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. You’re listening to The Woman’s Career Podcast, and today we’re diving straight into one of the most powerful career tools you have: networking that actually feels like you. Not fake, not forced, just intentional connections that move your career forward. Think of networking less like collecting business cards at a conference center in Las Vegas and more like curating your own personal board of allies. LinkedIn’s research on career moves shows that most opportunities come through weak ties, not best friends. That means the colleague you met once at a workshop in Chicago, the panelist you messaged on LinkedIn, or the woman you chatted with at a coworking space in Austin may be the bridge to your next role. Let’s talk about networking as an introvert first. If walking into a big room in New York City filled with strangers makes your stomach drop, you are not bad at networking; you just need a different playbook. Start with one-on-one or small group settings: a coffee chat with a former colleague, a virtual meetup on Zoom, or a professional group on Slack. Before any event, set a tiny goal: talk to three people, ask one thoughtful question, and then give yourself permission to leave. Prepare your opener so you’re not scrambling. Something as simple as, “Hi, I’m Maya, I work in marketing at a startup in San Francisco, what brings you to this event?” can lower the pressure immediately. Online networking can be a superpower for introverts. Use LinkedIn to comment meaningfully on posts by people you admire, especially women leaders like Indra Nooyi or Mellody Hobson. When you send a connection request, mention something specific: “I loved your Harvard Business Review article on inclusive leadership and how you described sponsoring women of color.” Specificity shows respect and makes it easier for them to respond. Now for the extroverts. If you gain energy from a room full of people in a London conference center, your challenge is to channel that energy strategically. Instead of trying to meet everyone, identify three to five people in advance: maybe a director at a company you admire, a recruiter in your industry, and a speaker whose work you follow. After you meet someone, follow up within 48 hours. Send a short email or LinkedIn message referencing something you discussed: “I appreciated your point about negotiating salary at the Women In Product event in Seattle.” Your charisma opens the door, but consistency keeps it open. Whether you’re introverted or extroverted, networking works best when you give before you ask. Share a job posting with a friend in Berlin, introduce two women who could help each other, or recommend a resource like the book Lean In by Sheryl Sandberg or the podcast Second Life with Hillary Kerr. When you become known as someone who uplifts other women, your network becomes deeper and more loyal. Here’s your gentle challenge for this week: reach out to three people. One peer, one potential mentor, and one person you haven’t spoken to in a while. Keep it simple, honest, and specific. Your next opportunity might be sitting in their inbox right now, waiting for you to say hello. Thank you for tuning in to The Woman’s Career Podcast. If this episode on networking effectively was helpful, please 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
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