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Local Businesses in Soshanguve, South Africa Bike to Raise Money

Submitted by Karin Metz, Executive Director in Tschwane Region, South Africa



On Sunday morning, 21 May 2017, businesses from the BNI Pinnacle Chapter joined forces to create an event that would be remembered for a long time. Well, at least for two adventurous and enthusiastic cyclers as well as the Nomangezi Day Care Centre. As a fundraising project for the Day Care Centre Christiaan Jansen, current President of the BNI Pinnacle Chapter in Tshwane, together with a close friend, Jacques du Toit, decided to engage on a courageous bicycle journey of 1809km to Cape Town.

As a Social Responsibility and Development project and through the dedication and initiative of Ian van Niekerk from Skitterblink Cleaning Services and a member of BNI Pinnacle, this idea all started in November 2016. The Pinnacle Chapter decided to adopt and support the Nomangezi Day Care Centre in March 2017, managed by Mrs Thandi Mamphangindawo and her mother, Iris. A Fun Walk was held to raise funds for the day care centre, with a positive outcome of nearly R5000.

Many of the BNI Pinnacle members visited the small day care centre in Block Y, Soshanguve, during the Fun Walk event, and realized much more funds were needed for bare necessities. And the idea of a cycle tour was born in Christiaan. Christiaan and Jacques’s aim is to raise funds for this project through per kilometre sponsorships from businesses and individuals. Sponsorships of anything from 10 cents to R10 per kilometre are welcome. On the kick-off date they already had sponsors to the value of R6.00 per kilometre secured.

As members of BNI Pinnacle, we challenge other BNI members to become involved by sponsoring the cycling fund raiser, either as an individual business or as a combined Chapter. The money will be managed by the Pinnacle Chapter and be used for flooring, curtains, educational materials, furniture, healthy food and allowances for the volunteer day care helpers.

We wish Christiaan and Jacques the best of luck on their 15 day journey, at an average of 120km per day, to reach Cape Town on the 4th of June. They will have to endure and withstand many physical obstacles. This is a true and real-life example of ‘giver’s gain’ – giving a lot physically, to gain for the Nomangezi Day Care Centre.

“It’s the commitment our members have to give back to society that makes BNI one of the most successful networking organizations in the world. The fact that so many businesses in our society contributes and having fun while doing it, demonstrates that we are a society that still cares,” says Christine Malherbe, member of BNI Pinnacle. “It is initiatives like this that underline the core value of BNI – highlighting the principle of ‘givers gain’”.
If you which to learn more or to make a contribution, please contact Ian van Niekerk on 0828511546 or manager@skitterblink.co.za

Updates to the Global Brand Standards Now Available!

You asked, and we delivered! Updates to the BNI Brand Standards are now available here. The updates to the brand standards do not make any of your existing collateral non-compliant, however they do make it easier for our directors and members to understand our brand. Additionally, we have included a few additional complementary colors for use with BNI-branded designs to help diversify collateral moving forward.

We’re also pleased to release an updated PowerPoint template for use globally, in conjunction with the updated brand standards. Download the template here.

These updated materials have also been added to the Member Resource Center through BNI Connect. Should you have questions, please feel free to email branding@bni.com.

Get More Referrals By Educating Your Network

Your network is one of your greatest tools to help you grow your business. Getting to know them and educating them on your business and services is vital to receiving quality referrals.

The challenge for many business professionals is in walking the line between educating their network on their ideal referrals and trying to sell their services. Oftentimes, educating your network as opposed to selling to them is as easy as changing the way you are describing your business.

To ensure you are helping educate your network, consider the following techniques.

