Tag Archives: viable audience

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network size

Network Size, What Is Your Viable Audience?

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Do you have a vast network? Who is in your network? Network size might be better considered as your smallest viable audience.

Have you ever taken a moment to consider your social or professional network?

Does a social connection in another country, a person you’ve never met, have value in your network?

If you are going to measure value, will you compare it with something?

A social connection in another country compared with a social connection who resides within a 50-mile radius of your home?

What about a connection who is employed as a front service desk clerk compared with the CEO of a 25-million-dollar business?

Should you be picky about your network, or just go for grabbing every person who will communicate with you or accept a connection request online?

Network Size

In business or professional networks, it often feels like size matters. How relevant is it though? Does it matter for your career?

Certainly, some of this depends on the level of engagement. Everyone recognizes that social channels operate based on algorithms. While the exact algorithm is a mystery, people quickly recognize that behind the scenes engagement or a lack of is being conditioned by the code.

When engagement feels slow or weak, many users seek to gain new connections. More must be better.

Friends are friends, but professional connections might be analyzed a little differently.

Perhaps understanding more about your smallest viable audience is the best.

Do you focus on people with like-minded interests, people who work in the same sector, or people who have a similar career or job title?

Are you selling, buying, or just building? Are you job hunting or only seeking collaboration?

It seems to me that the quality of your connections matters most.

Quantity is important. Theoretically, more makes sense. However, 25 quality connections might be much more powerful than 250 of which you have no common interest, association, or interaction.

-DEG

Dennis E. Gilbert is a business consultant, speaker (CSPTM), and culture expert. He is a five-time author and the founder of Appreciative Strategies, LLC. His business focuses on positive human performance improvement solutions through Appreciative Strategies®. Reach him through his website at Dennis-Gilbert.com or by calling +1 646.546.5553.


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viable audience

Viable Audience and Your Next Career Move

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Wishing for a promotion? Looking at new options? Perhaps you just want to be the absolute best in your current role? Think twice about what is trendy or flashy and consider your viable audience.

Here is why.

Trendy, flashy, or doing something the way it appears to sell at the employer across town may not matter very much. Surfing LinkedIn, searching Indeed, or posting your discontent on Instagram probably won’t result in anything positive.

Choose Your Audience

Too often people try to go for the biggest viable audience. They consider that all of the organizations must be searching for someone who fits all the knowledge, skills, and abilities of the advertisement they just read.

The truth is, when you say it politely, that employer likely just borrowed the job advertisement from the closest job ad they themselves just read. It is the same, or very similar.

It appears everyone wants nearly the same thing. They offer X and provide Y. They are growing and care. So they say.

That’s what they advertise.

What is behind the veil?

Smallest Viable Audience

What do you want for your career? What makes you the best candidate?

Mainstream, fitting into the average and being just like everyone else probably will make finding the right opportunity nothing more than a gamble.

Who is your smallest viable audience? Not the largest, the most flashy or trendy, not all of the employers in the ocean of opportunity.

What employers really have the niches where you shine? Are you promoting and growing the things that make you unique, or do you find yourself trying to justify your abilities in areas where you are weak?

Sometimes you just need a job. It’s true, and understandable.

Your next career move though, it should be something more than that.

If you want it to be.

-DEG

Dennis E. Gilbert is a business consultant, speaker (CSPTM), and culture expert. He is a five-time author and the founder of Appreciative Strategies, LLC. His business focuses on positive human performance improvement solutions through Appreciative Strategies®. Reach him through his website at Dennis-Gilbert.com or by calling +1 646.546.5553.


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