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The Woman's Career Podcast

Podcast von Inception Point AI

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This is your The Woman's Career Podcast podcast. The Woman's Career Podcast is your go-to resource for empowering women in the workplace. In our insightful episode on networking effectively, we delve into strategies tailored for both introverts and extroverts, ensuring everyone can build meaningful professional connections. Tune in to discover expert tips and actionable advice to enhance your networking skills, advance your career, and thrive in any industry. Whether you're naturally reserved or outgoing, this episode offers invaluable guidance to help you navigate the world of professional networking with confidence. For more info go to https://www.quietplease.ai Check out these deals https://amzn.to/48MZPjs This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

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Episode Network Like Yourself: Why Your Next Big Break Won't Come From a Job Board Cover

Network Like Yourself: Why Your Next Big Break Won't Come From a Job Board

This is your The Woman's Career Podcast: Create a podcast episode outline about networking effectively, including tips for introverts and extroverts. podcast. Welcome back to The Woman’s Career Podcast. I’m so glad you’re here, because today we’re diving straight into one of the most powerful career accelerators you have: networking that actually feels like you. Not forced, not awkward, not “collecting business cards” – real relationship-building that works for both introverts and extroverts. Think about the last big opportunity you heard about: a role at Morgan Stanley, a project at Google, a board seat at a local nonprofit, a speaking slot at South by Southwest in Austin. Chances are, it didn’t come from a random job board. It came through a person. LinkedIn’s research shows that a large percentage of jobs are found through connections, and Harvard Business Review often highlights that “weak ties” – acquaintances more than close friends – are especially powerful for new opportunities. So networking isn’t a nice-to-have. It’s career infrastructure. Let’s start with what networking actually is. It is not walking into a conference room at the Javits Center and trying to talk to everyone. Networking is simply building and maintaining mutually helpful relationships over time. That means you are not begging for favors; you are creating a web of support, insight, and opportunity that you contribute to and benefit from. If you are an introvert, I want you to exhale. According to Susan Cain, author of Quiet, introverts often excel at deep listening and thoughtful one‑on‑one conversations. That is a networking superpower. Instead of avoiding events completely, design them on your own terms. Decide in advance: I will have three meaningful conversations and then I can leave. Arrive with two or three questions you genuinely care about, like “What’s the most interesting project you’re working on this quarter?” or “What’s one shift you’re seeing in our industry that excites you?” Your goal is curiosity, not performance. Use tools that play to your strengths. On LinkedIn, send a short, specific message: “Hi Ana, I appreciated your article on marketing analytics at HubSpot. I’m exploring that transition myself and would love to ask you two questions over a 20‑minute virtual coffee.” You’ve shown you did your homework, you kept the ask small, and you framed it as a conversation, not a pitch. Now, if you’re an extrovert, your energy in a room is gold, but strategy matters just as much. Instead of working the entire ballroom at a Women in Product conference in San Francisco, choose a corner or a breakout and go deeper. Set an intention to be the connector in the room. When you meet Priya, a data scientist, and later meet Sofia, a product manager who wants to get better with analytics, say, “You two have to meet.” Research from the University of Chicago’s Ron Burt on “brokers” shows that people who bridge different groups often see faster career growth. You can be that bridge. For both introverts and extroverts, follow-up is where real networking happens. Within 24 to 48 hours, send a quick note: “It was great meeting you at the Boston Women in Tech meetup, Sara. I loved your point about inclusive onboarding at Microsoft. Here’s the article on psychological safety I mentioned from MIT Sloan Management Review.” You’re not just saying “nice to meet you,” you’re adding value. And remember, networking isn’t only up; it’s across and down. Your peers today at Deloitte, Spotify, or a local startup incubator in Nairobi may be the VPs, founders, and investors of tomorrow. Treat them that way now. Support their wins, share their work, introduce them when you can. Most importantly, especially for women, give yourself permission to see networking as part of your job, not something extra you might get to on a Friday. Block one hour every week as your “relationship power hour.” Use it to check in with a former colleague on WhatsApp, comment thoughtfully on a leader’s LinkedIn post, or schedule one coffee chat for the month. You are not “bothering” people. You are building a community around your talent, your ambition, and your values. And that community is exactly what will help you step into the next role, the next salary band, the next chapter of your career. Thank you for tuning in to The Woman’s Career Podcast. If this episode helped you rethink networking, make sure you subscribe so you never miss an empowering conversation. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

