Being Relevant is Important
Sokol exercises in year 1924

Being Relevant is Important

A part of the human condition is a desire to feel needed. The reality is that in most of our interactions, we won't be needed... but we can be relevant. And our relevancy doesn't need to me immediate, there is a similar benefit to thinking we can be relevant in the future.

When I interact with people, I ask enough questions to start to get a feeling for how I might be relevant to someone, and how they might be relevant to me. At a party, this could be as simple as trying to find the subject area that they love to talk about. They feel relevant through an area of their knowledge. If I'm flexible or clever enough (or they are), we find the way that our interests intersect and then we can both be relevant. I may not be a model train enthusiast, but I am interested in the modeling of landscapes. We become relevant to each other and provide mutual value.

Professionally, the people that actively try to understand my relevancy (value) create a bridge to me. I can see when people expend the effort to understand how I might help them in the present or the future, and it's a natural inclination for us to then try to do the same for them. You scratch my back, I'll scratch yours. This person is filed in my brain as someone I'd like to work with.

In comparison, it is very obvious when people take no interest in you. I might find them to be interesting, and the conversation might be great, but it's typically one-sided. I take knowledge value away from it, but I rarely take away anything more. This person doesn't get filed in my brain as someone I'd like to work with.

It doesn't take much effort to invest someone with a feeling of being relevant, now or in the future. At the worst you might just walk away with an excellent conversation. I like good conversations.

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About the Author: Peter Briggs is a landscape architect who has a current preoccupation with the business of design. For more bio information, please see: www.highestexpertise.com/who-is-peter/

This blog post was originally posted at: http://highestexpertise.com/2017/10/feeling-relevant-is-important/

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