Jan. 7, 2025

Why Staying Visible Matters: Wisdom from Karen Gunther | RR292

Why Staying Visible Matters: Wisdom from Karen Gunther | RR292

The secrets to staying visible and building lasting client relationships in a competitive digital landscape are just a listen away.

Karen Gunther, founder of Stay Visible Marketing, joins me to talk about how businesses can stand out and build authentic relationships in the digital age. With over 25 years of experience in business development, Karen shares practical tips for using tools like LinkedIn, email marketing, and CRMs to keep your business top of mind. She emphasizes the importance of consistency, authentic communication, and leveraging technology to connect with prospects and clients.

Karen also shares her take on how businesses can overcome common mistakes, like neglecting follow-ups or failing to use tools effectively, and explains why staying visible isn’t just about being seen—it’s about building trust and credibility over time.

Highlights:

  • How to stay visible in a crowded marketplace by using consistent and authentic communication strategies.
  • Actionable tips for leveraging LinkedIn and CRMs to build and maintain stronger client relationships.
  • Understand how personalized touches, like voice and video messages, can make your outreach stand out.
  • Explore ways to simplify your marketing efforts while keeping your business top of mind for customers.
  • Insights into the power of continuous learning to adapt and thrive in today’s fast-paced digital world.


Connect with Karen:

Website: www.stayvisiblemarketing.com 

Email: karen@stayvisiblemarketing.com 



In appreciation for being here, I have some gifts for you:

A LinkedIn Checklist for setting up your fully optimized Profile:

An opportunity to test drive the Follow Up system I recommend by taking the

3 Card Sampler – you won’t regret it.


AND … Don’t forget to connect with me on LinkedIn and be eligible for my

complimentary LinkedIn profile audit – I do one each month for a lucky

listener!


Connect with me:

http://JanicePorter.com

https://www.linkedin.com/in/janiceporter/

https://www.facebook.com/janiceporter1

https://www.instagram.com/socjanice/


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Transcript
Janice Porter:

Karen, welcome to this week's episode of



Janice Porter:

relationships rule. Today I'm excited to welcome Karen Gunther



Janice Porter:

to the show. Karen has over 25 years of experience as a



Janice Porter:

professional business development manager, and is the



Janice Porter:

founder of stay visible marketing with a strong



Janice Porter:

background in sales, Karen specializes in helping B to B



Janice Porter:

business businesses connect with prospects and clients through



Janice Porter:

email marketing LinkedIn and enhancing their overall digital



Janice Porter:

presence. She's passionate about networking and relationship



Janice Porter:

building, offering expertise in crm management to support



Janice Porter:

consistent and meaningful connections throughout the sales



Janice Porter:

process. Karen is here to share her insights on creating



Janice Porter:

authentic business relationships that drive success. Welcome.



Janice Porter:

Welcome to the show. Karen, super excited to be here.



Janice Porter:

Janice, thank you. You're my pleasure. We've been talking



Janice Porter:

about this for a while and and I guess I want to start by saying



Janice Porter:

I love that you you see the power and value of LinkedIn to



Janice Porter:

help people with their businesses, because you know



Janice Porter:

that that's where I live and and yet, a lot of people who who use



Janice Porter:

LinkedIn don't see the relationship side of it. They



Janice Porter:

see content, content, content, and that's about it. So can we



Janice Porter:

start there? Can we just, can you give me your take on how you



Janice Porter:

use it with your clients, or what you you know, what you



Janice Porter:

teach or what you share with people? Yeah, my,



Karen Gunther:

my company's name is stay visible marketing, and



Karen Gunther:

there's a reason for that, because I believe it's about



Karen Gunther:

visibility. And whether you're at a networking event, in



Karen Gunther:

person, virtually on LinkedIn, your website, how often you're



Karen Gunther:

reaching out to people with email marketing or general



Karen Gunther:

emails, it's all about visibility. And with so much



Karen Gunther:

noise in the marketplace, it is so important to have that



Karen Gunther:

ability to reach through that noise, is the way I look at it.



Karen Gunther:

So when it comes to LinkedIn, specifically, as a rule, it's



Karen Gunther:

important to understand the algorithm. Now, I don't know



Karen Gunther:

what the algorithm is, only LinkedIn knows what the



Janice Porter:

outcome changes all the time, right, right? And



Janice Porter:

it's being



Karen Gunther:

changed all the time. In fact, I learned



Karen Gunther:

something today that changed since I last looked at it to



Karen Gunther:

this specific action two weeks ago, which is really



Karen Gunther:

interesting. So it seems like once a month there's something



Karen Gunther:

else that's changing when you go to look for a people within a



Karen Gunther:

company specifically. And this is being broadcast in November



Karen Gunther:

of 24 so we have this timestamp for it. When you go look for a



Karen Gunther:

company and you go look for the people in the company, you used



Karen Gunther:

to be able to do multiple search terms to narrow down the person



Karen Gunther:

you were looking for. Now they only give you one in the keyword



Karen Gunther:

part, yes, yes. Just learned that this morning when I was



Karen Gunther:

working with somebody. So it's just they're constantly changing



Karen Gunther:

things. So when it comes to the algorithm, and I was training a



Karen Gunther:

person this morning about this saying, LinkedIn was purchased



Karen Gunther:

by Microsoft in 2016 and they have done a phenomenal job of



Karen Gunther:

monetizing it. So the important thing is, is that, how can you



Karen Gunther:

use the the algorithm that LinkedIn uses for monetization



Karen Gunther:

for their own business, to help you with your business. That's



Karen Gunther:

how I look at it. So it comes down to visibility. So how do



Karen Gunther:

you use that visibility? Well, they look at interactions. So



Karen Gunther:

when you are posting, you want to make sure that there's a hook



Karen Gunther:

in there so that people will respond, and then that creates



Karen Gunther:

an opportunity for you to talk to people. If you're going to



Karen Gunther:

like something, you not don't want to just like it. You want



Karen Gunther:

to also comment on it, because if you comment on it, that has



Karen Gunther:

more credibility when it comes to the more hooks for the



Karen Gunther:

algorithm. If you're going to repost something, repost



Karen Gunther:

something with a comment, because that helps you and the



Karen Gunther:

person that posted the original post. And when they go to their



Karen Gunther:

notifications, they will see that you did that. So the more



Karen Gunther:

often you're popping up, the more visible you are, the more



Karen Gunther:

opportunity they have to be reminded that you exist. There



Karen Gunther:

are so many ways to connect with people. There are so many



Karen Gunther:

connections that we've all made over our careers, it's almost



Karen Gunther:

overwhelming. You don't remember you know somebody. So to be able



Karen Gunther:

to make sure that when you are, you know, calling on a



Karen Gunther:

particular prospect or trying to get deeper into particular



Karen Gunther:

client, you want to make sure that wherever they are that



Karen Gunther:

you're popping up and that visibility can be done through



Karen Gunther:

LinkedIn if you do it carefully and you do it authentically.



