Chapter FiveNetworking Is a Contact Sport

Figure depicting a baseball player hitting a web of base balls by his base bat.
Figure depicting a web of base balls.
  1. Why Networking Mystifies
  2. The Point of Contact
  3. Networking 101: Check the Boxes
  4. The Golden Rule: It's Not About You
  5. The Value of Validation
  6. Networking Your References
  7. Looking for Winners
  8. Be Prepared for the Long Haul
  9. Networking Doesn't End with a New Job

Extroverts think they're pros at it. Intro-verts dread it. Most people end up somewhere in the middle. “It” is networking.

Some people think it's as easy as working a room and chatting up everyone they see. They'll dive into a networking event like a hungry seal in a school of fish. Or they approach it like a 1950s door-to-door salesman trying to sell vacuum cleaners to everyone he meets. This is not networking; it's stalking with a resume—and it's happened to most of us in some peculiar circumstances. Consider what happened to me one Saturday morning.

At the top of my weekend to-do list was a trip to the dry cleaners to pick up my shirts and drop off another batch to be laundered. I was in my typical Saturday uniform: jeans and a T-shirt. There was nothing about me or my demeanor that indicated I was anything other than a typical dad doing some errands in between my children's sports practices and games. I greeted “Mrs. Jones,” the owner of the dry-cleaning store, picked up my shirts, ...

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