- Joined
- Jan 26, 2013
- Messages
- 707
Hey gents,
Last weekend I attended to my first business event ever. It was very nice to see so many entrepreneurs in one place
Before attending it, I have read who were the coaches/mentors/every guy who gave a talk and what they did and how they did it. There was one guy that grabbed my attention. He had majored in a top tier university in the same area that I'm majoring in, had worked in big, multinational companies that lead their respective market segment, then left and built his own (successful) business. He's quite young, but almost 10 years older than me.
Towards the end of the event, I saw an opportunity to talk to him, and I did. We talked for almost an hour and he gave me his business card. I emailed him the next day with a link to an article that I have mentioned in our conversation at the event and thought he'd like to see.
He replied, saying that he'd read the article and that if I needed anything, I know how to contact him. He doesn't live here, so most of my "contacting" will have to be though email. Maaaybe calling him once I'm sure he'll remember me. I have read "How to find a mentor" (https://www.girlschase.com/content/how-find-mentor) a thousand times already, and I think it'd be better to have him as "The Good Friend Mentor" since I want to be surrounded with people like that...
My problem is exactly what Chase describes in that post: as a novice, I may not have enough value to provide just yet. And I can't just "hang" with him because we live in different cities. I don't want to seem like this annoying kid that just shoots emails to have his questions answered, but I don't want him to forget me as well... we just talked in an event. He must attend multiple events year round. How can I email him frequently enough that he wouldn't forget about me and not be annoying?
If you say to me "look, establishing an obvious mentor-mentee is the way to go, because of this and that," then it is what it is. I won't stress over it and give what you guys suggest me a shot, because, frankly, I never did this before, so a little bit of experience would be nice (and would be heard). If I mess up, sure, I can try again with someone else in the future and learn lessons from now. BUT, if I manage establish a friendship/mentorship... it wouldn't hurt at all
Last weekend I attended to my first business event ever. It was very nice to see so many entrepreneurs in one place
Before attending it, I have read who were the coaches/mentors/every guy who gave a talk and what they did and how they did it. There was one guy that grabbed my attention. He had majored in a top tier university in the same area that I'm majoring in, had worked in big, multinational companies that lead their respective market segment, then left and built his own (successful) business. He's quite young, but almost 10 years older than me.
Towards the end of the event, I saw an opportunity to talk to him, and I did. We talked for almost an hour and he gave me his business card. I emailed him the next day with a link to an article that I have mentioned in our conversation at the event and thought he'd like to see.
He replied, saying that he'd read the article and that if I needed anything, I know how to contact him. He doesn't live here, so most of my "contacting" will have to be though email. Maaaybe calling him once I'm sure he'll remember me. I have read "How to find a mentor" (https://www.girlschase.com/content/how-find-mentor) a thousand times already, and I think it'd be better to have him as "The Good Friend Mentor" since I want to be surrounded with people like that...
My problem is exactly what Chase describes in that post: as a novice, I may not have enough value to provide just yet. And I can't just "hang" with him because we live in different cities. I don't want to seem like this annoying kid that just shoots emails to have his questions answered, but I don't want him to forget me as well... we just talked in an event. He must attend multiple events year round. How can I email him frequently enough that he wouldn't forget about me and not be annoying?
If you say to me "look, establishing an obvious mentor-mentee is the way to go, because of this and that," then it is what it is. I won't stress over it and give what you guys suggest me a shot, because, frankly, I never did this before, so a little bit of experience would be nice (and would be heard). If I mess up, sure, I can try again with someone else in the future and learn lessons from now. BUT, if I manage establish a friendship/mentorship... it wouldn't hurt at all