Social Networking is growing bigger and more popular than ever these days. Social networking takes many different forms and serves many different purposes. In general it helps you build and maintain relationships. This, of course, can be a key tool for the telecommuter who can too easily be cut off from co-workers and miss opportunities to meet new people and build new relationships.
Social networking serves three major purposes, two of which are discussed in this article. Stay tuned for my next article with the third, and perhaps most important benefit of social networking for the telecommuter.
1. Education and information
Social networking lets you learn from others in a similar situation to yourself with very little effort. Whereas in the past you’d have to read a book written by an expert, or find in-person meetings with other people with the same interest or challenge as you are experiencing, social networking gives you easy access to all kinds of every-day folks, scattered around the globe, who want to talk about the exact topic you care about. You can find valuable information about all aspects of telecommuting – everything from how to request such an arrangement from your manager and where to find the best telecommuting jobs, to tips, tricks and techniques of all kinds to help you succeed as a telecommuter.
Blogs are one of the best places to gather this kind of information. For instance, there are many telecommuting blogs whose authors write posts on a large variety of telecommuting topics. Many of these blogs offer the very convenient capability to allow you to subscribe to the blog via an RSS feed, where you can be notified of new postings as soon as they come out without having to bookmark the site and keep checking it. You can track a handful of your favorite blogs easily – to get different viewpoints from different authors. Some blogs and sites (such as my own at http://avoidgoingtowork.com) also allow you to become a free subscriber where you can receive ongoing emails from the author about all kinds of telecommuting topics.
Another useful type of site that can help you learn a lot about telecommuting is a telecommuting forum. Forums allow groups of people with a particular common interest to become members where they can post questions, provide answers, and participate in ongoing discussions. You can find a forum on most any topic and a good forum can really help you, whether you just monitor conversations without choosing to participate, or you post your burning questions and receive answers. Of course, providing answers to other people’s questions and participating in the conversations and discussions helps build the community.
2. Keeping track of your social network
In our busy lives, we encounter many people, and it can be hard to keep track of all of them. With the advent of the internet, email certainly made it easier to keep in touch with people versus old-fashioned letter writing. Yet, the internet has evolved again with tools like Linked-In and FaceBook, making it even easier to keep track of people we know.
As a telecommuter, you don’t see your peers very often. And, if your company is globally distributed, or just a big supporter of telecommuting, you may have coworkers who are spread across the country or the globe. Keeping track of people can become difficult as time goes by and people move around. Even if they stay at the same company as you, if they change jobs and/or organizations it’s harder for you, the telecommuter, to keep track of them. At least if you work in the office, there’s still a good chance you’ll bump into them in the hallways or cafeteria now and then.
Linked-In is a popular tool that allows you to “connect” with people you know who are also members of Linked-In (and the tool has become popular enough now that many people are members). You can post information about yourself and people who are connected to you can see who else you are connected to, making it easier to connect to common acquaintances. The really nice aspect of Linked-In is that you can send someone a message via the tool. So even if you don’t communicate with a Linked-In contact for years, during which time they change jobs, move, get a new phone number, and change their email address, you can still find them to reconnect. Linked-In also has features that allow you to search on people who are in a similar profession or working on similar projects/goals/etc.
Like Linked-In, FaceBook also lets you connect with or “friend” people you know. FaceBook is different than Linked-In in that people use it a lot more to provide ongoing updates about their lives to keep their “friends” updated on the details. Linked-In tends to have a more professional/career focus whereas FaceBook is used much more for social and personal, non-work updates.
Stay tuned for my next article where I’ll discuss what is arguably the most important aspect of social networking for the telecommuter, and some important tips about how and how not to use social networking tools!
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