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Tom Friel: How to Network

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We talk a lot about networks.

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Most people don't have any idea how big their networks in fact really are.

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Your networks are enormous.

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I mean, you start with the people in the room, you start with everybody they know.

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You start with people that they know.

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You look at graduates of Stanford, people that they know,

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the places that they've worked.

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Before you know it,

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you can define your network literally as being hundreds of thousands of people.

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Because anybody who can make a connection to somebody that might be willing to help

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you, is in fact part of your network.

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And you may not even know who they are, but they're part of your network and

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you can make that work for you.

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If you want to meet somebody, somebody, usually somebody in

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the Stanford Business School alumni, Kim Marie will make that introduction for you.

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If you can figure out the right way to get to him and

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the right way to ask that question.

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GSB alums will usually help.

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I'll make this point because I always make it and that is,

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almost anybody is going to be willing to help you.

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I'd be willing to help you, your classmates would be willing to help you.

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Your professors and alumni will be willing to help you, but

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very few of them are going to be willing to do your homework for you.

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And so, an example, if you call me and say,

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Tom, I want to get into, I don't know, venture capital.

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Would you introduce me to some venture capitalists?

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What?

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That's a lazy question, okay?

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But if you said, I've got two years in the venture capital industry,

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and I'm working on a project that Josh Greene and

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More David Dahl is a board member of.

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I know you know Josh, because I know you work with him on a board.

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Would you be willing to introduce me to Josh Greene so

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that I can have a conversation about this project that I know he's interested in?

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Now, night and day, those two questions.

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The first one general, requires work on my part.

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And I'm not going to go do a lot of work to try to figure out what you could have

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figured out and didn't.

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But the second one, if I believe that that's a very credible question,

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it takes me about 30 seconds to pop off an email to Josh and say, look,

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this is somebody I think you ought to meet.

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And they've specifically picked you out of the hundreds or thousands of venture

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capital people because of your experience in this company.

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And they're interested in that and they think they have something to add,

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would you meet with them for 15 to 20 minutes?

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Specific on the one hand, general on the other hand.

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They said pick specific targets, make specific requests.

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And then if somebody does you a favor, particularly somebody that didn't have

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any reason to do it other than they were just trying to help you.

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After the thing is done, you met with Joshua Hunter, go back,

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send them an email and tell him what happened.

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Hey, I met with Josh, thanks for setting that up.

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I'm not sure what's going to come out of it, but I really appreciate it,

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we're going to stay in touch, thank you.

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Believe me, that will pay dividends later.

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First of all, it's just good common courtesy if somebody did something for

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you that they didn't have to do to call them up and

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thank them and tell them what happened because they're probably curious.

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It also leaves that door open to go back to them again in the future because

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they've got a good feeling about you.

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This is somebody that handled that right and

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they'd be willing to go do another favor for you down the road.

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Whereas I've got a lot of people, I won't name them, maybe I will later a few,

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but who seems like every couple of years would call me up and

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say, Tom, it's been so long since we've talked.

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I really wanted to get back to you and see how you were doing.

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Well, I'm doing fine.

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[LAUGH] How are you doing?

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Well, I'm getting work out of looking for a job.

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Well, what happened with the last thing that you called me about two years ago

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that he never came back and told me what happened about that?

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And maybe I'll be polite to him, maybe I won't.

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More likely they don't, somehow I'm out of town or something when

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that call comes in and my EA just handles it, it never sees the light of day.

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Stay connected to the people who've helped you.

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[MUSIC]

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