Reid's rules of networking.

The whole Fortune magazine article talks about the philosophy of the man behind LinkedIn, but I particularly enjoyed his rules at the end:

In the next day: Look at your calendar for the past six months and identify the five people you spend the most time with -- are you happy with their influence on you?

In the next week: Introduce two people who do not know each other but ought to. Then think about a challenge you face and ask for an introduction to a connection in your network who could help.

Imagine you got laid off from your job today. Who are the 10 people you'd e-mail for advice? Don't wait -- invest in those relationships now.

In the next month: Identify a weaker tie with whom you'd like to build an alliance. Help him by giving him a small gift -- forward an article or job posting.

Create an "interesting people fund" to which you automatically funnel a certain percentage of your paycheck. Use it to pay for coffees and the occasional plane ticket to meet new people and shore up existing relationships.

Source: The real way to build a social network, Fortune Magazine

4:16 PM Jan 24 2012

I love the idea of an "interesting people fund" it's something that I've never really articulated but seen, and perhaps participated in at some level, unconsciously. Thanks for posting this!

8:35 PM Jan 24 2012

Agreed, thanks! Guess I need to read more Fortune:)

9:20 PM Jan 24 2012

Great highlight. I think this stuff is really hard to do, even if laid out so clearly by an expert.

7:03 AM Jan 25 2012

It's hard, but it's doable.

Hopefully Reid's book will lay it out clearly. :)

2:47 PM Jan 25 2012

7:31 AM May 16 2012

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