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I Thought “Networking” Meant Collecting Business Cards and Feeling Awkward

For a long time, I thought networking was something you just… got through.

You’d walk into a room, smile a little too much, hold a drink you didn’t really want, and have the same surface-level conversations over and over again. You’d leave with a stack of business cards, a drained social battery, and that familiar feeling of Okay, but did any of that actually matter?

Most of the time, it didn’t.

Because what we were calling “networking” was really just forced interaction. Fast conversations. Vague promises to stay in touch. Quiet pressure to turn every person you met into some kind of opportunity.

And it always felt awkward.
And honestly? A little fake.


The Shift That Changed Everything

Here’s what I’ve learned over time:

Real networking isn’t about collecting people.
It’s about actually connecting with them.

It’s not about how many conversations you have in a room. It’s about whether any of them stick once you leave.

The conversations that matter aren’t the ones where you perfectly explain what you do. They’re the ones where someone feels comfortable enough to be themselves for a minute. Where the conversation doesn’t feel rushed. Where you walk away thinking, I’d talk to them again.

That’s where trust starts.

And trust is what actually moves business forward.


Why Traditional Networking Feels So Draining

A lot of networking events fail because they’re built around performance.

You’re supposed to:

  • Have an elevator pitch ready
  • Talk to as many people as possible
  • Make sure everyone knows what you do

But people can feel when something is transactional — even when the intention is good.

The more you try to “work the room,” the less genuine the connections feel. And the pressure to perform makes it harder to just… be human.

The funny thing is, the harder you try to network, the harder it becomes to actually connect.


What Actually Works (And Feels Better)

The best connections don’t come from cramming in conversations.

They come from slowing down.

From listening more than talking.
From being curious instead of strategic.
From letting conversations unfold naturally instead of steering them toward an outcome.

When you stop thinking What can this turn into? and start thinking Who is this person?, everything shifts.

The pressure drops.
The conversations get easier.
And people remember you — not because you pitched, but because you were real.


What to Do After a Networking Event (Without Making It Weird)

This is where a lot of people overthink things — the follow-up.

Here’s the simple truth: it doesn’t need to be complicated.

Follow Up Within a Few Days

Not immediately. Not weeks later.

A message within 24–72 hours keeps things warm without feeling forced.

Something as simple as:

“It was great meeting you. I really enjoyed our conversation about ___.”

That’s enough.


Reference Something Specific

Generic messages get forgotten.

Mention something you talked about. A project they shared. A moment that stood out.

It shows you were actually present — and that matters more than a perfectly written message.


You Don’t Have to Ask for Anything

You don’t need to:

  • book a call
  • suggest coffee
  • pitch your services

Let the relationship breathe.

The right conversations continue naturally when the timing makes sense.


Stay Visible, Not Pushy

You don’t need constant touchpoints.

Support their work when it feels genuine. Engage when it makes sense. Reconnect when something aligns.

Consistency over intensity — always.


Why This Matters (Online Too)

This same approach applies to how people experience your brand online.

Your content. Your emails. Your presence.

People are drawn to things that feel calm, intentional, and honest — not loud or forced.

Growth doesn’t come from chasing attention.
It comes from creating spaces where people feel comfortable coming back.


The Bottom Line

You don’t need to be louder.
You don’t need to meet more people.
You don’t need to turn every conversation into a sale.

You just need real connections.

Because those are the ones that last — and those are the ones that actually build businesses.




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