4 Actions to Follow Through

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If you missed one of Stacey’s previous blogs or tips, visit her online.

Check out our Research on Influence in conjunction with the University of Northern Colorado HERE.

 

Stacey’s Pix:

Podcast: Entrepreneur’s on Fire with John Lee Dumas

 

 

 

Four Steps to Follow-Up

How many times has someone made a commitment to you and failed to follow through?

It’s frustrating, right?

When leaders make commitments to others, they risk their reputation if they fail to deliver.

Follow-up is crucial if you want to build trust to influence action. If you promised to have an answer by the end of the day … even if you were not able to meet this deadline, take the minute or two that it takes to let your listener know you are still working on it and when you will get back to them.

Her are three actions you can take daily to make sure you are not jeopardizing your reputation.

  1. Deadlines are important, so follow up with your team. If you are waiting on your team to complete a task for you to deliver on a deadline, follow up for regular status updates. This will reaffirm team priorities and spot any challenges they may face.
  2. Make each meeting matter. When you host a meeting, follow up afterward with meeting notes and action items. This reassures attendees you prioritize your time together and have taken ownership to get answers back in a timely fashion.
  3. Master meet and greets by following up on introductions. When meeting someone for the first time, whether it’s a prospect, colleague, employee or partner, follow up in an email or phone call. This solidifies your introduction and helps build a stronger relationship.
  4. You get what you give. We have clients who will reach out when they need something and expect us to respond immediately. Then when we reach out later pertaining to a new subject, it’s like crickets on their end. I often share with our clients “how you behave is how others respond.” If you only follow through when you need something, and don’t respond the same way to others, you jeopardize having consistent influence.

Having an influential reputation requires consistency in everything you do. Commit to following up each time and watch your reputation grow.

Influence Research

 

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