Transmitters

Transmitters

In which we are reminded to increase our reach through "transmitters" in our networks.

One night, we went to see a college 12-person A Capella ensemble perform. Their repertoire was a mix of contemporary mainstream pop and Great American Songbook (my favorite!). The theater seated 1,000; there were about 300 of us in the audience for their performance. And lucky we were. The theater is very “alive”; the acoustics are brilliant. We heard the group clearly with only modest amplification. They stood in a semi-circle facing three stand-mounted microphones that soloists used to amplify their voices a bit over their mates’ choral support. And they performed spectacularly well – beautiful, rich arrangements professionally performed. Amazing.

Which was great, as far as it went – we 300 were treated to a show that nobody else could hear.

Except that…

The college radio station broadcast the concert so it reached dozens or hundreds more people in the surrounding community, extending the performers’ reach in a roughly 15-mile radius around the theater.

And, although no other stations or networks picked up the performance, if they had, the performance could have been heard and enjoyed over a much, much wider area, hundreds or miles or more.

Coincidentally, I was watching Ken Burns’ series on the development of country music in the United States. The number of listeners and the popularity of country music increased dramatically in the 1920s and 1930s once stations with powerful, 50,000-watt transmitters like WSM in Nashville (the Grand Ole Opry) or WLS in Chicago (the National Barn Dance) began broadcasting the music weekly over wide swaths of America.

All of which prompted me to think: No matter how great our message is to the people we can reach personally in one venue or another, we can engage and attract many more people to us (and to our message or our services) if we develop “transmitters” in our personal networks – people who, like an 800-watt college radio station or a 50,000-watt WSM, can repeat and extend our music or our messages to communities in which we are not or cannot be present.

Nick Miller is President of Clarity Advantage based in Concord, MA. He assists banks and credit unions to generate more and more profitable relationships, faster, with business clients, their owners, and their employees through better sales strategies and execution. Additional articles on Clarity's web site.

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Mike Esterday

Vice Chair, Integrity Solutions

10 个月

Nick-Another great message! If what we do creates value for customers, we have an obligation to tell as many people as possible so we can help them. This also resonates since I live in Nashville,, the home of WSM and the Grand Ole Opry!

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Eddie Konialian

CEO/ Co-Founder

10 个月

…and because you know me so well, you know I am so passionate sit this topic. Hope those that follow you on LinkedIn that networking is a give first business, not a get first business.

Eddie Konialian

CEO/ Co-Founder

10 个月

I have so many deep feelings about this post Nick Miller. I have had so many conversations over the years where executives are so extremely afraid to be visionaries around this specific topic. Most people fail at networking because it’s a selfish strategy. We rarely stop to think what value we bring to our networks, but most of the time one focus what our network does for us!!

Mary Kay Schneider

Results-Oriented Financial Services Executive | Sales Leadership | Risk Management | Strategic Thinking & Problem Solving | Non-Profit Fundraising & Governance

10 个月

Great analogy to consider who else can transmit your ideas to get more exposure!

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