While sitting in my home office the other day, I sifted through two hundred business cards stacked in a rickety pile. They slightly tottered as I removed them one at a time and reviewed the information, straining for a memory of a meeting or handshake.
I knew if I had a card, that there had been a handshake,
undoubtedly. Because I am in the middle of a move, I am deep cleaning and discarding anything that I haven't looked at or used in a year. For some reason, I
cannot part with business cards.
Question: Are business cards a thing of the past? With all the social media and different ways to share information, do we no longer need to pass a small piece of card stock with a painstakingly designed image/logo imprinted along with the necessary contact details of the beholder? I love giving out and receiving business cards. To me, it is like having my dance card full. It means I got something out of a conversation, it means there is potential for future conversations and possibly a business deal. It means a LinkedIn connection or an animated follow-up email.
It means I connected with someone. We take the information found on a biz card and scan it or download it or upload it to our mobile device, our outlook, our networks. We used to transfer the info to a manila-indexed card or slip it into a plastic sleeve on a wheel that rested on our literal desktops, not our virtual ones. The
Rolodex® was a corporate icon, a necessary networking tool that everyone who was anyone filled without fail. The drive to add cards/contacts was just as strong as the urge to make LinkedIn connections. It was done differently and the value may have been greater because the literal connecting relied on more than acquiring an email address. Again, it was the result a handshake.
These two networking styles reside together. A relationship
rarely stands on one handshake. As well, it rarely stands on an email or a request to connect. There must be more than just one. The handshake is followed up by a new media connection or the new media connection is followed up by a voice to voice conversation or face to face encounter. They work hand in hand not against each other; they
both want for the same thing.
I am getting ready to order business cards for new members of our team. They are each
excited to receive their cards; it is a
rite of passage as a new member of the firm or company. It says that trust is there. It says that you are now accepted as a representative of the organization. It means you can do the real networking, the one that requires a handshake. And who
doesn't love that?
©by rayannethorn
.