• Home
  • About
  • Services
  • Blog
  • Contact Us
  • Free Gifts
  • Sign In My Account
Menu

The Job Search Center

6815 Euclid Avenue
Cleveland OH 44103
216-395-7433
I Got the Job! Success System

Your Custom Text Here

The Job Search Center

  • Home
  • About
  • Services
  • Blog
  • Contact Us
  • Free Gifts
  • Sign In My Account

Specific is Terrific!

August 26, 2020 Susan Nelson
Specific. AdobeStock_110227816.jpeg

Today I want to explain why in networking - as counter-intuitive as it may seem - asking for a very specific referral works better than asking for a more general referral.

I call it counter-intuitive because we each know there are large groups of people we can aid, and we want our marketing to include all of those people. If you say you help a specific group, class, type, or individual, wouldn’t that imply you don’t help others? There are at least two deep, psychological reasons it doesn’t work that way: 

  1. Our brains remember and connect more easily with specific examples than with broad categories.

  2. Our brains easily generalize from specific examples but fail to easily imagine specific examples from a general case.

For example, those late night TV infomercials with their emotional appeals for aid to Africa are much more effective because they include a specific, named starving child.

Let me put it another way: Imagine I have four friends who are financial advisors; One specializes in the needs of doctors and lawyers. One specializes in the needs of corporate executives. One specializes in young families. One says “I can do all those things the others can do. I can help everyone”. 

If someone asks me “What financial advisor do you recommend?” My response would be “tell me about yourself, I know several.” As they answer my question, I would see if they fit into the categories of the first three, and if they do, the planner who they most closely matched would get the referral. ONLY IF THEY DO NOT FIT INTO A CATEGORY WILL I EVEN THINK OF THE FINAL ADVISOR. HE GETS THE LEFTOVERS.

Below I’ll explain in more detail how to properly specify your referral. For now I want to give you one more example of how our brains more easily create general answers from a specific example: 

If I asked you in a stressful situation to quickly think of something white, your mind would probably struggle. But if I asked you in that same situation to think of something white, round, found in a refrigerator, and can be used to make a sandwich, your mind would probably quickly think “egg”, or “mayonnaise” - both are round or in round containers, so they match ALL the descriptors. But you might also think of onions, which may be round and may not be white, or milk, which may not be used to make a sandwich, but is still white and could be in a round container. Then your mind will start to connect things like bread, which can be used to make a sandwich but may not be in the fridge. And then you’ll start to think about all different types of sandwiches. In a similar way, our networking brains will find ways to connect a specific example to the people we encounter to more easily make a referral,

I hope this leaves you hungry to learn more. :-)

Be Terrifically Specific!

I’ve explained why asking for specific, explicit, detailed individual referrals rather than more generic class, group, or type referrals works better. Now I want to show you how to generate referable descriptions for use in your networking presentations.

There are two parts to this:

  • Your ideal hiring authority or manager - a clear understanding of who you most want to serve, what role they perform, where they are, and what problems they encounter that you help solve.

  • Who also serves your ideal hiring authority- a clear understanding of those businesses and individuals that encounter, influence or have other connections with your ideal referral but DO NOT solve the problems you solve for them. This could be thought of as complementary and supplementary businesses or functions, and they are often in your contact sphere.

When asking for a specific referral, describe the person you want with a series of phrases that are progressively more specific. “Robert” often does this in his presentation. He’s not just looking for someone who has been in a merger, he is looking for a referral to the specific individual who is in charge of transporting the data from the acquired company to the newly formed Company Z which was reported in Crain’s Cleveland Business this week. It might end up that one of your friends works in that company.

Many networking referrals are best specified by descriptions of industry, company size, physical location, company name, department, role, and individual name. Tonya Pearls would like to be introduced to the owner of a medium sized trucking company, and she might generate better referrals by adding the name of the owner. For all she knows, your spouse’s cousin might work for that person.

Another way to ask for referrals is to ask what your contact thinks about introducing you to someone who fits the description of a key influencer of those leaders you are trying to meet. Jackie Jones wants to work with college bound high school students, and connecting her with organizations and services that also serve those students will help her. She might ask for an introduction to a specific individual college counselor at a specific school system. It might end up being your child’s scout troop leader, and you didn’t even know what was the scout leader’s day job.

