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Guidelines for effective networking

 

Introduction
 

Effective networking requires making contacts with many people over an extended period of time. It is a continuing process of seeking and building relationships.

 
See:

Networking in a language program

Guidelines
 

Here are some guidelines to follow when you network:

 
  • Take a nonpartisan approach.

    • Look for contacts with every person and agency who might have some common interest.
    • Do not restrict yourself to those who initially seem to be the most sympathetic, the closest ideologically, or the easiest to contact.
  • Make broad connections.

    • Make contact with anyone who might possibly have some interest in the language program, not just those whose interest seems obvious.
    • Watch the press closely to find out which national and regional agencies are seeking to communicate at the local level.
  • Overdevelop connections.

    • Make initial contacts, even though you think they may turn out later to be less than worthwhile. Do not make these judgments before wide-ranging contacts have been made.
    • Err on the side of overdeveloping contacts. In that way, the fruitful contacts will begin to appear.
  • Allow time and make repeated contact.

    • Do not give up on contacts too early. It generally takes longer than you think for others to understand the significance and benefits of a language program.

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Go to SIL home page This page is an extract from the LinguaLinks Library, Version 4.0, published on CD-ROM by SIL International, 1999. [Ordering information.]

Page content last modified: 16 February 1999

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