The Woman's Career Podcast
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
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