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About the Author

Works by Ivan R. Misner

The 29% Solution: 52 Weekly Networking Success Strategies (2008) — Author — 88 copies, 1 review
The World's Best Known Marketing Secret (1994) — Author — 57 copies
Givers Gain: The BNI Story (2004) — Author — 56 copies, 1 review
Masters of Sales (2007) — Author — 51 copies
Truth or Delusion?: Busting Networking's Biggest Myths (2006) — Author — 36 copies, 1 review
It's in the Cards! (2003) 10 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1956
Gender
male
Nationality
USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

10 reviews
Years ago when I first started to realize how important it was to be connected I just went at it willy nilly – trying to meet everyone. Now I see that there is much more to it than that. You should set out to do networking with a plan. You should know not just the why, but the how to go about it and realize how to focus on getting people into your circle who can help you to move forward.

Ivan Misner and Michelle Donovan should almost call this book Networking 101, but I would imagine that show more this title has been taken already. Instead they named it The 29% Solution: 52 Weekly Networking Success Strategies after the successful participant of the famous Six Degrees of Separation experiment many years ago. Ivan Misner is world famous for being the founder if the global business networking group Business Networking International, or BNI as it is commonly known. He also has a doctorate and has been a professor of Business Administration in southern California for a number of years, so he writes from authority. And although this is her first book, Michelle Donovan is known in business circles as “The Referability Expert” and has been in the networking business for some time in the western Pennsylvania area so she is no stranger to the networking game herself.

My first comment of the review has to do with the fact that Misner and Donovan start from the premise that the reader knows absolutely zilch about business networking so they set out to give the reader the advice and tools that will be needed to get off the ground and get within the 29% networking group. For instance they made sure that you know there is a very big distinction between a contact and a connection and why this distinction should be meaningful to you. In this sense of taking the beginner by the hand I believe the book really does a great job. For some of us who have been at the networking game for some time lots of the material could be second nature, but there was still some advantage to going through this. The authors offer more than advice but they also offer their vast experience. All of the information I saw that they put out is very practical and would be the same kind of information that I would offer myself to wall flowers who need help.

On top of this there were tips in there that many of us more experienced networkers could use and incorporate into our own business practices – so that alone would be worth the price of the book for the non-beginners. The book had a very holistic view of the nature of constantly working at expanding one’s circles and I can’t see anything wrong with that.

Before I finish with this I will say that I did appreciate that the authors did not take this subject as a one way street. In order to properly network, they assert, you need to put in to the network as well, otherwise it is like trying to drive a car with no gas. There was a great example in the book about periodically just letting people know that you can help them with other contacts even when this had no relation to you. They showed in one case how this really turned the flow on for one networker with inquiries starting to flood inbound as well. Now that’s what I like to see! Why, because the authors were very correct in this assessment: This is how networking really works!
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A potpourri of short contributions from a collection of authors. All useful information but nothing particularly new or novel.
This book would best suit someone starting out in my view.
Great way to systematize your networking skills. This method will keep everything in focus and help develop relationships better than on the fly.
Great way to systematize your networking skills. This method will keep everything in focus and help develop relationships better than on the fly.

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Associated Authors

Don Morgan Author, Editor
Mike Garrison Author, Contributor
Jeff Morris Contributor
John Gray Contributor
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J. Lance Mead Contributor
Janice Malone Contributor
Joanna Stark Contributor
Ina von Koenig Contributor
Ron Hain Contributor
Sue Hain Contributor
Elisabeth Misner Contributor
Connie Hinton Contributor
Niri Patel Contributor
Darrell Ross Contributor
Susan DeLoren Contributor
Terry Misfeldt Contributor
Linda Macedonio Contributor
Brian Alcorn Contributor
Niraj Shah Contributor
Martha Laff Contributor
Sam Schwartz Contributor
Erin Brockovich Contributor
Anthony Robbins Contributor
Brian Tracy Contributor
Michael E. Gerber Contributor
Harvey Mackay Contributor
Buzz Aldrin Contributor
Mark Victor Hansen Contributor
Robert G. Allen Contributor
Larry Elder Contributor
Tom Hopkins Contributor
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Tony Alessandra Contributor
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Jim Blasingame Contributor
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Patrick M. Kelly Contributor
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Dan Georgevich Contributor
Brian Roach Contributor
Ron Stark Contributor
Andrew Hall Contributor
Peter W Schutz Contributor
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Igor Khmelnitsky Contributor
Jerry Schwartz Contributor
Linda McCarthy Contributor
Kirstie Bjorn Contributor

Statistics

Works
26
Members
640
Popularity
#39,394
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
9
ISBNs
47
Languages
6

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