Finally, don’t be afraid to ask for an introduction to someone you might believe is out of your league. Three things can happen:

  1. You’ll activate your network to help find a connection to that person.

  2. You’ll begin to get referrals that are more “like” that person than you were previously receiving.

  3. You’ll discover someone in your network has that person in their personal network but does not yet feel comfortable making the introduction and you have an opportunity to do more 1-2-1s with them to correct this.

In Blog, Coaching, Hexter, How To, Networking, Principles
← How to Make GREAT Introductions via EmailBecoming VISIBLE to Your Network →

Recent Posts

Featured
Jan 8, 2025
Let’s Look at a Late-30’s Man’s Transition
Jan 8, 2025
Jan 8, 2025
Nov 19, 2023
Healing Is Changing
Nov 19, 2023
Nov 19, 2023
Nov 19, 2023
To the Recalcitrant Seeker of a Leadership Role
Nov 19, 2023
Nov 19, 2023
Nov 19, 2023
Responding to an Emailed Referral Message
Nov 19, 2023
Nov 19, 2023
May 26, 2023
Whew! It's Memorial Day!
May 26, 2023
May 26, 2023
May 16, 2023
A Compliment and Three Questions
May 16, 2023
May 16, 2023
May 3, 2023
Insights Into Job Searching by Persons with Disabilities
May 3, 2023
May 3, 2023
Dec 19, 2022
Tis the season to treat your referrals like the gifts they are
Dec 19, 2022
Dec 19, 2022
Nov 4, 2022
Reasons to Keep Network During the Holidays
Nov 4, 2022
Nov 4, 2022
Jun 18, 2022
Thoughts on Long Distance Job Search Issues
Jun 18, 2022
Jun 18, 2022
Mar 25, 2022
Good Candidates, Where Are You?
Mar 25, 2022
Mar 25, 2022
Mar 25, 2022
What to Say Instead of, "What Do You Do?"
Mar 25, 2022
Mar 25, 2022
Mar 15, 2022
How to Connect
Mar 15, 2022
Mar 15, 2022
Feb 15, 2022
Connecting Is an Art and a Science
Feb 15, 2022
Feb 15, 2022
Dec 6, 2021
Why Employed Professionals Are Seeking Help to Change Jobs
Dec 6, 2021
Dec 6, 2021
Nov 1, 2021
Responding to People Who Are Discouraging: a Post to Help You Through Holiday Quandaries
Nov 1, 2021
Nov 1, 2021
Aug 12, 2021
When You Have "Too Many" Potentials
Aug 12, 2021
Aug 12, 2021
Jun 1, 2021
Is it time to ask for a raise?
Jun 1, 2021
Jun 1, 2021
Feb 17, 2021
Tips for Using Zoom in Networking
Feb 17, 2021
Feb 17, 2021
Feb 8, 2021
Your Fortune Is In Your Follow-Up
Feb 8, 2021
Feb 8, 2021
Jan 21, 2021
How Candidates With Disabilities Can Develop a Political Campaign
Jan 21, 2021
Jan 21, 2021
Dec 7, 2020
Yeah! You Got the Job! And the Gifts!
Dec 7, 2020
Dec 7, 2020
Sep 21, 2020
How to Use Technology in Your Career When You Have a Disability
Sep 21, 2020
Sep 21, 2020
Aug 26, 2020
Affirmation for When You Feel Stuck or Scared Things Won't Turn Out Well
Aug 26, 2020
Aug 26, 2020
Aug 26, 2020
How to Make GREAT Introductions via Email
Aug 26, 2020
Aug 26, 2020
Aug 26, 2020
Specific is Terrific!
Aug 26, 2020
Aug 26, 2020
Aug 21, 2020
Becoming VISIBLE to Your Network
Aug 21, 2020
Aug 21, 2020
Aug 21, 2020
KLT Is Not Enough
Aug 21, 2020
Aug 21, 2020
Jul 10, 2020
Almost Hired? That Window of Opportunity is More Special Than You Think
Jul 10, 2020
Jul 10, 2020
Jun 3, 2020
Maximize Networking During 2020
Jun 3, 2020
Jun 3, 2020

The Brownhoist • 4403 St Clair Avenue • Cleveland OH 44103