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Use Networking to Get Personal Development Help

When the term was first popularized in the 1980s, “networking” was something that sales representatives and insurance agents did at 6:30 a.m. at the local diner, swapping leads and war stories over coffee and toast. Some 20 years later, the term has worked its way into the common vocabulary, and simply means “staying connected” as well as “checking the connections regularly.”

No matter what you do for work or play, there is a way that networking can help. If you need a kick start in your new career, check the calendar listings in the business section of the newspaper and drop in on a few meetings of people in your line of work. If you don't know what you want to do, but know you want a change, go to AnalyzeMyCareer. They will help point you in the right direction and get you started looking for the right networking and job opportunities. If you have a home-based business, of any kind, there are groups of local entrepreneurs at whose networking meetings you can learn about all the aspects of running yours.

Even stay-at-home moms (and dads) can add some dimension to their lives by seeking out people with common interests. From athletes and hobbyists to students and business people, everyone has something to gain, as well as their own experience and hope to share, through networking. It leads to free advice, new contacts, increased business and, sometimes, to lasting partnerships and even romance.

The Net in Networking

Again, the Internet is a tremendous resource, along with the local newspapers and business groups, for locating people of similar interests. And the house-bound invalids and the chronically ill can even make the most of “virtual networking” without ever leaving the house. In addition to staying in touch with email, of course, one can add a “web camera” to a computer and have video conferences with one, two, or half a dozen people, right from the comfort of home.

Networking is really just a high-tech term for “making the rounds” and “talking shop,” human activities that go back to the dawn of civilization. With the tools available today—computers, modems, web cams, wireless Internet, all the rest—there may be additional opportunities for networking and new ways of communicating, but it still comes down to the age-old human desire to connect with others. In the last analysis, then, networking is just connecting with others, to help and be helped.

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