Karen Gunther:

That's



Janice Porter:

so true. I know that's a big piece of teaching



Janice Porter:

people how to use LinkedIn effectively in the work that I



Janice Porter:

do, too. So I. You give me an example of a company that you



Janice Porter:

might be working with. Did you work with sales teams in or do



Janice Porter:

you work with you? I know that you do work with different



Janice Porter:

kinds, different kinds of clients. You have a heart, and



Janice Porter:

so you help people at university and you you do some work with



Janice Porter:

students or grad students and things like that. But you also



Janice Porter:

work with individual, small business owners and bigger



Janice Porter:

teams. Is that correct?



Karen Gunther:

All of the above? Okay, absolutely. I work with



Karen Gunther:

companies that are, you know, up to 100 million, down to, you



Karen Gunther:

know, nonprofits. So I literally just brought on a new client in



Karen Gunther:

the last 24 hours. That's a nonprofit that needs help with



Karen Gunther:

getting certain marketing out and helping help with their



Karen Gunther:

website to get it updated, little things like that. I work



Karen Gunther:

with primarily business to business companies, because I



Karen Gunther:

find that the logic associated with business works a little



Karen Gunther:

easier for me. I can understand that more than going business to



Karen Gunther:

consumer. Consumers have a lot more variability, so I prefer



Karen Gunther:

the business to business landscape. But more importantly,



Karen Gunther:

I work individually with the sales people, as well as with



Karen Gunther:

the sales team. I recently served with a new client where



Karen Gunther:

they want me to help them review their website and making sure



Karen Gunther:

their branding and their their messaging is correct with what



Karen Gunther:

they're saying the workplace right now. They also want me to



Karen Gunther:

work with their individual sales reps, because we were going to



Karen Gunther:

be starting a LinkedIn posting, you know, campaigns for them.



Karen Gunther:

And I want to train their sales reps, not only to have a good



Karen Gunther:

LinkedIn, strong LinkedIn profile, so that when they're



Karen Gunther:

going after their prospects and clients, they look very



Karen Gunther:

professional, but also to train them how to use technology,



Karen Gunther:

tools, chat, GPT, the scheduling task, the scheduling piece on



Karen Gunther:

LinkedIn and others, to amplify the company's message. So when



Karen Gunther:

we do the posting for the company, the sales reps are



Karen Gunther:

authentically posting and reposting and amplifying that



Karen Gunther:

message. And so I'm literally working with a brand new sales



Karen Gunther:

rep tomorrow that's as an on an individual basis, teaching them



Karen Gunther:

technology tools to make them more savvy and better and to up



Karen Gunther:

level their their their own personal profile and their brand



Karen Gunther:

in the marketplace, but by doing that, rising up the brand of the



Karen Gunther:

company as well. So it's an organic search. It's an organic



Karen Gunther:

lift all the way around. I also started with helping them with



Karen Gunther:

their sales force, and I will probably be putting together



Karen Gunther:

more email templates for them to use in their Salesforce, so that



Karen Gunther:

it makes it easier to use technology for their sales reps



Karen Gunther:

to reach out to their prospects and clients with a message that



Karen Gunther:

makes sense. It



Janice Porter:

does and it doesn't okay in the sense that



Janice Porter:

you're such a tech guru that that, in a way, that's your



Janice Porter:

secret sauce, or your your zone of genius is making it easier



Janice Porter:

for people, or seeing where you can help them make it easier by



Janice Porter:

using some tools, technical tools in in the process those



Janice Porter:

things, like we were talking offline about about a new app



Janice Porter:

that was being shown to us, or something I see, I just glazed



Janice Porter:

over When it happened on a call that we were both on, and you



Janice Porter:

understood it way more than I did, because I'm just the people



Janice Porter:

person. I'm not I'm not the tech person, I'm the people person.



Janice Porter:

And I don't say just, I shouldn't say that, I just mean



Janice Porter:

that that's my my zone of genius is building relationships with



Janice Porter:

people, and that's what I like to teach people to do as well.



Janice Porter:

In the process that you go through with, say, these new



Janice Porter:

sales people that you work with, I'm just curious. I remember



Janice Porter:

back, I'll give you a little back story. And back in the day



Janice Porter:

when I was doing corporate training, and I would be the



Janice Porter:

trainers, were always the last people to go out to the customer



Janice Porter:

site. They put in, I worked for the telephone company, or I



Janice Porter:

contracted to them, and somebody would sell them, the sale the



Janice Porter:

phone system, somebody else would design it and implement it



Janice Porter:

so that, you know, it rang three times here before it went to



Janice Porter:

this person and all of the different things around it. And



Janice Porter:

then the installer would go in and install it. And then we came



Janice Porter:

in and we trained on how to use the system, from the



Janice Porter:

receptionist to the CEO to the IT people all different versions



Janice Porter:

of what they had to do. But inevitably, we'd get there and



Janice Porter:

we'd see how it was set up, where we had the book that



Janice Porter:

showed and we go, like, why did they do it this way? Right?



Janice Porter:

Because nobody asked a trainer or asked the right people to get



Janice Porter:

those answers. So when you get these new sales people, do you



Janice Porter:

ever wonder what this guy's doing selling, or what that



Janice Porter:

woman's doing in that kind of industry? Does it ever not mesh



Janice Porter:

for you when you're dealing with them? Because you have to deal



Janice Porter:

with what you have but I. Does that ever happen?



Karen Gunther:

Yeah, it actually does. Wonder what the heck's



Karen Gunther:

going on here. Why did I hire this person? Yeah, I need to do.



Karen Gunther:

How do we salvage this situation? Yes, on a different



Karen Gunther:

tact, I do absolutely agree with that, and I will, I will respond



Karen Gunther:

back to the management, yeah, and provide my concerns. Yeah.



Karen Gunther:

Okay, good, absolutely. 100% and that's part of the I do



Karen Gunther:

individualized sales training. I can do, like group sales



Karen Gunther:

training, webinars, seminars, things of that nature. I have no



Karen Gunther:

problem doing that in person or, you know, virtually. It doesn't



Karen Gunther:

matter. I'm happy to do that. But I find that the greatest



Karen Gunther:

shift can happen when I work one on one with a person, regardless



Karen Gunther:

of who they are in the organization. If I can work with



Karen Gunther:

them one on one, we figure out where their speed bumps are with



Karen Gunther:

the technology, and then we move them past that so that their



Karen Gunther:

lives are easier on a day to day basis. And like I worked with



Karen Gunther:

somebody this morning who had their outlook set up, but they



Karen Gunther:

didn't have it set up so that the images downloaded. So every



Karen Gunther:

time they went into an email, if they wanted to see the images,



Karen Gunther:

they had to click the button to download the images. Is a very



Karen Gunther:

common thing, right? Well, what happens is the as I went



Karen Gunther:

through, I said, Do this, and I walk them through the process



Karen Gunther:

for the settings, and I had him go through and shift that so



Karen Gunther:

that it downloads it completely right? Every single time. He's



Karen Gunther:

like, Oh my gosh, that's going to save me so much time every



Karen Gunther:

day. And it's just little things like that that just make our day



Karen Gunther:

so much better, you know. But I sit there and I wonder, why



Karen Gunther:

isn't somebody going through and helping these people, you know,



Karen Gunther:

work through this process, you know?