  1. Teach your network what your “dream referral” is. As we say in BNI, specific is terrific. Not only does being specific help your network keep you top of mind in situations where your dream referral is possible, it also helps them know what your business does to the extent that they feel comfortable referring you. The more details you can provide, the easier it will be for your network to help you grow.
  2. Share the details, not the high-level view of your business. Never refer to your company as “full service.” This does you a disservice by making it harder for your network to visualize what you do. Again, specific is terrific.
  3. Be transparent about your services. Sometimes when we sell to others, we have a tendency to only share the things we are best at. While it is important to tell your network about your dream referral, also sharing the services that aren’t your strongest can help narrow down what referrals you get, and increase the likelihood that referrals will be positive experiences. If you receive a referral for a job you are so-so at, and complete it, you may damage your credibility by doing work that isn’t top quality.
  4. Share the qualities current or past customers had. By sharing with your network the types of clients you currently or previously work with, you’re more likely receive referrals for customers similar to these groups. If married, middle-aged men who work in automotive are clients that you have previously had a lot of success with for your landscaping service, wouldn’t you want more clients just like them?
  5. Success stories can help sell your business. Before and after pictures, testimonials, and other methods to show your network tangible examples of your work are great techniques to help your network see the value in what you do, and can give them specific examples to use when communicating your services to others.
  6. Offering samples may help as well as success stories. Do you provide a product or service that you can offer a sample of to your network? If so, providing a sample of your product can help your network see how it works and visualize someone they know who may benefit from it.

How do you educate your network on your products and services? Join the conversation on Facebook, and tell us how you help your network learn your business.

Core Values Video Contest Extended for Four Values

Following positive support from our recent “What is Your Core Value?” Video Contest, we have decided to extend the contest

All current and alumni BNI members are encouraged to participate.

How does your BNI story related to one of our Core Values? Have any of the values changed your professional and personal life? We want to hear what our Core Values mean to you!

Select one of the four Core Values we are focusing on (Traditions + Innovation, Recognition, Positive Attitude or Accountability) and share with us what it means to you and how it has impacted your life, your BNI journey, or your business.

Rules:

All submissions must:

  • Be NO LONGER than two minutes.
  • State in the beginning of the video your name, location (city, state/province, country), Chapter name and the Core Value that you plan to feature.
  • Be received by 11:59 pm ET (U.S.) on Friday, July 28, 2017 to be considered.
  • Be a spoken testimonial focused on what one of our seven Core Values means to you and have impacted your professional or personal life.
  • Include a signed Photo Release Consent Form (downloadable here).
  • (For languages other than English) provide a written translation of the video into English, or include English subtitles in the video.

Prizes:

A winner will be selected in each of the four Core Value categories. Winners will be featured in upcoming email communications and on BNI.com in the Video Testimonial section.

Judging:

Videos will be judged based on compelling storyline, story-telling ability, and quality of audio/video.

Winners will be featured in the August issue of SuccessNet.

How to Submit:

We want your video to be the best quality it can be. Before filming, check out this guideline for capturing the perfect footage.

Please complete the Photo Release Consent Form (available here) and upload it with your video submission here.

If you have any questions or issues with submitting your video, please contact marketing@bni.com.

By submitting a video, the content becomes property of BNI, and according to the Photo Release Consent Form, may be used in BNI Marketing initiatives.

BNI Foundation Hosts ‘Who?s In Your Story?’ ? A USA Video Contest

WHO: When you were growing up, did you have an adult (teacher, coach, mentor, NOT immediate family) who significantly influenced your life? Then, we at the BNI Foundation want to hear from YOU!

WHY: We want you to share your story with us so we can share it with the world so people will see and hear the huge impact that adults can have on kids!

WHAT: So, tell us in a 1 minute or less video, about the person who inspired you, possibly even changed the trajectory of your life when you were between age 6 and graduating from high school. We especially welcome stories in which a small gesture or action made a big difference, showing how easy it can be to help our youth, without always spending a ton of time over many years. It can be raw footage, shot with a phone, and does NOT need to be professionally filmed or edited.

WHEN: May 18 ? June 15, 2017

WHERE: U.S., Email your video contest submissions to: Marketing@bnifoundation.org

? Subject Line should read: Who?s In Your Story? Video Contest

? Email should include:

  • Name
  • Location
  • Video (1 minute or less) embedded or attached
  • Link to Google Docs/Drive platform for downloading video

HOW: (RULES): All submissions must:

? Be NO more than 1 minute long

? State, at start of video, your name & location (city & state)

? Be received by 11:59 pm (Eastern Time) on June 15, 2017

? Be a spoken testimonial of how this special person positively influenced your life

? Include a signed photo release consent form (downloadable here)

BONUS WHY: (PRIZES): 3 Overall Winners

? 1st prize – 2 days in Austin, TX for winner + 1 guest (1 day to be spent with Ivan & Beth Misner), including airfare and hotel!

