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Five Things Everyone Gets Wrong About Networking

Most people think networking means working the room. We break down what actually builds real professional relationships.

7 min read Beginner February 2026
Professional woman taking notes at networking event with coffee and business card on table

Here’s What Actually Matters

You’ve probably heard the advice: work the room, collect business cards, make connections. Sound familiar? That’s the version of networking that makes most people uncomfortable. The version that feels fake, exhausting, and honestly? Not how real professional relationships form.

We’ve talked to hundreds of people about their networking experiences. What we found is that the biggest barriers aren’t shyness or lack of confidence — they’re misconceptions. Bad ones. The kind that make you approach networking all wrong from the start. Once you understand what actually works, everything shifts.

Group of professionals having genuine conversation at casual networking setting with coffee cups and relaxed body language

Myth #1: Networking Means Meeting as Many People as Possible

This one’s backwards. The goal isn’t a hundred business cards — it’s actual relationships with people who matter to your work.

What you’re really doing is having meaningful conversations. Quality absolutely beats quantity here. You’ll remember three people you actually connected with far longer than you’ll remember thirty names you collected. That person you spent 15 minutes talking to about a shared problem? They’re way more valuable than someone you shook hands with for 30 seconds.

Real networking is about depth. It’s staying in touch with people you genuinely clicked with. It’s following up. It’s remembering something they mentioned and bringing it up three months later. That’s what builds professional relationships that actually matter.

Two professionals having focused one-on-one conversation across table with coffee, leaning in attentively, clear genuine interest in discussion
Professional woman smiling warmly at networking event, dressed in comfortable business attire, natural confident posture in casual conversation setting

Myth #2: You Need to Be Outgoing to Network

Some of the best networkers we know are introverts. They’re not working every room. They’re having deep conversations with a few people. They’re asking genuine questions. They’re listening more than they’re talking.

Introversion isn’t a barrier — it’s sometimes an advantage. You don’t need to be the loudest person at an event. You need to be interested. You need to ask real questions about what people do and what they care about. Most people appreciate that far more than small talk.

Think about it: would you rather talk to someone asking scripted questions or someone genuinely curious about your work? Exactly. Show up, be yourself, have real conversations. That’s networking.

Myth #3: Networking Is Just for When You Need Something

This approach kills relationships before they start. People can smell transactional from a mile away. When you only reach out because you need a job, a client, or a favor, it feels forced. Because it is.

Real networking happens continuously. You’re building relationships when you’re employed, content, not actively looking for anything. You’re checking in with people. You’re sharing relevant articles. You’re offering help when you see someone struggling with something you understand.

Then when you actually do need something? You’ve already got a genuine relationship there. They want to help because they know you, they trust you, and you’ve shown you care about more than just what they can do for you. That’s the difference between transactional and real.

Professional man at desk reviewing documents, focused and approachable, surrounded by professional materials suggesting ongoing work and relationship building
Small group of professionals laughing together in casual networking setting, relaxed body language suggesting authentic connection and enjoyment

Myth #4: You Have to Be an Expert to Have Value

Nobody expects you to be the most knowledgeable person in the room. You don’t need to have all the answers. What you need is perspective and genuine interest.

Early in your career, your value comes from enthusiasm, fresh thinking, and willingness to learn. Later, it comes from experience and what you’ve learned along the way. At every stage, you’ve got something to contribute. Even if it’s just asking a really good question or making a real connection between two people who should know each other.

The pressure to be an expert keeps people quiet. Drop that. Be honest about what you know and what you’re learning. Most people find that refreshing.

Myth #5: Follow-up Feels Awkward So Most People Don’t Do It

This is where networking actually happens. Most people meet someone interesting and then… nothing. They never reach out again. Which means the connection dies.

But follow-up doesn’t have to be weird. It can be simple. A message within a day or two: “Hey, I enjoyed talking about [thing you discussed]. Saw this article that might interest you.” That’s it. You’re not asking for anything. You’re just staying present.

People appreciate follow-up. It shows you were actually paying attention. It shows you care enough to remember them. And honestly? It’s how you stand out from everyone else who met them that same day and never said another word.

Person at desk typing email or message on laptop, thoughtful expression, coffee nearby, professional workspace suggesting relationship maintenance and follow-up communication

What This Actually Means for You

Networking isn’t a performance. It’s not about having a pitch ready or knowing what to say. It’s about showing up as yourself, having genuine conversations, and building real relationships over time.

Here’s what actually works: be interested in people. Ask real questions. listen to the answers. Follow up. Remember things. Be generous with introductions and help when you can. Stay in touch without always wanting something in return.

That’s it. That’s networking. And it works far better than any script or strategy ever could.

About This Article

This article is educational in nature and provides general guidance on networking principles and professional relationship-building. The perspectives shared are based on common practices and feedback from networking participants. Every person’s networking experience is different, and what works in one context might need adjustment in another. Consider these principles as starting points for your own approach, and adapt them to your specific situation, industry, and professional goals.