Janice Porter:

Oh, I know, I totally can identify with that.



Janice Porter:

Because some things I think, Gosh, I gotta call, I'm an apple



Janice Porter:

girl. Gotta call apple and just ask them about this. And then I



Janice Porter:

never get around to it. So I'm still doing the same things the



Janice Porter:

wrong way, or whatever. So I get that, um, so, uh, questions. Um,



Janice Porter:

you do email marketing with some of your clients, yes, and um,



Janice Porter:

email marketing, it's become more challenging, I think, and



Janice Porter:

more complex. So how do you ensure that your clients emails



Janice Porter:

land in the inbox and resonate with their audience, because



Janice Porter:

it's hard these days to even get people to open those emails.



Karen Gunther:

Yes, that's two different tasks. One is to get



Karen Gunther:

at landing in the email box, landing in the inbox. That's an



Karen Gunther:

entirely different task that has to do with the person's domain



Karen Gunther:

and their DNS text records. Huh, exactly about six years ago.



Karen Gunther:

About five years ago, the that shift happened where outlook



Karen Gunther:

decided to no longer accept third party email platforms. And



Karen Gunther:

so you're saying that email focus



Janice Porter:

on you focus on Outlook. Only, no, oh no. I'm



Karen Gunther:

just using that as an example, okay, okay?



Karen Gunther:

Because when you're in a Gmail inbox, you'll see that it has



Karen Gunther:

your main email and it has a social and it has promotional



Karen Gunther:

okay tabs. That's just what most people see. Yeah, Outlook



Karen Gunther:

decided to go to something simpler, similar to that, made



Karen Gunther:

it different, and as a result of that, I had to have a crash



Karen Gunther:

course in it and how the handshakes work between servers



Karen Gunther:

to get emails delivered. And I didn't know anything about that,



Karen Gunther:

but now it's just second nature for me to whenever I set up a



Karen Gunther:

new client, to go in and to manage this process to make sure



Karen Gunther:

their stuff gets delivered. So there's that one piece of it



Karen Gunther:

right there is getting it into the inboxes. For those of you



Karen Gunther:

who are listening to this podcast, it's called the DNS



Karen Gunther:

text record, feel free to contact me. My information will



Karen Gunther:

be in the show notes, and I'll be happy to walk you through



Karen Gunther:

that so you can understand that for yourself. For that, it's too



Karen Gunther:

long to explain for this process, talking about here's



Karen Gunther:

way too techie. It's not even worth it to take the time to



Karen Gunther:

talk about that. Now the second thing is, is that, how do you



Karen Gunther:

get the person to open it? Well, there are times and days that



Karen Gunther:

are better to send so that emails will be seen as part of



Karen Gunther:

the normal business day. Somebody think about how you



Karen Gunther:

yourself approach your email in the morning. So in the morning



Karen Gunther:

you get you either looking at your phone having your cup of



Karen Gunther:

coffee, or you're at your computer and your finger is



Karen Gunther:

hovered over the delete button, or you're swiping delete one of



Karen Gunther:

the two. And so that means everything that comes in in the



Karen Gunther:

morning prior to the normal business day starting is now



Karen Gunther:

subject to being easily deleted. So you want to make sure to send



Karen Gunther:

your emails during the normal business day, so not before



Karen Gunther:

people start their business day, and not right, and not during



Karen Gunther:

lunch, because that's another time where people spend time



Karen Gunther:

deleting. So it's just there's a time frame that you send it now.



Karen Gunther:

So the time that you send the email indicates whether somebody



Karen Gunther:

will actually open it or not. The only other thing. Thing that



Karen Gunther:

is contingent on whether somebody will open the email or



Karen Gunther:

not, is the subject line, Oh, there's one other thing and that



Karen Gunther:

they actually know you. So if you receive an email from



Karen Gunther:

somebody you don't know, then you look at the subject, subject



Karen Gunther:

line to see, gosh, do I Is there something beneficial for me in



Karen Gunther:

this email? That's That's it, that that's all there is. So you



Karen Gunther:

always want to make sure it comes from a person's name or a



Karen Gunther:

well known company, you know, if it's a well known brand. So if



Karen Gunther:

you're a smaller company, you want to make sure it comes from



Karen Gunther:

your name as the business owner or the salesperson. And then you



Karen Gunther:

want to make sure that this the subject line. So that's just



Karen Gunther:

for, like, third party emails, even for sending emails during



Karen Gunther:

the day, just as a normal course of business, to reach out to



Karen Gunther:

people, to prospect, you want to make sure that your subject line



Karen Gunther:

is not very long, and that it has you know, relevant



Karen Gunther:

information, so that somebody will open it, and then once



Karen Gunther:

people open it, that's where we get to the does this resonate?



Karen Gunther:

Right? What I really love, and I'll give you these kudos.



Karen Gunther:

Janice, what I really love about your newsletters that you send



Karen Gunther:

out is you do have an engaging subject line. Number one, they



Karen Gunther:

are sent at a time that makes sense for people to open it, at



Karen Gunther:

least for me. And the third thing is, is that I know that



Karen Gunther:

when I receive those newsletters from you, that there's going to



Karen Gunther:

be something in there that will touch me and make me think about



Karen Gunther:

something differently, because that's what I've because I've



Karen Gunther:

spent time looking at your newsletters. At first it was



Karen Gunther:

like, yeah, yeah, yeah, whatever, right. It's just



Karen Gunther:

another newsletter. But when I stopped to actually take the



Karen Gunther:

time to look at the newsletter and read it, I'm like, oh,



Karen Gunther:

there's going to be something interesting in here. I'm going



Karen Gunther:

to want to read this. And so I will set it aside so that I have



Karen Gunther:

time and I'll flag it so I can go back and look at it, so that



Karen Gunther:

I can say, Okay, I went through and I read it, and I picked up



Karen Gunther:

the one really cool tip. And it may not even be the thing that



Karen Gunther:

you were intending for people to pick up Janice, because that's



Karen Gunther:

the interesting thing. But I do know that when it comes to



Karen Gunther:

certain people, when they send me emails, that there's going to



Karen Gunther:

be something, you know, in that there for me. So let's get let's



Karen Gunther:

go to the next point. You're sending out marketing emails to



Karen Gunther:

people you don't know and who don't know you. How do you make



Karen Gunther:

sure it resonates? Well, you need to understand their



Karen Gunther:

industry. You need to understand their challenges. You need to



Karen Gunther:

understand what keeps them up at night. You need to understand



Karen Gunther:

what they might be interested in learning more about. And you



Karen Gunther:

need to provide education. If I'm just trying to hawk



Karen Gunther:

something and sell it. It's not going to go through, but if I



Karen Gunther:

offer education as part of the content, then it becomes more



Karen Gunther:

valuable. It's



Janice Porter:

interesting, because that's the part I like



Janice Porter:

the best. I want to make sure that I can teach them something.



