conversation, and send it out to the world.
IT’S YOUR CHOICE: You can tell three people, or 30,000 people – even 3,000,000 people. The power of Twitter, when applied to business social media, allows you to broadcasts your brilliance to your followers and all the followers of those who re-tweet you. From a casual conversation in a coffee bar. YIKES.
We spoke for an hour. We had lots to talk about. We were familiar with the American culture and the European culture, and had their company in common. I gave them my business card, my business coin, and two signed books and said, "May I have your business cards?" Each of them said, "I didn’t bring any," and I thought to myself, "That doesn’t work."
But my thinking was 1990, not 2011.
REALITY: Pascal, the guy I bought the coffee for said, “Just connect with me on LinkedIn.” Cool.
REALITY: Business cards are not necessary to connect anymore, especially if they’re boring, or have been created by some marketing department, or both.
Right then we each took out our mobile devices, and connected with one another on LinkedIn. Not a business card, rather an online business connection, a permanent business card, a permanent connection. And with the exchange, we each receive 100 hundred times more information than what could ever fit on a business card.
BUSINESS SOCIAL MEDIA LESSION LEARNED: When you link with people, like people, follow people, photo with people, “bump” with people, and tweet what is said, all of the sudden the business card becomes relatively irrelevant.
EPILOGE: Less than an hour later, 22 global re-tweets of, “Differentiate with value, or die with price.” And the re-tweets will continue to pile up.
TRY THIS: Next time you attend a networking event, don’t bring any business cards. Force people to link with you, or follow you, if they want to connect with you. Realize that a business card only really represents simple exchange, but that a LinkedIn or Twitter or Facebook on-the-spot connection creates engagement. Long-term engagement.
Think about the pile of business cards on your desk, of people that you’ve never really connected with, and certainly have never provided value for. Then think about the number of people who you could be adding to your network; people who could really be enlightened by you and discover your depth (or lack of it).
The tide is turning against one of America’s institutions. It’s not a “movement” or a “protest.” Rather, it’s a technological evolution. And one you and I need to be made aware of. Today.
Oh, cards will be here for some time, but I can already hear my 3-year old granddaughter, Isabel, asking me in 15 years, “Pop Pop, what’s a business card?”
How are you connecting?
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