? 2nd prize – $75 Amazon Gift Card

? 3rd prize – $50 Amazon Gift Card

Have fun making your videos and telling us your stories!

Politics and Religion in BNI

BNI has a long history of staying out of politics and religion.  Here’s why:

Before I did my graduate work in Organizational Behavior, I received a Bachelor’s degree in Political Science!  Yes, Political Science (go figure).  I was very interested in politics and am still interested in the topic – I just do NOT discuss it in BNI.  Why?  Because it gets our eyes off the ball; it takes us away from BNI’s mission. 

Our mission is “to help members increase their business through a structured, positive, and professional ‘referral marketing’ program that enables them to develop long-term meaningful relationships with quality professionals.”  (Givers Gain® The BNI Story, Chapter 10.)

One of the reasons BNI is the largest, most successful business networking organization in the world is that we have been adamant about staying on mission.  Anything that takes us away from our mission is a distraction and there is no bigger set of distractions to a referral organization than religion and politics.

I’ve been a registered voter since I was 18 years old (and have voted in every major U.S. election since then).  I have been active in a church most of my life.  Neither of these points are appropriate for me to impose on BNI members by discussing my opinions or political/religious affiliations.  I have, throughout my life, been very involved in many local, state, and national political campaigns.   I also have well established religious beliefs.  However, unless you know me really well – you don’t know what my political or religious views are.  Why? Because it is not appropriate for me to espouse those views in BNI even though I am the Founder.

I understand that there are political and sometimes religious issues that we may be considerably wound up about—I certainly have some.  However, BNI is not the place to air these discussions because they are almost always ‘divisive.’  It takes our eyes off of what the purpose of the organization is, namely – referrals based on professional relationships.   This is one of the reasons we don’t have outside speakers in BNI.  They generally want to sell a product or service OR they want to promote some political or civic position.  If they want to sell something they should join a chapter.  If they want to promote a political or religious position, they need to speak somewhere else—BNI is not the right venue.

BNI operates in countries where almost every religion in the world is practiced.  We are in countries that represent virtually every political system in the world.  We couldn’t do that effectively if we weren’t focused on one thing, and one thing only – helping business people get more business through referrals.

We are proud of our emerging legacy of bringing people together.  People who, in their country, may have contentious political and religious positions – yet in BNI, they focus on the mission of relationships and referrals. 

This doesn’t mean that members are apolitical.  I am sure that many have strong political and religious beliefs.  It just doesn’t belong in a meeting.

If you want to stay on mission – stay off the topics of religion and politics at BNI meetings.  But, really, shouldn’t we all know that already?

Building Self-Esteem Through BNI

Submitted by Don Hayes, Rees & Hayes, Integrity BNI, BNI Vermont

I receive monthly updates from this website called BabyCenter. My wife was first made aware of the site while she was pregnant. What hooked her was how the site compared the size of the fetus to common fruits – from poppy seed to pumpkin.

Now our little poppy seed is three, but the monthly BabyCenter emails keep coming. This month we were directed to an article on how to build your toddler’s self-esteem. As I read the article, it occurred to me that there are a lot of similarities between raising a happy toddler and raising a happy BNI member. In part, self-esteem is about feeling valuable – feeling appreciated for the work we do and the contributions we make. The article listed 7 things that parents can do to build self-esteem:

1.      Give love unconditionally. The idea is to participate with no strings attached. Givers Gain, right? A new member like myself may not be able to generate a ton of referrals now, but I’d still like to feel like I contribute. Not keeping score is a way to make sure everyone wins.

2.      Listen attentively. Put the phone away. Be present. Listen. Nothing communicates “I care about what you are saying” better than active listening. Eye contact. Body language. Be welcoming. And that fosters confidence: “People really do care about what I am saying.”

3.      Encourage healthy risk taking. Without risk taking there is little opportunity for meaningful success. Whether it’s bringing a guest or giving a referral, we can encourage healthy risk taking by being a solid foundation for each other, and by providing support. Being welcoming to guests encourages people to bring guests. Being responsive to referrals encourages people to give referrals.