Janice Porter:

And what I've started to learn, though, is that it's okay to



Janice Porter:

repeat yourself, because not everybody reads it every time,



Janice Porter:

and so on and and it's different way of saying the same thing. It



Janice Porter:

might start to connect with, actually, what something you



Janice Porter:

just said, which is that you know the flavor of my of my



Janice Porter:

newsletter, well, that's what you get over time, right? But



Janice Porter:

that that the message is clear, right? It's either about, well,



Janice Porter:

there's different parts to it, but it's about, you know,



Janice Porter:

gratitude, or it's about, you know, trusting people and



Janice Porter:

staying connected and all of that good stuff. So thank you.



Janice Porter:

Thank you for for that. And okay, just a minute, there was



Janice Porter:

something else around that I wanted to ask you. Well, let's



Janice Porter:

go to, let's go back to staying visible. Because it's important



Janice Porter:

that we stay visible in the marketplace, that we're in front



Janice Porter:

of the people that we want to be in front of, in a, in a in a



Janice Porter:

useful way. But what are the common mistakes that businesses



Janice Porter:

make that cause them to lose visibility. And how do you help



Janice Porter:

them address these issues? So salespeople, it's, it's kind of



Janice Porter:

an important thing that they stay in front of people. And



Janice Porter:

we've all, I find we forget the follow up, or we forget to come



Janice Porter:

back to people that we've you know, spent the time opening the



Janice Porter:

door with. Do you find that with your people that you train?



Janice Porter:

Yeah, what



Karen Gunther:

I would where I would say that's, that's a very



Karen Gunther:

large subject. So let me, let me contain my subject. Let me



Karen Gunther:

contain my comments to the sales rep. Because there's a lot of



Karen Gunther:

different there's a lot of different areas to that subject.



Karen Gunther:

When I contain my comments to the sales rep, specifically, I



Karen Gunther:

would see failure to use a CRM, be it HubSpot, gold mine,



Karen Gunther:

Salesforce, whatever it is, I'm a Salesforce baby. So I'm a



Karen Gunther:

Salesforce girl, and I find it to be very helpful. And what I



Karen Gunther:

can't remember everything, and neither can anybody else. So



Karen Gunther:

based on that, the sales reps need to use some sort of CRM,



Karen Gunther:

because you're having to contact so many people, so many times



Karen Gunther:

with. So many different messages that you want to be able to



Karen Gunther:

track what you've done, how often you've done it, when



Karen Gunther:

you've done it, so that you know that you're not pestering the



Karen Gunther:

person too much or too little, and that you provide and you



Karen Gunther:

schedule those tasks for yourself, so that sales, sales



Karen Gunther:

force, or the CRM that you're using becomes your brain to



Karen Gunther:

remind you, so that when you get in in the morning, okay, I have



Karen Gunther:

these 10 things I need to do today, and then you set your



Karen Gunther:

next tasks, you know, for whatever the future dates are



Karen Gunther:

for those so that you're feeding into the system, so that over



Karen Gunther:

time, the first half hour of the day is 100% spent doing specific



Karen Gunther:

prospecting based on previous actions. And I find that most



Karen Gunther:

sales people are reticent to use their CRM tool. But I must say,



Karen Gunther:

this new generation, this Gen Z, that's coming into the



Karen Gunther:

workforce, they are completely willing to use a CRM, which I



Karen Gunther:

have found that to be really gratifying and so much easier to



Karen Gunther:

work with Gen X. Heck no, that's my generation. Nope. We have no



Karen Gunther:

interest in doing that. Millennials are kind of



Karen Gunther:

interested, but only if they see how, based on my experience, and



Karen Gunther:

see how it benefits them, and only if they can see that, and



Karen Gunther:

then the the Gen Z's what I've noticed when they come into



Karen Gunther:

they're like, Okay, this is a tech tool I get to use cool.



Karen Gunther:

They does it for me, great, and they just move into it, and



Karen Gunther:

they've got no problem. And I've been really gratified to work



Karen Gunther:

with the new generation coming into sales, I was a little



Karen Gunther:

concerned at first, but



Janice Porter:

okay, so they like the tech things because



Janice Porter:

they grew up with it and they're comfortable with it. How the



Janice Porter:

people skills? Zero? Yeah, that's what I thought. Yeah,



Janice Porter:

yeah,



Karen Gunther:

absolutely zero people skills. So you have to



Karen Gunther:

train them more on how to talk. So what I do for that is the



Karen Gunther:

second thing that I find that people don't do that they should



Karen Gunther:

be doing, is they should be practicing more. So the most



Karen Gunther:

important thing you can do to practice is to take your phone,



Karen Gunther:

put it into Voice Memo mode, work with some sort of AI or



Karen Gunther:

yourself to create some sort of script that you can use. Not



Karen Gunther:

that you're going to only use a script, but it gives you



Karen Gunther:

something to work with, to start with, because if you don't know



Karen Gunther:

a product, you have to start somewhere. You need to bone up



Karen Gunther:

on the product. You need to understand the you know, the



Karen Gunther:

brochures and the information and why it benefits the client.



Karen Gunther:

And you need to go through and use that voice memo function on



Karen Gunther:

your phone, because there's something about saying the



Karen Gunther:

script when you are just reading it. I could just pick up a piece



Karen Gunther:

of paper and read it or read it off a monitor, but when you have



Karen Gunther:

that voice memo on and you've got that record on, it changes



Karen Gunther:

everything in the brain, and all of a sudden everything's engaged



Karen Gunther:

and you're practicing, how do these words come out of my



Karen Gunther:

mouth?



Janice Porter:

How do I sound? Do I sound authentic? Does it



Janice Porter:

sound authentic?



Karen Gunther:

Exactly, exactly? And then what happens from that



Karen Gunther:

is you're like, Oh, I'm stumbling over saying don't or



Karen Gunther:

do not. You know, I find that contractions work well when



Karen Gunther:

you're speaking, but not when you're writing. So I tend to not



Karen Gunther:

use contractions when I write, but I will use contractions when



Karen Gunther:

I speak. So it's just a difference between speaking and



Karen Gunther:

writing and learning. What does that sound like, and does this



Karen Gunther:

sound correct? So where are people not taking advantage of



Karen Gunther:

opportunities? They're not using CRMs. They're not practicing,



Karen Gunther:

you know, in a live situation where they can hear themselves



Karen Gunther:

and going back and verifying. And the other thing that I find



Karen Gunther:

that people don't do that they should be doing more of is



Karen Gunther:

continuing to learn. Oh, really, just the constant learning there



Karen Gunther:

is, there are so many different ways to learn. There are so many



Karen Gunther:

different ways to improve your skills. Mm, hmm, in all areas of



Karen Gunther:

not only your life, but in your business, aspect of how to do



Karen Gunther:

this better, how to do that better. You know, constantly



Karen Gunther:

learning, you know, listening to podcasts like yours and others,



Karen Gunther:

where you can pick up one more thing of, oh, I didn't think to



Karen Gunther:

do it like that. I remember I had this large meeting that I



Karen Gunther:

was going into, and I really wanted to sound smart. Wanted to



Karen Gunther:

make sure I had all the questions. So I went into my my



Karen Gunther:

podcast app, and I typed in, you know, how to whatever it was,



Karen Gunther:

how to do something or another in a sales call, and, like,



Karen Gunther:

three or four different podcasts, you know, pulled up



Karen Gunther:

ones I've never listened to before, and I was in the



Karen Gunther:

airport, so I took the time to listen to them, and I was busy



Karen Gunther:

taking notes, and I was ready when I had that meeting to ask



Karen Gunther:

some of those questions. So I sounded really smart, and I



Karen Gunther:

actually got really good information. So now those



Karen Gunther:

questions are part of what I do. But it was really interesting



Karen Gunther:

because it was like, Okay, I better bone up on this. I better



Karen Gunther:

learn. There's so many resources out there right now that you



Karen Gunther:

know, something that people don't do, that they should be



Karen Gunther:

doing, is continuing to sharpen that, sharpen that sword. You



Karen Gunther:

know,



Janice Porter:

I'm, I'm surprised that you said that, in



Janice Porter:

a way, because we have so much at our fingertips today to



Janice Porter:

answer whatever question. I mean, if I if I'm watching



Janice Porter:

Jeopardy, which is one of my favorite things to do, and I



Janice Porter:

don't understand something, or I don't know the I'll go and right



Janice Porter:

away on my phone and. Find out more about it, or if I'm, you



Janice Porter:

know, whatever I'm crossword puzzles, whatever it is I'm



Janice Porter:

doing, I want to find out more, or just something I hear on



Janice Porter:

television that I want to know more about. But we also are so



Janice Porter:

busy today. Now, I'm also surprised, though, because the



Janice Porter:

young people are the the Gen Z's you were just referring to. They



Janice Porter:

were brought up on their phones. And they go to it for



Janice Porter:

everything. So I think they go to



Karen Gunther:

it for entertainment, yeah, with their



Karen Gunther:

friends, but not for business purpose, and not to learn,



Janice Porter:

not to learn interesting. Yes, that really,



Janice Porter:

that's really interesting. And, and then the other thing, when



Janice Porter:

you said, you just said, they go to it to communicate with their



Janice Porter:

friends, which is, like the most passive communication piece



Janice Porter:

there is, right? Which is why they're not good at social



Janice Porter:

skills. Which is so when you have a client like that, a sales



Janice Porter:

rep that you're that you're talking to, like that, how do



Janice Porter:

you bring them around? Because are they going to say, Oh, sure,



Janice Porter:

I'm going to practice this on my phone, talking to myself. Or do



Janice Porter:

they willingly do it? Or do you have to push? I



Karen Gunther:

have to push. I have to say, I have to have them



Karen Gunther:

set goals. I have to have them practice. And I ask them how the



Karen Gunther:

experience was. So they go off and they do it on their own. The



Karen Gunther:

next time I meet with them, how was that? What did you learn? So



Karen Gunther:

I asked the probing questions, what did you learn by doing it?



Karen Gunther:

And you can tell really quick if they're lying, yeah, you know.



Karen Gunther:

But most of the time, because it's a tech thing and it's a new



Karen Gunther:

way to use technology, they already like using it's kind of



Karen Gunther:

like, oh, I can do that. Oh, that's cool. I'm going to try



Karen Gunther:

that, because they're really so interested in learning, but they



Karen Gunther:

just don't know all of the resources. And you would think,



Karen Gunther:

well, God, they have a phone in their hands. Well, they don't



Karen Gunther:

use the well, they don't use those apps. Yeah, you know. So



Karen Gunther:

if you introduce them to the apps, they're like, Oh, okay.



Karen Gunther:

I'd say, when you're driving, you know, listen to the podcast,



Karen Gunther:

and don't do it every time. And go listen to music and take a



Karen Gunther:

break and let your brain relax, for sure, but at least once a



Karen Gunther:

day, be listening to something.



Janice Porter:

You know, it's so funny. Do you see how old I am



Janice Porter:

when I say this, but it reminded me what you just said of when I



Janice Porter:

was at the telephone company and I was training soft, what we



Janice Porter:

called soft skills, to receptionists, and one of the



Janice Porter:

things that I used to do is sit with the receptionist and listen



Janice Porter:

to how they answered the phone and listen to their voice and



Janice Porter:

whatever. And I would say to you know, the odd one. Have you ever



Janice Porter:

heard yourself on the phone? And I would give them something to



Janice Porter:

to say, and I say, you know, or they had to record the the



Janice Porter:

greeting on the voicemail system, or whatever. And I say,



Janice Porter:

you know, go home, go in your bathroom. Don't let anybody hear



Janice Porter:

you and record yourself. And then listen to what you sound



Janice Porter:

like and you'll know whether you need to change it or not. That's



Janice Porter:

what you used to have to do in the old days, right? And it



Janice Porter:

wasn't as easy because he didn't have a phone too. You had to get



Janice Porter:

a little tape recorder Exactly. Yeah, I understand all that, but



Janice Porter:

it's just so interesting, okay? And it just, there's just so



Janice Porter:

many interesting things that the kids today, the kids today, the



Janice Porter:

young people today, do so differently than than we do and



Janice Porter:

but so much



Karen Gunther:

is the same in terms of how business works. It



Karen Gunther:

was interesting. I just was meeting with a student. You



Karen Gunther:

mentioned that I mentor students. I mentor students at



Karen Gunther:

the local school, they have a course specifically for how to



Karen Gunther:

integrate the students into a professional life, yeah. And



Karen Gunther:

which is great. So I was talking to the student today, and he



Karen Gunther:

said, Oh, by the way. I said, Is there anything else? Because



Karen Gunther:

we're wrapping up. He said, Yeah, one more thing. He says,



Karen Gunther:

You do marketing stuff, right? I said, Yeah. And he wants to go



Karen Gunther:

into the supply chain, and so it's nothing to do with



Karen Gunther:

marketing. He says, Well, I was just at this event last week,



Karen Gunther:

and I think they need help with their marketing. Is it okay if I



Karen Gunther:

present the information? I said, Oh, what event was it? And he



Karen Gunther:

told me. I said, oh, and I held up my phone and I said, I'm



Karen Gunther:

already texting with the executive director of that



Karen Gunther:

organization. I started working with them two days ago. Oh,



Karen Gunther:

that's so funny, because I and by the way, the person you met



Karen Gunther:

with, you know, three weeks ago at the networking event. Was



Karen Gunther:

also at that event, but she was in the wrong place, so you



Karen Gunther:

didn't recognize her. So now you have a way to go back to her,



Karen Gunther:

you know. So now we have this total connection. I said, if you



Karen Gunther:

could please do me a favor, could you please let that person



Karen Gunther:

know that you know me and make the recommendations? And now



Karen Gunther:

he's hearing from two people that I'm a good person to work



Karen Gunther:

with, right? Well, that person turned around immediately sent



Karen Gunther:

me that text not an hour ago. Nice, nice saying, oh, this



Karen Gunther:

person recommended you as well. I mean, isn't that it? And isn't



Karen Gunther:

that the way? So business still works that way. It's all of who



Karen Gunther:

you know. And I think that the the incoming you know, business



Karen Gunther:

professionals very much value what their who, their network



Karen Gunther:

knows more so than anything. It's surprising to me that you



Karen Gunther:

would think that they would just go online and find sources, but



Karen Gunther:

they don't. They talk to their the people around them,



Karen Gunther:

certainly



Janice Porter:

the the business students learn that faster. I



Janice Porter:

remember doing a. Uh, going up to with the local university for



Janice Porter:

their MBA students had an event, and it was to teach them how to



Janice Porter:

network properly, and they wanted some business



Janice Porter:

professionals there to to help with the the situation in the in



Janice Porter:

the event, and there were a lot of accounting students and a lot



Janice Porter:

of pharmacy students, and they struggled. They struggled with



Janice Porter:

what to say in a networking setup, or whatever. The business



Janice Porter:

students, I think, have to come about. They have to learn, or



Janice Porter:

they do learn more quickly how important it is to build your



Janice Porter:

network, yes, but yeah, but yeah. Today it's a lot of them



Janice Porter:

were struggling with that and, and, and it's fun to be able to



Janice Porter:

share with them, you know, conversation, or to to show by



Janice Porter:

having those conversations with them in the groups, and they



Janice Porter:

start to see how much easier it can be to to build rapport with



Janice Porter:

people and to talk with them. But, yeah, it's, that's the



Janice Porter:

thing I love to to look at and and so and networking today.



Janice Porter:

What do you think about you know, we got so much away from



Janice Porter:

face to face networking, at least I did, because I've rarely



Janice Porter:

gone back to the face to face thing since, since the COVID



Janice Porter:

disaster, and I stay online, mostly doing it on LinkedIn, but



Janice Porter:

then having one to ones with people. What's your take on



Janice Porter:

that? Are people seeing that they need to be out there in



Janice Porter:

front of people? Or are they doing it online? Are they using



Janice Porter:

LinkedIn? Or all



Karen Gunther:

of I think that the sphere of networking has



Karen Gunther:

expanded. It used to be in person, and that was it was



Karen Gunther:

starting to be more on LinkedIn prior to the pandemic. It



Karen Gunther:

switched to online during the pandemic, and now that people



Karen Gunther:

are able to get back together, people are craving the



Karen Gunther:

opportunity to be in person with people. Yeah, somehow. Mono, so



Karen Gunther:

I think there's a lot to be said for attending networking events,



Karen Gunther:

because people want to be there and they want to meet with



Karen Gunther:

people. They're craving that, that one on one interaction



Karen Gunther:

with, you know, another human being, you know, just standing



Karen Gunther:

in front of rather than just the computer. But in addition to



Karen Gunther:

that, we've also layered on the LinkedIn and the virtual



Karen Gunther:

connections as well. I mean, so it's like, it's like the



Karen Gunther:

pandemic tripled our opportunities. That's right,



Janice Porter:

that's what I thought, too. Something that you



Janice Porter:

when you were talking about your clients practicing with the



Janice Porter:

their phone, it made me think of the the value today of voice



Janice Porter:

messaging as well as video messaging. It makes you stand



Janice Porter:

out from the crowd. Do you teach them? Do you teach your people



Janice Porter:

to do that as well?



Karen Gunther:

Yeah, absolutely. I use, there's a lot of



Karen Gunther:

platforms out there. I use loom. I don't have any paper



Karen Gunther:

promotional for them. It's just, it's just what I learned on and



Karen Gunther:

I like it, and it's easy, and it's one of the few platforms



Karen Gunther:

that I do pay for, because I do like having that option to have



Karen Gunther:

as many videos as I want. And I create loom videos all the time



Karen Gunther:

for training purposes, Okay, number one, to provide people



Karen Gunther:

with how to do things. And then I do also use it as for sales



Karen Gunther:

purpose to and I train salespeople on how to use it for



Karen Gunther:

sales purpose, so people can show what they want to share



Karen Gunther:

about with a prospect. As opposed to just leaving a



Karen Gunther:

voicemail message, they're actually having their face



Karen Gunther:

there. They're having visual for people to look at. It's really



Karen Gunther:

powerful.



Janice Porter:

Is it easier than doing it than not just doing it



Janice Porter:

on Zoom? Like is significantly easier. Okay, I've used it once



Janice Porter:

or twice, but I've never really looked into it. So maybe because



Janice Porter:

I I know sometimes I'll say to a client who I've just brought on



Janice Porter:

to send out cards, I want you to be aware of the back of the



Janice Porter:

card, blah, blah, blah, and do this, I'll send you a short



Janice Porter:

video just to keep to show you what I mean, and I've destined



Janice Porter:

it on Zoom, but, oh,



Karen Gunther:

I would do that on loom, because you're using



Karen Gunther:

their their platform as the basis point. And it's wonderful



Karen Gunther:

because you can use it on your phone. You can if you're what I



Karen Gunther:

find is fascinating. So for people who are in a



Karen Gunther:

manufacturing setting, and many of my clients are manufacturing



Karen Gunther:

settings, so you're sitting there and you're with a client,



Karen Gunther:

and the client is saying it's making this weird noise. You



Karen Gunther:

know, manufacturers like, there's no way it can make that



Karen Gunther:

weird noise. It's just not physically possible, right? So



Karen Gunther:

you pull out the loom video, you show the client there, you start



Karen Gunther:

the button, you show the client, and you have the video. They see



Karen Gunther:

the part running and all this stuff, and then the weird noise



Karen Gunther:

happens, right? And then you send it, and they're like,



Janice Porter:

oh, oh.



Karen Gunther:

And there it is. And it just, it just stops it.



Karen Gunther:

And one of the things that loom says is their little branding



Karen Gunther:

thing, their marketing thing, they do, we just saved you a



Karen Gunther:

meeting. You know, they really do, because I have a virtual



Karen Gunther:

assistant who works out of the Philippines, so we're on



Karen Gunther:

different time. Schedules. So from one o'clock on my time, I'm



Karen Gunther:

separate from him, and if I have things and I work until 10



Karen Gunther:

o'clock at night, because my husband works second shift, so



Karen Gunther:

that works for me. So I'll go through and I'll create a bunch



Karen Gunther:

of work for him. I'll do it on loom, I'll show him everything,



Karen Gunther:

and I'll send it to him, and he'll when he gets in and when



Karen Gunther:

he starts his shift, he just looks at everything, and it



Karen Gunther:

reports back to me that he's looked at it, so I know he's



Karen Gunther:

engaged.



Janice Porter:

And boom, okay, that's good.



Karen Gunther:

It's really exciting, because you can



Karen Gunther:

actually see what's happening. And when you use it for sales,



Karen Gunther:

let's say I want to sell you email marketing. Jenna, so I go



Karen Gunther:

through and I do this little presentation. It's like a three



Karen Gunther:

or four slide thing on PowerPoint, and I have my little



Karen Gunther:

face there, and I'm talking, and I have all this wonderful stuff



Karen Gunther:

happening, right? And I take this video and I send it to you,



Karen Gunther:

I see when you opened it, and I can see time you spent on it,



Karen Gunther:

yeah, I know when that happened, and so I need to follow up with



Karen Gunther:

you later that day or the following day. Yeah, that's



Karen Gunther:

beautiful. Or if you haven't opened it, maybe the video, the



Karen Gunther:

email didn't go through, yes? So I can say, Gosh, I'm not sure if



Karen Gunther:

you got this email, you know, but I want to make sure you saw



Karen Gunther:

this, you know, yeah.



Janice Porter:

Oh, that's awesome. Those all these little



Janice Porter:

tricks, right? Using technology



Karen Gunther:

to make our lives easier, that's my mantra.



Janice Porter:

So okay, we've let me just ask you this quick



Janice Porter:

question. So if you set a meeting with somebody on a



Janice Porter:

Calendly or whatever calendar link that you use, does that



Janice Porter:

calendar link attach to your zoom or does because mine isn't



Janice Porter:

working properly. So



Karen Gunther:

we have, so I have found a way to do that,



Karen Gunther:

because, like you, I have a specific meeting code that I



Karen Gunther:

use. You have your, you know, zoom with Janice meeting code,



Karen Gunther:

and I have my specific meeting code that I use, and I have my



Karen Gunther:

meeting set up in a very particular way so that I can use



Karen Gunther:

it ongoing and it stays specific to that. So when I set up a



Karen Gunther:

meeting, I have it set up in my Calendly, because I do use



Karen Gunther:

Calendly, but that's what I'm missing. You can set it up with



Karen Gunther:

any of the services, and even if you do it through Outlook or



Karen Gunther:

Gmail or however you manage your email or your calendar, you can



Karen Gunther:

set it up so that the calendar link goes through, and heart has



Karen Gunther:

that templated information in there, so the person can just,



Karen Gunther:

you know, and it'll come through. And you have to set it



Karen Gunther:

up in a very particular very particular way. Again, I was



Karen Gunther:

working with a client this morning, explaining how to do



Karen Gunther:

this so that you can do informational interviews. And it



Karen Gunther:

was information, and I said this, and I showed him my



Karen Gunther:

screen. I said, Here it is. Take a screenshot so you can set up



Karen Gunther:

yours the same way. Because if you set this up correctly, and



Karen Gunther:

you do it one and done, then you don't have to think about it



Karen Gunther:

again exactly. It just makes your life so much easier.



Karen Gunther:

There's no fretting, there's no worrying. There's no did they



Karen Gunther:

have the right thing? And especially when it comes to



Karen Gunther:

these, you know, teams, or zoom, or any of these platforms, as



Karen Gunther:

soon as you you know, you have to think about it. Can my 95



Karen Gunther:

year old, you know, grandmother, yeah, get on a meeting with me



Karen Gunther:

if the answer is no, because it's a weird password that you



Karen Gunther:

have to hit Shift to get to the, you know, the ampersand or



Karen Gunther:

whatever. I mean, it's like, no, we have to make it as easy as



Karen Gunther:

possible because it's so hard to sell. Yeah, we have to make it



Karen Gunther:

as easy as possible and let tech make it easy for us to be



Karen Gunther:

accessible.



Janice Porter:

Yeah, yeah, that makes sense. We'll have to talk



Janice Porter:

about that offline, because I think it's one little thing I'm



Janice Porter:

missing. That's what I think it is. And I know that you're a wiz



Janice Porter:

with chat GPT. You love using that tool, and that has saved



Janice Porter:

you a lot of time and hard. It made me a lot of money. Yeah,



Janice Porter:

really, yeah. Okay. What's the three top things you do with it.



Karen Gunther:

I have the paid version. Yes, so do i for $20 a



Karen Gunther:

month right now, and November 24 that's how much it costs the and



Karen Gunther:

the reason I do that is I have, do not have unlimited bandwidth



Karen Gunther:

to do to do chats. I do not have that because nothing has that



Karen Gunther:

that I'm aware of, but I have more options than somebody who's



Karen Gunther:

on the free program, so it allows me more opportunity to do



Karen Gunther:

more. I'm also able, with a paid version to create what's called



Karen Gunther:

the custom GPT. Because I do marketing, I set up LinkedIn



Karen Gunther:

posts, blog posts, website content pages, refreshes,



Karen Gunther:

LinkedIn profile. I have certain things that are already set up.



Karen Gunther:

So all I need to do is put in just two or three pieces of



Karen Gunther:

information and it'll spit out what I need in a close



Karen Gunther:

representation. Because it gets not, you know, 80 90% of the way



Karen Gunther:

there. You have to check it and, you know, make it right, but it



Karen Gunther:

gets you most of the way there. And so I have the paid version



Karen Gunther:

so I can have more opportunity to use it more often without



Karen Gunther:

being stopped. Two to be able to create the custom gpts, which



Karen Gunther:

already has the information parameters in there. It already



Karen Gunther:

has all the instructions in there, and then. So those are



Karen Gunther:

the, you know, yeah, those two things because I just use it all



Karen Gunther:

the time. So you asked to go to the top. Things. The third thing



Karen Gunther:

that I would suggest is continuously learning how to use



Karen Gunther:

it. Most people think, Oh, I'm just going to use it to write an



Karen Gunther:

email. It's like, oh, did you know that you could take this



Karen Gunther:

brochure, attach it to the chat, even on the free version, you



Karen Gunther:

can, you know, attach it brochure and say, Please create



Karen Gunther:

a presentation for me, a written presentation to send to a client



Karen Gunther:

regarding this product. This is their situation. And it'll,



Karen Gunther:

poof. It'll bring out an entire proposal for you. Wow. Number



Karen Gunther:

one, I know it's pretty amazing. It will create PowerPoints for



Karen Gunther:

you. It will create, it will literally create Word documents



Karen Gunther:

and excel sheets. It will actually output to those



Karen Gunther:

documents. There are so many different ways, if you can think



Karen Gunther:

about I've had it create, I've had it plan trips for me. I just



Karen Gunther:

came back from a trip to Alaska, Fairbanks, Alaska to go see the



Karen Gunther:

northern lights, and it was fabulous. And it literally found



Karen Gunther:

the place that we stayed at. I wouldn't have sounded otherwise,



Karen Gunther:

you know. So it was really interesting. So the how it can



Karen Gunther:

be used. So what I do is I consistently keep up, either on



Karen Gunther:

YouTube or through articles that I see online, of the new



Karen Gunther:

features, and I listen, and I join peer groups where I can



Karen Gunther:

listen and see how are people using this technology. I'm of a



Karen Gunther:

mind, and I'm old enough to remember when cell phones were



Karen Gunther:

the size of a shoe box, yeah, back in the early 90s, and they



Karen Gunther:

went really small, and now they're larger again, thank God



Karen Gunther:

so I can read the screen, yeah. And what happens is, is that I



Karen Gunther:

think chat GBT is the shoe box cell phone right now, and it



Karen Gunther:

will transition and shift and change as we go. So I need to be



Karen Gunther:

able to transition, shift and change along with it, and need



Karen Gunther:

to learn how to use it every time I think I don't know if



Karen Gunther:

chat GP can do it, I just throw it in interesting that's the



Karen Gunther:

question, just to see why not. Well?



Janice Porter:

And that's another example of always



Janice Porter:

learning and lifelong learning and being ahead of the game and



Janice Porter:

ahead of your clients, right? This is so much fun. So I'm just



Janice Porter:

going to shift a little bit before we wrap up, because I



Janice Porter:

know that you just started doing Wordle, and I've been doing it



Janice Porter:

for a long time, and I got stumped on it today, and I was



Janice Porter:

so mad. So do you do it every day?



Karen Gunther:

Not every day? I'd say four out of seven days



Karen Gunther:

of the week. Okay, so every



Janice Porter:

morning, when having my cup of tea, usually,



Janice Porter:

usually every day, I'll do Wordle, and then I do two of the



Janice Porter:

puzzles in LinkedIn. I do this, I forget the names, pinpoint,



Janice Porter:

and I do the other one, the cross climb. And I do those



Janice Porter:

every day, and it only takes me maybe 10 minutes, max at you



Janice Porter:

know, to do them. But I just, I love the the challenge, and I



Janice Porter:

love to do puzzles anyway. Now I think I'm going to start doing



Janice Porter:

Spelling Bee, but that takes longer, and that's a New York



Janice Porter:

Times one as well. And because I'm a word person and crosswords



Janice Porter:

at night, so it's fun to see that you're doing them so on.



Janice Porter:

Have you ever done any of the LinkedIn games?



Karen Gunther:

No, I've actually turned off the opportunity. I



Karen Gunther:

mean, I turned off the notifications to do that because



Karen Gunther:

I don't do games. I mean, I do games. What do I do? Spider,



Karen Gunther:

which is a version of solitaire. I do that. Oh yeah, I do the



Karen Gunther:

I've started doing the Wordle. But it's what's interesting for



Karen Gunther:

me about the Wordle is that I need to actually not be



Karen Gunther:

listening to a book, or I have to actually think about it. And



Karen Gunther:

sometimes I have to pull out a piece of paper and write the



Karen Gunther:

words, which is trying to figure



Janice Porter:

that's funny. Well, the thing that I like



Janice Porter:

about, and I've only done it a couple of times, but the thing



Janice Porter:

that I like about the word games that LinkedIn has brought in is



Janice Porter:

you can actually use it as another networking tool, because



Janice Porter:

it shows you who of your connections has done the puzzle.



Janice Porter:

Wow. So you can ask more interesting now, yeah, so you



Janice Porter:

can see who's you know, doing like you, and you can reach out



Janice Porter:

to them if you want. So that's kind of fun and different. Okay,



Janice Porter:

last question, and I'm sure you'll have an answer for this.



Janice Porter:

So curiosity is my favorite word, and I love to ask



Janice Porter:

occasionally two things. One, it's two. Part question. One, do



Janice Porter:

you think curiosity is innate or learned. And part two, what are



Janice Porter:

you most curious about today? And you don't have to overthink



Janice Porter:

it, because there's no



Karen Gunther:

writing or learned. I'm going to say it's



Karen Gunther:

5050, it's nature, nurture, right? Yeah. And I think that if



Karen Gunther:

somebody, somebody either has natural curiosity and they



Karen Gunther:

pursue things just as a general rule. But I also do think that



Karen Gunther:

if you start young or start somebody at any age, quite



Karen Gunther:

frankly, on the path of how to be more curious about things,



Karen Gunther:

and the benefits of that and what happens as a result of



Karen Gunther:

being more curious, I. I think it could be very much a learned



Karen Gunther:

item. And I think that's what I try to teach people when I work



Karen Gunther:

with them in the sales training, is how to be curious. How do you



Karen Gunther:

be curious about how to do things differently, right? Yes.



Karen Gunther:

And then, what am I curious about today? I am. I'm curious



Karen Gunther:

about, literally, like you're asking me, and I'm telling an



Karen Gunther:

answer. I'm curious about 2025, because I'm starting to think



Karen Gunther:

now, because it's, you know, in the middle of November, to how



Karen Gunther:

to, how to plan my year. You know, I you and I have talked



Karen Gunther:

about a a program that I'm putting together to reach out to



Karen Gunther:

reach out to my clients monthly. I'm going to be using the Send



Karen Gunther:

Out Cards that you talk about to reach my clients as well with



Karen Gunther:

that. And I'm curious to see how that program comes together,



Karen Gunther:

because I think it'll be really impactful to my business. But I



Karen Gunther:

haven't yet fully formulated that, so it's always in the back



Karen Gunther:

of my mind of, how am I going to put this together?



Janice Porter:

Well, just know that I'm happy to have that



Janice Porter:

conversation with you and brainstorm with you about it. I



Janice Porter:

appreciate that. Thank you. Yeah, I'm actually talking to a



Janice Porter:

guy tomorrow. This is kind of fun. Um, this person was



Janice Porter:

introduced to me by a podcast company because they send me



Janice Porter:

people all the time, and he to be on my podcast, and I always



Janice Porter:

have an intro call with them first. So we had this intro



Janice Porter:

call. He was great. I said, Let's do it. We're and I've



Janice Porter:

booked him to be on my podcast. But we started talking about one



Janice Porter:

of his companies, and I think he owns, he's a he's a coach, a



Janice Porter:

business coach, but he also has this carpet cleaning company,



Janice Porter:

and I asked him how he you know what? Anyway, I got into



Janice Porter:

conversation with him, and I gave him a couple ideas, and he



Janice Porter:

said, Oh, you and I need to brainstorm some more. I love



Janice Porter:

that. And I sent him a card, and now we're going to talk about



Janice Porter:

the cards in a brainstorming session tomorrow. So wonderful.



Janice Porter:

Yeah, that's kind of fun. So I love doing that. So if you're



Janice Porter:

when you're ready, let me know and and thank you so much for



Janice Porter:

being on on my podcast. I so enjoyed having you as my guest,



Janice Porter:

and I appreciate your expertise and in more ways than you, than



Janice Porter:

you know. So thank you, Janice, so much for having me here. Oh,



Janice Porter:

you're so welcome. Quite fun to have this conversation.



Janice Porter:

Actually, know what I'm really looking forward to you. I know



Janice Porter:

you love to travel, and you're coming up my way next summer,



Janice Porter:

and we're actually going to meet in person. So that's really



Janice Porter:

exciting. And



Karen Gunther:

that's another thing that I do when it comes to



Karen Gunther:

networking, is I let people know where I'm traveling. And you'd



Karen Gunther:

be surprised at how many people know people or are certain



Karen Gunther:

places. And I try to make that connection. I try to, generally,



Karen Gunther:

everywhere I go, in the United States, I try, or the world,



Karen Gunther:

literally, I try to make a connection.



Janice Porter:

Did you do that in Alaska?



Karen Gunther:

Oh no, because we're nowhere. Yeah,



Janice Porter:

okay, okay, there's nobody around, okay, but



Janice Porter:

you had a good time, and you saw the Northern Lights, right? It



Janice Porter:

was fabulous. Oh, fantastic. All right. Well, thank you again for



Janice Porter:

being here, and thank you to my audience for being here, please



Janice Porter:

let us know that you enjoyed the podcast, and Karen will put in



Janice Porter:

the show notes where people can find you. Yes, perfect. And all



Janice Porter:

right, and thanks again, and remember to stay connected and



Janice Porter:

be remembered. You.