3 answers
3 answers
Updated
Prit’s Answer
Great question Maria. There are honestly so many ways during the social media era. Try starting a blog on Unstagram, it's very helpful in in informally connecting to other professionals. From there you can try to create your own website and link it to your blog! Good luck!
Thank you.
Maria
Updated
Brenna’s Answer
Hello Maria and others seeking answers,
I'm not clear on your question, but I am intrigued. As another professional answered here, you may have been asking about sending a "proposal" instead of a purpose? However, if I read your question verbatim and understand that you're trying to express your purpose to them, this becomes an interesting open-ended question.
When conveying your purpose, here are keys to good communication techniques:
1) Be respectful.
If you're asking for their time, support, feedback, or other action, be respectful of their priorities and ask for their interest rather than assume that they're prepared to fulfill your needs.
2) Be concise.
Assume you have less than one minute to capture your audience's attention. Re-read your statement before sharing with them. Can it be stated in fewer words?
3) Be clear.
Read your statement as if you are the other person. Is it crystal clear on what you are asking of them? What to do, when you need something, who they should respond to, and what is attached? Can it be taken out of context?
4) Be reciprocal.
LinkedIn is a great example of being reciprocal, or lack thereof. When you ask someone for a connection, a recommendation, an invitation to share your post or idea -- offer a kind gesture to help them, or ask what you can do in return.
5) Be thankful.
Far too often, people forget to use these words with intention: "Thank you," "Much appreciated," and so on.
Thank you for the question Maria and others. Please let us know if this helps you.
I'm not clear on your question, but I am intrigued. As another professional answered here, you may have been asking about sending a "proposal" instead of a purpose? However, if I read your question verbatim and understand that you're trying to express your purpose to them, this becomes an interesting open-ended question.
When conveying your purpose, here are keys to good communication techniques:
1) Be respectful.
If you're asking for their time, support, feedback, or other action, be respectful of their priorities and ask for their interest rather than assume that they're prepared to fulfill your needs.
2) Be concise.
Assume you have less than one minute to capture your audience's attention. Re-read your statement before sharing with them. Can it be stated in fewer words?
3) Be clear.
Read your statement as if you are the other person. Is it crystal clear on what you are asking of them? What to do, when you need something, who they should respond to, and what is attached? Can it be taken out of context?
4) Be reciprocal.
LinkedIn is a great example of being reciprocal, or lack thereof. When you ask someone for a connection, a recommendation, an invitation to share your post or idea -- offer a kind gesture to help them, or ask what you can do in return.
5) Be thankful.
Far too often, people forget to use these words with intention: "Thank you," "Much appreciated," and so on.
Thank you for the question Maria and others. Please let us know if this helps you.
Updated
Jeannie’s Answer
If you’re asking about sending a proposal to another person make sure your proposal is legally a legal document reviewed by a business lawyer when you’re sending a proposal and if the client understands how long the proposal lasts and when it expires and those are all things that you would have to say on your own and as far as maybe talking to somebody about a proposal you still need a legal document for your proposal you need to always write it on a legal document scan it into the computer you can send it via email
Get a legal Document made for a proposal
Reviewed by a business attorney before hand and after
Always remember when giving a proposal there Has to be an ending date on it
Make sure you have a business license
And a tax ID
Jeannie recommends the following next steps: