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Let’s address something most business owners sense… but rarely say out loud.
Not all networking statistics tell the truth.
🔶 Not because people are dishonest.
🔶 Not because organisations are misleading on purpose.
🔶 But because the system used to measure success is often flawed.
And over time, that flaw quietly distorts reality.
The Numbers That Don’t Quite Add Up
You’ve likely seen it before.
A networking group proudly claims:
“This seat is worth £50,000… £75,000… sometimes more.”
Then adds:
“Our members generate £3 million to £5 million of business each year.”
Impressive.
But pause for a moment.
A room of 20 people generating £3 million means £150,000 per person.
So which is it? £50,000… or £150,000?
And more importantly… what do those numbers actually represent?
Where the Distortion Happens
The issue is not the intention. It’s the method.
Take a simple example.
A car leasing broker arranges two vehicles at £40,000 each through referrals.
Excellent result.
But their actual income might be £500 commission per vehicle. £1,000 total.
So what gets recorded?
£1,000?
Or £80,000?
In many cases, it’s the £80,000.
Not through deception. Just convention. They even ask and the biggest number is best.
Now scale that across a room.
20 members each generate £1,000 in real income = £20,000.
But if each record £80,000?
The group reports £1.6 million.
Same activity. Completely different story.
Why This Matters More Than It Seems
The real issue isn’t the numbers themselves.
It’s what those numbers do.
🔶 For members, they create pressure.
People feel they are underperforming against results they can’t replicate.
So they push harder, chase outcomes, and lose focus on relationship building.
🔶 For visitors, they create false expectations.
The success feels tangible, measurable, proven.
Until they realise it isn’t clearly defined.
🔶 For the group, they erode trust.
Experienced business owners can sense when something doesn’t align.
And when trust weakens, so does the community.
Not All Professions Scale the Same
It’s also important to recognise this:
Not every business model produces the same numbers.
A mortgage broker, accountant, or finance specialist may report high transaction values.
A utilities consultant, branded merchandise supplier, or payment specialist may deliver enormous value… but through lower-margin or recurring models.
Both are valuable.
But when measured by the same inflated metric, one appears to “outperform” the other.
That’s not accuracy. That’s distortion.
A strong networking group is built on complementary strengths, not identical outputs.
A Better Way to Think About Networking Results
If you’re evaluating a networking group, shift your thinking.
Instead of asking:
“How big are the numbers?”
Ask:
“How are those numbers defined?”
Here’s a simple lens:
🔶 Is the figure revenue, commission, or contract value?
🔶 Is there a consistent method of reporting?
🔶 Are results individual or collective?
🔶 Can members clearly explain how value is generated?
If those answers are unclear, the numbers are not reliable.
The Bigger Risk
When people experience this disconnect repeatedly, something deeper happens.
They don’t just leave a networking group.
They lose belief in networking altogether.
And that impacts the wider SME community.
Because when done properly, business networking is one of the most powerful forms of marketing available.
🔶 Not sales.
🔶 Not pressure.
🔶 Not inflated reporting.
But relationships.
Trust.
Consistency.
Choosing the Right Networking Group
So how do you choose the right room?
Start here.
Look for alignment before numbers.
Do the people share your values?
Do they approach business in a way you respect?
Would you confidently recommend them?
Pay attention to behaviour, not claims.
Strong networks are visible through:
🔶 Consistent attendance
🔶 Genuine engagement
🔶 Activity beyond the meeting
🔶 Presence within the local business community
And ask yourself one final question:
Can you contribute here?
Because the best networking communities are not something you join and observe.
They are something you help build.
Final Thought
Statistics can be useful.
But only when they are clear, consistent, and credible.
Without that, they become noise.
And in business, clarity always outperforms exaggeration.
Trust always outperforms noise.
And the right room won’t need to convince you.
You’ll feel it.
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