17. Juni 2026 - 4 min
Episode Network Like You, Not Like Them: Building Career Connections That Actually Feel Good Cover

Network Like You, Not Like Them: Building Career Connections That Actually Feel Good

This is your The Woman's Career Podcast: Create a podcast episode outline about networking effectively, including tips for introverts and extroverts. podcast. Welcome back to The Woman’s Career Podcast. Today we’re diving straight into one of the most powerful career accelerators you can control: networking effectively, whether you’re an introvert, an extrovert, or somewhere in between. Let’s start by reframing networking. Networking is not a room full of strangers and forced small talk. According to Harvard Business Review, the most effective networks are built on genuine, long-term relationships, not quick business card swaps. Think less “working the room” and more “building your circle of allies.” If you’re an introvert, this is where your strengths shine. Susan Cain, author of Quiet, reminds us that introverts often excel at deep, one‑on‑one conversations. So instead of pushing yourself to attend every big conference, choose one event hosted by a group like Ellevate Network or Lean In, and set a realistic goal: connect meaningfully with just three people. Before you go, research the speakers on LinkedIn, note one thing you admire about their work, and use that as your opener: “I loved your article on remote leadership in Forbes. One thing that stood out to me was…” That is real connection. If you’re an extrovert, your energy is a superpower, but strategy matters. The career podcast Career Tools emphasizes planning your follow‑through before you even step into the room. When you leave an event, write down three names, one concrete thing you discussed, and one way you can add value to them. Maybe you introduce a marketing manager you met at a Women In Product meetup to a designer friend looking for collaborators. Being known as a connector builds your influence and your reputation. Let’s talk about networking inside your current company. Research from the Kellogg School of Management shows that internal networks are just as critical as external ones for promotions. Schedule short virtual coffees with colleagues in other departments. Say, “I’d love to understand how your team in operations partners with ours in sales and how I might support your priorities this quarter.” Now you’re not just visible, you’re valuable. Online networking is where many women quietly excel. On LinkedIn, instead of liking posts in silence, comment thoughtfully. When you hear a powerful episode of a show like Women at Work by Harvard Business Review, share one takeaway and tag the host. Over time, these tiny, consistent touches create familiarity. That’s what leads to invitations and opportunities. If traditional networking still feels intimidating, create your own spaces. Start a monthly virtual coffee circle for women in marketing, engineering, or healthcare. Many successful communities, like Ladies Get Paid and Chief, began as small groups of women simply refusing to navigate their careers alone. Here’s your gentle challenge from The Woman’s Career Podcast: in the next seven days, send three messages. One to reconnect with someone you already know. One to thank someone for something specific they’ve taught or shared. And one to introduce two women who should know each other. That is networking as leadership. Thank you for tuning in to The Woman’s Career Podcast. If this episode helped you rethink networking, please subscribe so you never miss an episode and share it with another woman who is building her career on her own terms. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

15. Juni 2026 - 3 min
Episode The Rooms Where Your Name Gets Mentioned: Strategic Networking for Women Who Mean Business Cover

The Rooms Where Your Name Gets Mentioned: Strategic Networking for Women Who Mean Business

