Skip to content

Build productive relationships.

Clive Griffiths
Clive Griffiths
1 min read

If I were starting out building productive relationships today and wanted to establish credibility and trust, I'd do this:

Step 1: Listen empathically

— Understand clients' challenges and objectives.
— Show empathy for their situation, pressures and goals.
— Make suggestions that directly address their concerns.

Step 2: Act consistently

Most people skip this step entirely.

But this is a huge mistake — consistent action helps demonstrate reliability.

Being consistently responsive and attentive sets a foundation of trust thereby signalling dependability.

Step 3: Educate freely

This isn't easy.

But if you can do this, you will:

— Be recognised as an expert and a go-to resource in the field.
— Increase engagement and goodwill by providing value without expectations.
— Maintain visibility, keeping you on the radar and fostering long-term relationships.

Don't skip this step.

It took me years to crystallise these steps—hope this helps.

LinkedIn PostsLI-2024

Related Posts

Members Public

Think Different

I love it when there's a seemingly Unreasonable Agenda. The Apple Think Different campaign epitomised this. Just look at the change makers: Albert Einstein: Questioned absolute space-time. Bob Dylan: Reimagined song meanings poetically. Martin Luther King Jr.: Envisioned equality beyond segregation. Richard Branson: Ignored business conventions fearlessly. John

Members Public

Here to share

Posting regularly on LinkedIn one starts to appreciate the different social engagement circles. You've got your lurkers. They follow but never engage. You've got your collectors. They connect to boost their numbers, but aren't truly interested. You've got your barnacles (HT Dean

Members Public

Molly vs the Machines

Monetising misery. A machine for manipulating behaviour. Global architecture of surveillance. Computational governance. -//- Yesterday I watched Molly vs the Machines on Channel 4 catch up. I feel it's a must watch for anyone with children. The phrases above are four of many I wrote down, used