Most people hate networking because they approach it as asking for things from strangers. The professionals who are great at it think about it completely differently — as building genuine relationships over time. Here’s how that actually works.
Why networking matters more than most people think
Studies consistently show that 70–80% of jobs are filled through personal connections — either referrals or direct outreach — before they’re ever publicly posted. The people who advance fastest in their careers aren’t always the most skilled; they’re often the most visible and connected. This isn’t unfair — it’s how trust works. People hire people they know or people vouched for by people they trust. Networking is how you get into that circle.
Start with your existing network
Your first-degree network — former colleagues, classmates, professors, managers, and even family friends — is your strongest asset and usually underutilized. When you’re looking for a job or want to learn about an industry, the people who already know you and trust you are far more likely to help than strangers. Reconnect before you need something: a quick “catching up” message with no ask is how you maintain relationships so they’re warm when you do have a reason to reach out.
Informational interviews — the most underused tool
An informational interview is a 20–30 minute conversation with someone in a role, company, or industry you want to learn about. You’re not asking for a job — you’re asking for their perspective and experience. Most people are willing to give 20 minutes to someone genuinely curious about their career. Reach out via LinkedIn with a specific, brief request: “I’m exploring a transition into product management and would love 20 minutes to hear about your path.” These conversations regularly lead to referrals, job leads, and mentorships — often without you asking.
LinkedIn as a networking tool
LinkedIn works best when you use it actively rather than passively. Posting thoughtful content in your area of expertise, commenting meaningfully on others’ posts, and sending personalized connection requests (not the default message) are all ways to build visibility and relationships online. A complete, strong LinkedIn profile is the foundation — recruiters and potential connections will look at it before deciding whether to engage.
Following up and staying in touch
The most common networking mistake: meeting someone once and never following up. A brief email after a good conversation, sharing an article relevant to what you discussed, or congratulating someone on a promotion keeps relationships alive with minimal effort. A small amount of consistent attention to your network over years builds something genuinely valuable. The goal isn’t to have 1,000 weak connections — it’s to have 50–100 people who would genuinely help you if you asked.