4.      Let failure happen. While we hope every referral leads to closed business, it doesn’t always happen. Therein lies a valuable message: if you are the “referrer” – you were able to draw from your pool of resources to help someone out; if you are the “referree” – someone thought enough of you to send business your way. In other words, be thankful even for the business that didn’t close!

5.      Celebrate the positive. Sure, we do that every week by recognizing referrals and closed business. But, it goes beyond that – celebrating, as a group, the new addition to a family, or celebrating exceptional business growth of a fellow BNI member – even celebrating the contributions made by a member who has decided to move on. When we focus on the positive, we not only foster confidence, we create enthusiasm.

6.      Resist comparisons. Comparisons are meaningless – each person here is unique – each business represented here, by design, is unique. When we see ourselves as too similar we are unable to appreciate individual talents; or when we see ourselves as too different we fail to find the connections. We’ve heard the disclaimer before: individual results may vary – and that’s a good thing!

7.      Be encouraging. Positivity – even in the face of defeat – not only does it build confidence, but it also encourages future risk taking. We are all here because we want to grow our businesses. We will have down days, but under that unified purpose, we can encourage each other to achieve great things so together the trajectory of our combined efforts will arc toward success for all.

Just remember, we all started out as poppy seeds.

BNI Foundation Hosts Events at U.S. National Conference

Erica Gufford, Volunteer Coordinator for the BNI Foundation



Every year, the BNI Foundation is lucky enough to be a guest at BNI US Conference. BNI and the BNI Foundation have a unique relationship – we are two separate entities, but exist simultaneously, sharing resources and embodying the concept of Givers Gain®.

This year, from May 17-20 in Charlotte, North Carolina, Stephanie Starr, the BNI Foundation Executive Director, will be joined by her “Dream Team” of Volunteers from around the US to help to educate and inform BNI leaders how the BNI Foundation can help Members Make More Money while cause networking. The BNI Staff and volunteers, including some BNI Executive Directors, will be on hand to help BNI Executive Directors and Director Consultants learn how to implement service projects in their area to increase their bottom line, improve member retention and growth, and spread the word about BNI in their area.

Here are four main ways you can learn about the BNI Foundation and its programs at the BNI US Convention:

  1. Our Booth – Learn more about the BNI Foundation and its programs! Opens at 8 AM on May 18th and closes at 4pm on May 20th.
  2. Our Walk and Talk – We are hosting a Fun Walk and Talk (or Run) on Saturday morning, bright and early at 6:15! Register here and be sure to get a premiere spot and t-shirt.
  3. Our Auction – Have you always wanted to become a Sonoma Wine Maker or attend a baseball game at Wrigley Field on the rooftop or vacation on the beach in Galveston? If so, come bid at our silent auction on Thursday, Friday and Saturday at the BNI Foundation Table. We will announce all winners during the Gala. You can find the details here.
  4. Our Round Tables – The BNI Foundation is hosting an information round table on Saturday, May 20th. Stop by our table to sit down with Stephanie Starr and other Executive Directors, Director Consultants and Regional Administrators who are working with the BNI Foundation to see how to implement it in your region.

Feel free to drop us a note at info@bnifoundation.org before the show to set up a One to One.

We cannot wait to see you there!

Cross Kilimanjaro Off Your Bucket List and Support Charity with BNI

BNI’s guiding philosophy of Givers Gain® is a powerful concept, which is evident not just in our weekly networking meetings, but in the lives of each of our leaders and members across the world. This year, we’re pleased to again support a philanthropic endeavor, the BNI Kilimanjaro Challenge, led by Bijay Shah, BNI’s National Director in the UAE, Qatar, Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania.

In an effort to support Larchfield Charity Organisation, a children’s orphanage in Tanzania, Bijay, along with James Berry, a BNI member for more than 10 years, and the UAE based charity Gulf for Good, are leading a series of five Mt. Kilimanjaro treks from June to October 2017.

BNI’s members around the world are invited to participate in the challenge this Summer, as are your friends, family, associates and colleagues. Graham Weihmiller, BNI’s Chairman & CEO, has recorded this brief video about the Challenge, and his journey climbing Kilimanjaro.