This is your The Woman's Career Podcast: Create a podcast episode outline about networking effectively, including tips for introverts and extroverts. podcast. Welcome back to The Woman’s Career Podcast. Today we’re diving straight into something that quietly shapes promotions, opportunities, and pay raises: networking. Not the awkward business-card-collecting kind, but intentional, values-aligned networking that works for both introverts and extroverts. Career strategist Herminia Ibarra often says that your network shapes your career before your talent gets a chance to speak. Think about that: the rooms your name is mentioned in when you are not there can change your trajectory. So our goal today is to help you become the kind of woman whose name comes up in those rooms, without feeling fake or exhausted. Start by redefining networking. Sheryl Sandberg, former COO of Meta, has talked about how careers are not ladders anymore, they’re jungle gyms. Networking is how you find the next bar to grab onto. Instead of asking “Who can help me?” ask “Where can I build real, mutual relationships?” This shift alone takes the sleaze out of networking and centers you in integrity. If you’re an introvert, let’s begin with you, because most networking advice is written for the loudest voice in the room. Susan Cain, author of Quiet, reminds us that introverts thrive in depth, not noise. Use that. Choose formats that play to your strengths: one-on-one coffees, small roundtables, or online messages on LinkedIn. Before an event, research two or three people you’d genuinely like to meet. Walk in with three authentic conversation starters like “I saw your article on Harvard Business Review about women in leadership and loved your point on negotiation—how did that opportunity come about?” Your power is thoughtful curiosity, not working the entire room. For extroverts, think of yourself as an amplifier, not the star of the show. Adam Grant, organizational psychologist at Wharton, writes about “givers” having the strongest networks when they give strategically. Use your energy to make sure quieter women are pulled into the conversation. At an industry meetup in New York, for example, you might say, “Priya, I know you’ve done work in cybersecurity—what’s your take on this?” That small gesture builds trust and positions you as a connector, not just a talker. No matter your style, preparation is your secret weapon. Know your career story in three sentences: who you are, what you do, and what you’re excited to do next. Something like, “I’m Maya, a product manager at Spotify, focused on user research. I help teams turn data into features people actually use, and I’m exploring leadership roles in tech that prioritize inclusive design.” Clear, confident, and specific. Follow-up is where almost everyone drops the ball. Research from LinkedIn highlights that most opportunities come from “weak ties,” those light-touch connections you maintain over time. Send a quick message within 24 hours: a thank you, a reference to what you discussed, and, if it feels right, a next step. Share an article from McKinsey on women in the workplace that connects to your conversation, or a podcast episode from How I Built This that made you think of their journey. Remember, your network is an ecosystem. Include mentors, peers, and sponsors. Sylvia Ann Hewlett, founder of the Center for Talent Innovation, distinguishes mentors as those who advise you and sponsors as those who advocate for you when you are not in the room. You deserve both. Schedule regular, low-pressure touchpoints—quarterly check-ins, quick emails, or sharing a win on LinkedIn that keeps your work visible. Networking effectively is not about becoming someone else. It is about letting more people see the woman you already are: capable, ambitious, and ready. Build your network the way you build your career—intentionally, courageously, and on your own terms. Thank you for tuning in to The Woman’s Career Podcast. If today’s episode on networking effectively was helpful, make sure you subscribe so you don’t miss what’s coming next. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

14. Juni 2026 - 4 min
Episode Network Like You Mean It: Real Connections Over Business Cards Cover

Network Like You Mean It: Real Connections Over Business Cards

This is your The Woman's Career Podcast: Create a podcast episode outline about networking effectively, including tips for introverts and extroverts. podcast. Welcome back to The Woman’s Career Podcast. Today we are diving straight into something that moves careers faster than any certification on your resume: networking effectively, whether you are an introvert, an extrovert, or somewhere in between. Let’s start by rewriting what networking even is. Networking is not collecting business cards at a conference in New York or awkwardly adding people on LinkedIn at midnight. Networking is building real, mutual relationships that open doors, share information, and amplify your voice. Harvard Business Review describes it as creating a web of strong and weak ties that help you access opportunities you’d never find on your own. When women do this intentionally, research from McKinsey and LeanIn shows we are more likely to be promoted, sponsored, and invited into key projects. So how do we do it in a way that feels authentic? First, get clear on your goal. Maybe you want a mentor in product management at a company like Google, a sponsor in your current firm, or peers who are also building side businesses. Naming what you want helps you decide who to reach out to, instead of trying to “meet everyone.” Next, let’s talk to my introvert listeners. If the thought of a huge networking event in a hotel ballroom makes you want to hide in the bathroom, you are not alone. Psychologist Susan Cain, author of Quiet, reminds us that introverts thrive in depth, not in volume. So use that. Choose formats that play to your strengths: one-on-one coffees, small roundtables, or virtual chats. Prepare three simple, genuine questions before you go, like, “What are you working on that you’re excited about?” or “How did you get into this field?” Give yourself permission to take breaks; stepping outside for five minutes between conversations is not failure, it is strategy. For my extrovert listeners, your energy is a gift. You light up a room at a conference in San Francisco or a team offsite in London. Your opportunity is to focus and follow through. Instead of talking to thirty people once, choose five you genuinely want to know better and send a thoughtful follow-up within forty-eight hours. Mention something specific you discussed so the connection sticks, and then offer value: an article, an introduction, or a quick note of encouragement. No matter where you fall on the introvert–extrovert spectrum, there are three powerful habits you can build. First, create a simple networking rhythm. That might be one coffee chat a week, one LinkedIn message every Friday, and one industry event a month. Second, diversify your network: connect with women in different functions, levels, and locations. A software engineer in Bangalore, a marketing director in Chicago, and a founder in Lagos will see opportunities you cannot. Third, ask for what you need clearly and confidently. Instead of saying, “Let me know if you hear of anything,” try, “I’m looking for senior marketing roles in healthcare tech in Boston—if someone comes to mind, I’d love an introduction.” Most importantly, networking is not about proving that you are worthy. You already are. It is about letting the world see you, hear you, and remember you when doors open. Thank you for tuning in to The Woman’s Career Podcast. If this was helpful, make sure you subscribe so you never miss an episode and share it with another woman who is building her career. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

