
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In this episode of The BNI UK Podcast, Ed Nell and National Director Mike Holman are joined by Birmingham Area Director Dawn Adlam, who supports over 200 members across the region. Dawn shares how she went from being crushed by her first “no” to confidently inviting visitors for 17+ years, using a simple, repeatable system that brings a steady flow of guests and tens of thousands of pounds in business into BNI chapters.
Key Takeaways
Inviting is a mindset, not a mystery. If you tell yourself that inviting visitors is hard, it will be. If you decide it’s easy and treat every “no” as one step closer to a “yes”, it becomes just another positive habit in your business rather than something to fear.
Visitors spend money and raise everyone’s game. Chapters with visitors in the room see more energy, better 60-second presentations, stronger leadership performance, and more business. Even visitors who never join can still spend thousands with members and receive referrals themselves.
Treat inviting as prospecting, with a simple system. Dawn works in small, consistent blocks: five invites a day (around 100 a month), mainly via LinkedIn and Google Maps. She searches by profession and location, sends a personalised invite, and always follows up because clicking “connect” without follow-up is wasted effort.
Make the visitor experience personal from first contact to follow-up. Give clear times, dates and costs, offer two possible meeting dates, and arrange a personal call the day before. Let them know who will meet them at the reception and what to expect, as many visitors feel nervous walking into a room where they don’t know anyone.
Handle objections and keep good contacts warm. “Too busy” often means “not a priority yet”. Offer later starts, online or hybrid options, ask permission to follow up in six months, and, where appropriate, ask if they know someone else who might benefit. A polite “no” today can still become a great visitor tomorrow.
Key Moments
“A ‘no’ is good because it gets you closer to a ‘yes’.” (On reframing rejection so you don’t stop inviting after the first knock-back.)
“I’m not inviting them to join, I want them to come along for the opportunity.” (Why shifting the focus to what’s in it for the visitor makes inviting feel natural.)
“You can’t say the wrong thing to the right person.” (Encouragement for members who worry about using the ‘perfect’ script.)
“If you have five power teams of eight, you’ve got a chapter of 35 members.” (How focusing on power teams and their gaps makes inviting more strategic and effective.)
About BNI
BNI is the world’s largest referral networking organisation. Local chapters meet weekly with a proven agenda based on Givers Gain®, helping members build credibility, share qualified referrals and grow revenue. With training, 1-2-1s and clear metrics, BNI turns business networking into predictable results for SMEs and professionals. Visit as a guest to experience the format.
Find Out More: https://bni.co.uk/en-GB/index
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By BNI UKIn this episode of The BNI UK Podcast, Ed Nell and National Director Mike Holman are joined by Birmingham Area Director Dawn Adlam, who supports over 200 members across the region. Dawn shares how she went from being crushed by her first “no” to confidently inviting visitors for 17+ years, using a simple, repeatable system that brings a steady flow of guests and tens of thousands of pounds in business into BNI chapters.
Key Takeaways
Inviting is a mindset, not a mystery. If you tell yourself that inviting visitors is hard, it will be. If you decide it’s easy and treat every “no” as one step closer to a “yes”, it becomes just another positive habit in your business rather than something to fear.
Visitors spend money and raise everyone’s game. Chapters with visitors in the room see more energy, better 60-second presentations, stronger leadership performance, and more business. Even visitors who never join can still spend thousands with members and receive referrals themselves.
Treat inviting as prospecting, with a simple system. Dawn works in small, consistent blocks: five invites a day (around 100 a month), mainly via LinkedIn and Google Maps. She searches by profession and location, sends a personalised invite, and always follows up because clicking “connect” without follow-up is wasted effort.
Make the visitor experience personal from first contact to follow-up. Give clear times, dates and costs, offer two possible meeting dates, and arrange a personal call the day before. Let them know who will meet them at the reception and what to expect, as many visitors feel nervous walking into a room where they don’t know anyone.
Handle objections and keep good contacts warm. “Too busy” often means “not a priority yet”. Offer later starts, online or hybrid options, ask permission to follow up in six months, and, where appropriate, ask if they know someone else who might benefit. A polite “no” today can still become a great visitor tomorrow.
Key Moments
“A ‘no’ is good because it gets you closer to a ‘yes’.” (On reframing rejection so you don’t stop inviting after the first knock-back.)
“I’m not inviting them to join, I want them to come along for the opportunity.” (Why shifting the focus to what’s in it for the visitor makes inviting feel natural.)
“You can’t say the wrong thing to the right person.” (Encouragement for members who worry about using the ‘perfect’ script.)
“If you have five power teams of eight, you’ve got a chapter of 35 members.” (How focusing on power teams and their gaps makes inviting more strategic and effective.)
About BNI
BNI is the world’s largest referral networking organisation. Local chapters meet weekly with a proven agenda based on Givers Gain®, helping members build credibility, share qualified referrals and grow revenue. With training, 1-2-1s and clear metrics, BNI turns business networking into predictable results for SMEs and professionals. Visit as a guest to experience the format.
Find Out More: https://bni.co.uk/en-GB/index
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.