Networking
Confidence
Digital Presence
Building
Exposure
Understanding the Value of Networking
Most early-career professionals understand that networking matters in theory but struggle to connect that understanding to their daily behaviour. The gap usually comes from a fundamental misunderstanding of what networking actually is. Networking is not asking people for jobs. It is not collecting connections on LinkedIn. It is not attending events and handing out business cards. It is the deliberate, consistent practice of building genuine professional relationships before you need them - so that when opportunities arise, you are known, trusted, and thought of.
- I reach out when I need something
- Networking is about getting introductions and referrals
- I connect with people above me who can help me
- A relationship has value when it produces an outcome
- I don't have time until I actually need a job
- I invest in relationships continuously, not reactively
- Networking is about contributing and being curious
- I connect across levels, functions, and industries
- A relationship has value in itself - outcomes follow
- I build now so the network is there when I need it
This distinction matters practically. When someone reaches out to you only when they want something, you notice - and you become less willing to help. When someone has invested in a relationship genuinely over time, their request for help feels natural and is met with enthusiasm. The professionals who seem to attract the most opportunity are rarely the ones who network hardest at the point of need. They are the ones who networked consistently long before they needed anything.
In the RISE context, this principle is visible in every direction. Your RISE mentor chose to invest time in your development without an immediate personal gain. The RISE community shares knowledge, makes introductions, and supports each other across cohorts - because that is what a trust-based professional community does. Your job is to bring that same generosity to your own networking practice.
Building Networking Confidence
Fear of networking is almost universal among early-career professionals, and it is entirely understandable. You are asking someone you do not know to give you their time and attention, with no guarantee that the conversation will go well, and with the constant background worry that you will come across as inexperienced, boring, or presumptuous. These fears are real - and they are also, in almost every case, disproportionate to the actual risk. Most professionals are genuinely willing to speak with someone who approaches them with genuine curiosity and respect.
Networking confidence is not a personality trait - it is a skill, built through practice and repetition exactly like any other. The first networking conversation you have will be awkward. The tenth will be better. The fiftieth will feel natural. The professionals who seem effortlessly comfortable in networking situations have simply done it more often, not been born differently. This reframe - from "I am not a networking person" to "I am someone who is still practising networking" - is the most useful shift a mentee can make.
| "I feel inexperienced" | Being early in your career is not a weakness in a networking conversation - it is context. No experienced professional expects you to have thirty years of insight. They do expect you to be curious, prepared, and respectful of their time. Meet that bar and the conversation will go well. |
| "I fear rejection" | When someone does not respond to a connection request or declines a conversation, it is almost never personal - it is time. Most professionals receive more requests than they can respond to. A non-response is not a verdict on you. Send the message, follow up once, and move on without taking it personally. |
| "I don't know what to say" | You do not need to be interesting - you need to be interested. Thoughtful questions create better conversations than polished speeches. Prepare two or three genuine questions about the other person's work, career path, or industry perspective. Then listen properly and respond to what they actually say. |
| "I have nothing valuable to offer" | Curiosity is valuable. Genuine attention is valuable. A fresh perspective from someone building their career is something many experienced professionals find energising. You also have your own experience - your background, your field of study, your network at your level - all of which may be genuinely useful to others. |
An elevator pitch is a 30–60 second introduction that answers three questions clearly: who you are, what you do or are working toward, and what you are interested in or looking for. It is not a sales pitch - it is a conversational opening. The goal is to say enough to make the other person want to ask a follow-up question.
LinkedIn & Digital Presence
LinkedIn is no longer optional for professional visibility. It is the first place a recruiter, hiring manager, potential collaborator, or professional contact will look for you - often before they have spoken to you, and sometimes instead of speaking to you. The RISE 2025 "Accelerating Your Career" workshop was explicit on this point: your digital presence is your professional reputation at scale. An unoptimised or inactive LinkedIn profile is not a neutral choice - it is a missed opportunity that compounds over time.
Your headline should describe who you are and what you do - not just your job title. Lead with your value and direction, not your current role. It is the first thing people read and the key driver of search visibility on the platform.
A clear, professional headshot significantly increases profile views and connection acceptance rates. It does not need to be a studio photograph - it does need to be recent, well-lit, and to show your face clearly. A photo builds the human trust that a blank avatar never can.
Write it in first person. Tell your professional story - where you have come from, what you are working toward, and what you care about. End with a clear statement of what you are looking for or open to. The About section is where personality and purpose meet.
Each role should include at least one quantified achievement - a number, a result, or a scope that anchors your impact. "Managed social media accounts" is forgettable. "Grew social media engagement by 40% over six months through a content strategy redesign" is memorable and credible.
An optimised profile is a foundation, not a strategy. The professionals who build genuine visibility on LinkedIn are those who show up consistently - not necessarily daily, but regularly enough that their name and perspective become familiar to the right people. Consistency matters more than volume. One thoughtful post per week outperforms five hasty ones.
