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. 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
259 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de The Woman's Career Podcast!