Collectively, the team hopes to lead 125 climbers to the Summit of Mt. Kilimanjaro, and to raise $125,000 for the children at Larchfield.

Is climbing Mt. Kilimanjaro on your bucket list? Are you interested in contributing to an amazing cause, while taking part in a life-changing experience? Are you interested in networking with fellow BNI members and global leaders from across the world? If so, click here to learn more about the treks offered this summer, and how you can register. 

Big Spoon, Small Spoon: Giving in BNI

Submitted by Amruth Kumar, Greatscope Consulting, Kingfishers, BNI Bangalore


The below is a suggestion for an Education Moment during a BNI meeting, but can be used to share the benefits of networking with anyone in your life.

To get the full effect, have handy a large serving spoon and a smaller spoon that you would use to eat soup with.

Hold up the small spoon, and ask your audience what they would use it for. Aside from a few jokesters, your audience will answer “Eating.”

Now hold up the large spoon, and ask what it is for. Your answer should be “Serving.”

Ask your audience why they joined BNI. You’ll receive numerous answers, most being a variation of “To get more business and to make money.”

Tell them the reason they joined BNI was to use the small spoon, and hold it up. All members saw opportunities to get more business, and to feed themselves.

The philosophy of BNI, Givers Gain, teaches us how to use the large spoon (hold it up), so that we have enough for not just our small spoon, but for others.

How often to members have nothing to give in the “I Have” section of the meeting? These members come to the meeting only wanting to use the small spoon. If every member is only at a BNI meeting to eat, who will serve with the big spoon?

As BNI members, we have to think about how we can give to other members. Giving can be in the form of a referral, a visitor, or other opportunities. You could help a member with their Feature Presentation, suggest how someone can give a great Weekly Presentation, or teach a new member how to use BNI Connect – any way you can help or serve the others in your chapter, you should consider.

A chapter that has more members providing for each other and using the serving spoon will have more opportunities for everyone to use the small eating spoon.

Only if we give to others can we hope to receive.

Ask yourself, have you been using the small spoon too often? How can you use the serving spoon more? 

Growing Your Referrals through One-to-Ones

Submitted by Roger Schmidt, Roger’s Relaxing Massage Therapy, Middlebury BNIBNI Vermont  



Is there a correct number of One-to-Ones you should have per week to find success in networking?  I’m sure we all have our own opinions and perspectives about the answer to this question, and allow me to share with you mine.  My experiences with One-to-Ones have been great.  Fifty percent of One-to-Ones I have had with new people have led to booked appointments with me within one week.  Another 15 percent of first time One-to-Ones have booked an appointment with me within three weeks. This makes sense because a One-to-One allows another person to learn the details of what my services are and how it can help them personally.

Speaking of, would anyone like to have a One-to-One?

BNI® suggests at least one One-to-One per week, and in order to simply maintain your current relationship with someone, BNI suggests a One-to-One with them at least once every 6 months.  For me, belonging to a chapter of 20 members, it would take me 20 weeks to have a One-to-One with every member.  However, if I want to grow my relationships with those in my chapter, not just maintain them, this means that more One-to-One’s are in order.

The types of referral giver you are is directly impacted by how many One-to-Ones you regularly have.

Advocators are approximately 90 percent of a network, and you should have a One-to-One with them at least twice a year. These people will say good things about you when a referral “falls in their lap.”

Promoters are approximately 8 percent of a network, and every 2 to 4 months you should have a One-to-One with them. They who will listen to whomever they are talking with and recognize key words that relate to your business, thereby getting you a referral.

Finally, Creators are approximately 2 percent, at most, of a network, and every 30 to 45 days you should have a One-to-One with them. They will actively engage the people they are talking with to find a referral out of thin air on behalf of your business

What type of referral giver are you?

BNI Global Support Team Activates Business Voices Initiative

During the month of March, the BNI Global Support Team collaborated with the BNI Foundation to activate a Business Voices™ initiative by adopting a local North Carolina school.

On February 1, Good Morning America featured a segment about a 5th grade English teacher, Barry White, Jr, at Ashley Park School in Charlotte, North Carolina.