13. Juni 2026 - 3 min
Episode Network Like Yourself: Why the Quietest Voice in the Room Might Just Get the Job Cover

Network Like Yourself: Why the Quietest Voice in the Room Might Just Get the Job

This is your The Woman's Career Podcast: Create a podcast episode outline about networking effectively, including tips for introverts and extroverts. podcast. You’re listening to The Woman’s Career Podcast, and today we’re diving straight into something that quietly shapes careers more than any performance review: networking, and how to do it in a way that fits who you are, whether you’re an introvert, an extrovert, or somewhere in between. Picture this: you walk into a conference hall at the Moscone Center in San Francisco or a local Women in Product meetup. The noise hits you first. Clusters of people already deep in conversation, a few confident voices carrying over the crowd. You might think, “These are the people who get ahead. The naturals.” But here’s what LinkedIn’s research on career growth keeps repeating: the most effective networkers are not the loudest in the room; they’re the most intentional. So let’s get intentional. If you lean introvert, your power is thoughtfulness and depth. Before your next event, take ten minutes to scan the attendee list or the event’s LinkedIn page. Pick three people or companies you’d genuinely like to learn from. Walk in with a simple script ready, something like: “Hi, I’m Maya, I work in product marketing at Atlassian, and I’m really curious how your team is tackling AI tools right now.” You don’t need twenty conversations. You need two or three real ones. According to Harvard Business Review, weak, shallow ties don’t move your career nearly as much as a smaller number of high‑quality connections. Another introvert-friendly move: claim the one‑on‑one. If big events drain you, focus on follow‑ups. Send a message the next day on LinkedIn: “It was great hearing your perspective on remote leadership. Would you be open to a 20‑minute virtual coffee?” A short, focused conversation at your kitchen table can be more powerful than an entire conference. Now, if you’re an extrovert, your superpower is energy and reach. You’re probably already talking to a lot of people. The opportunity for you is to channel that energy strategically. Before an event, set an intention: “I want to walk away with three new people I can genuinely help and three I’d like to learn from.” When you meet someone, resist the urge to dominate the conversation. Ask questions like, “What are you working on this year that you’re excited about?” or “What’s the biggest challenge your team is facing?” Then listen. Research from the University of Cambridge shows that people rate conversations as more meaningful when they feel truly heard, not dazzled. Whether you’re introverted or extroverted, remember this core truth: networking is not asking for a job; networking is building a relationship before you need it. Career coach Herminia Ibarra talks about “outsight” — the idea that insight about your career often comes from new people and new experiences, not from sitting alone at your desk trying to figure it out. Every coffee chat, every quick LinkedIn exchange, is a small step toward that outsight. You can also network without leaving your desk. On LinkedIn, don’t just collect connections; interact with them. Comment thoughtfully on a post from a woman you admire at Google or Deloitte. Share an article from McKinsey about women in leadership and add two sentences of your own perspective. That’s how people start recognizing your name, your voice, your point of view. And here’s something especially important for women: networking is not selfish. According to LeanIn.Org and McKinsey’s Women in the Workplace report, women who build strong networks are more likely to be promoted and more likely to stay in roles that fit them. When you show up, you’re not just advocating for yourself. You’re normalizing women being visible, vocal, and connected. So, for your next week, try this: choose one introvert-style action and one extrovert-style action, no matter how you identify. Maybe it’s sending one LinkedIn message to a woman whose career you admire at Salesforce, and also starting one genuine conversation at your next team meeting. Small, consistent steps beat one big, awkward networking sprint. Thank you for tuning in to The Woman’s Career Podcast. If this episode helped you rethink networking even a little, make sure you subscribe so you don’t miss what’s coming next. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

10. Juni 2026 - 4 min
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Super gut, sehr abwechslungsreich Podimo kann man nur weiterempfehlen
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