Are you a subject matter expert? A subject matter expert is the “go-to” person for their customers and social network contacts. These experts are seasoned professionals with references and a portfolio of proven success. Subject matter experts get the customers, win the bids and are answering the phone rather than cold calling.
Interested in being an expert? Then begin thinking like one. An expert by definition is “having, involving, or displaying special skill or knowledge derived from training or experience.” In other words if you can demonstrate that you know more than most and are recognized as a leader within a community you are an expert.
In the 1980’s it could take you years to establish yourself as an expert. With today’s social networking communities you can be recognized almost overnight. Let’s look at two communities and how to position you and your business as leaders.
LinkedIn:
LinkedIn is established to be a business networking community. You have the opportunity to ask questions, answer questions and participate in discussions. The more time you dedicate to positioning yourself the more you will differentiate yourself. Include links to your sites (blogs included) and where possible share your books or white papers on the subject. References also speak volumes. Anytime you can say “don’t take my word for it, read what my customers think” the more credible your opinions and suggestions become.
You can also join “like-minded” experts on LinkedIn. These are small groups inside of the larger community that often focus on a discipline (e.g. marketing, sales, recruiting, human resources, or accounting) or on a specific interest (e.g. events, public relations, consulting). Groups are reflected on your profile and allow people to see your affiliations and interests.
Facebook:
Facebook is different as it was set up as a social site. Both business and personal intersect here. You can establish multiple Facebook pages that focus on your business and on you as an individual. You can choose to combine it all into one page. Post notes that include article leads with links as well as highlights from your latest activities. Changing your status to include information on where you are speaking or a presentation you may have posted will drive others to review your work. You can cross link both Facebook and LinkedIn driving your audience from one site to the other.
There are many other sites that work much like these two (Plaxo, Namyz, MySpace). It is possible to stretch yourself too thin with social networks. I recommend you pick two and really focus your efforts in developing your message through your profile, references and participation (e.g. status updates, Q&A).
The path to being an expert is clear: a well developed profile, references from your customers, participation in online discussions and building a following of contacts who are looking to drive business with you and for you.

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November 18, 2008 at 1:42 pm
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