After reading about this incredible teacher and the high needs of this school, Stephanie Starr, BNI Executive Director, and Meghan Polovick, Global Training Operations Manager, met with Mrs. Cheryl Laster, Vice Principal of Ashley Park School, to inquire how BNI and the BNI Foundation could help her school. Mrs. Laster provided a list of needs.

Ashley Park is a Title I, PreK-8 School serving approximately 600 children from a low-income part of Charlotte. As of 2016, the percent of students at this school who pass the North Carolina End of Grade Tests across all subjects is significantly lower than average for North Carolina: Ashley Park (37.1%) and North Carolina average (62.3%). Parent participation and Resources are low and the school is working very hard on improvements.

After presenting this to Graham Weihmiller, BNI CEO, he enthusiastically agreed that the GST should adopt this school as a Business Voices Initiative and approved supporting their needs.
Do you have what it takes to start a Business Voices Initiative? Let the BNI Foundation assist you in your community! Please invest in our future leaders by helping us to Bridge the Gap in Children’s Education. 

Reach out to Stephanie at stephanie@bnifoundation.org for more information.  

Video Contest: What is Your Core Value?

BNI® is excited to announce a video contest that will take place through May 19, 2017. All current BNI members are encouraged to participate.

How does your BNI story related to one of our seven Core Values? Have any of the values changed your professional and personal life? We want to hear what our Core Values mean to you! 

Select one of the seven Core Values (Givers Gain®, Building Relationships, Traditions + Innovation, Lifelong Learning, Recognition, Positive Attitude or Accountability) and share with us what it means to you and how it has impacted your life, your BNI journey, or your business.

Rules:

All submissions must:

  • Be NO LONGER than two minutes.
  • State in the beginning of the video your name, location (city, state/province, country), Chapter name and the Core Value that you plan to feature.
  • Be received by 11:59 pm ET (U.S.) on Friday, May 19, 2017 to be considered.
  • Be a spoken testimonial focused on what one of our seven Core Values means to you and have impacted your professional or personal life.
  • Include a signed Photo Release Consent Form (downloadable here).
  • (For languages other than English) provide a written translation of the video into English, or include English subtitles in the video.

Prizes:

A winner will be selected in each of the seven Core Value categories. Winners will be featured in upcoming email communications and on BNI.com in the Video Testimonial section.

Judging:

Videos will be judged based on compelling storyline, story-telling ability, and quality of audio/video.

Winners will be notified by May 31, 2017.

How to Submit:

We want your video to be the best quality it can be. Before filming, check out this guideline for capturing the perfect footage.

Please complete the Photo Release Consent Form (available here) and upload it with your video submission here.

If you have any questions or issues with submitting your video, please contact marketing@bni.com.

By submitting a video, the content becomes property of BNI, and according to the Photo Release Consent Form, may be used in BNI Marketing initiatives.

How Specific Are You With Referral Partners?

If you were asked exactly what kind of person would help you grow your business, what would you say? Who exactly is your target client? Do you know?

The more specific you can be with yourself, and your goals, the easier it will be for you to share those goals with your referral partners. More importantly, the easier it will be for your referral partners to keep you and your business top of mind as they are connecting with others.

Have you ever said to someone, “I want to meet anyone who needs my services”? If yes, has your generic request for a new contact ever resulted in a referral?

Likely the answer here is no, because your request was so high-level that your referral partners were unable to immediately think of someone. The more specific you can make your request, even down to possibly naming a specific person, the easier it will be for your referral partners to help make an introduction.

This concept doesn’t just apply to asking for referrals. When you are learning about someone else’s business, consider asking them who specifically they would like to be introduced to. Building goodwill with your connections will bolster your relationships and help strength the connection you already have.

Learn about a few specific pieces of their business – perhaps only one or two products they offer as opposed to everything – and learn the details of those specific elements. In turn, share specifics back to your partners about your business.

The reason you are not getting the referrals you truly want may be because you are not asking for them. If there is a specific person you would like to meet, tell your network! You never know who many know your dream referral.

As Dr. Ivan Misner says, “Specific is Terrific!”