Relationship Building Skills
Meeting people is the easy part of networking. Maintaining the relationships that form from those meetings is where most professionals fall short - and where the real value of a professional network is either built or destroyed. Weak follow-through is the single most common reason why potentially valuable professional relationships never develop. A strong first conversation means nothing if it is never followed up. A good meeting produces nothing if its momentum is not maintained.
A strong relationship builder thinks about the other person between interactions, not just during them. They notice when something in the world is relevant to a contact - an article, a job posting, an event - and take thirty seconds to forward it with a personal note. They follow up after a meeting or event within 24–48 hours, before the conversation has faded from memory. They stay visible over time without being transactional about it.
Expanding Professional Exposure
The most limiting version of a professional network is one that mirrors the environment you are already in - the same colleagues, the same industry bubble, the same professional context. The people who are most likely to introduce you to genuinely new opportunities are not the people you already know well. They are what sociologist Mark Granovetter called "weak ties" - people at the edges of your current network, in adjacent fields, different geographies, or broader communities. Expanding your professional exposure means deliberately seeking out those edges.
A professional with strong exposure deliberately creates regular touchpoints with the world beyond their immediate environment. They attend events where they are not the most knowledgeable person in the room - because that is where the learning happens. They join communities where they are a newcomer, not a veteran - because newcomers ask better questions. They seek informational interviews with people whose careers represent a version of what they are working toward. Each of these activities is an investment in the breadth and diversity of the relationships that will shape their future.
Attend with a specific goal: two connections and one insight. Many industry webinars are free or low-cost. Engage in the chat, follow up with speakers, and treat every event as a networking opportunity rather than a passive viewing experience.
Alumni networks are one of the most underused resources available to early-career professionals. An alumnus who has the career you want is almost always willing to speak with someone from their institution who approaches them with genuine curiosity and preparation.
LinkedIn groups, Slack communities, Discord servers, and sector-specific forums give you access to conversations happening at the edges of your field. Participate genuinely - contribute before you ask for anything - and connections will form naturally.
Volunteering for a professional association, charity, or community initiative puts you alongside people you would not otherwise meet and gives you visible, credible evidence of your skills in action. It is one of the fastest ways to build a reputation outside your current employer.
An informational interview is a 20–30 minute conversation with someone whose career you admire, approached with the explicit purpose of learning from their experience - not asking for a job. Most professionals are willing. Few early-career professionals ask. This gap is your opportunity.
RISE knowledge events, graduation ceremonies, and community gatherings are professional networking opportunities. The RISE network spans industries and geographies. Treat every RISE event as an occasion to meet two new people outside your immediate cohort - and follow up with both within 48 hours.
Suggested Networking Activities
Use this table with your RISE mentor to identify which areas to prioritise in your development plan. Choose one or two activities per area and add them to your RISE Goal Tracker as SMART goals with deadlines.
| Focus Area | Suggested Activities |
|---|---|
|
LinkedIn Growth
|
Connect with professionals after every event, webinar, or RISE session - always with a personalised note. Engage meaningfully with at least five posts per week by adding a genuine perspective rather than just liking. Post once per week sharing a learning, an insight, or a question relevant to your field. |
|
Relationship Building
|
Follow up with a personalised message within 48 hours of any meaningful professional interaction. Send a specific thank-you when someone gives you time, advice, or an introduction. Check back in with two or three key contacts each month - with something to offer, not just something to ask. |
|
Confidence Building
|
Practise your elevator pitch with your RISE mentor until it feels natural. Role-play an introduction or informational interview request. Set a goal to attend at least one in-person or virtual networking event per month - with the specific target of starting two conversations and following up with both. |
|
Industry Exposure
|
Attend two industry webinars or virtual events per month. Join one online professional community relevant to your target sector. Research one professional association in your field and explore the networking or events programme it offers. |
|
Mentorship Expansion
|
Identify two people in your target field whose career you admire and request an informational interview with each, using the RISE message template above. Ask your RISE mentor for one warm introduction each month to someone in their network who could be useful for your direction. |
|
Professional Visibility
|
Share one piece of insight or learning publicly per week - LinkedIn post, a comment on an industry discussion, or a contribution to a professional community. Use the RISE Visibility Mapping Tool to audit which stakeholders are aware of your work, and identify two or three who should be but are not yet. |
Example Networking Goals
These example goals follow the SMART framework - Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, and Time-bound. Adapt them to your own context and add them to your RISE Goal Tracker. Discuss the right goals for your stage with your mentor at your next session.
| Goal | SMART Example |
|---|---|
| Expand Network | Connect with 20 professionals working in my target industry by the end of this month - each with a personalised connection note referencing something specific about their work or background. |
| Improve Visibility | Post once per week on LinkedIn for the next 8 weeks, sharing a learning, an insight, or a question relevant to my field - and respond to every comment within 24 hours to build engagement. |
| Build Confidence | Attend one in-person or virtual networking event within the next 30 days, with the specific goal of starting two genuine conversations and following up with both people within 48 hours. |
| Gain Insight | Conduct two informational interviews with professionals working in my Horizon 2 target role within the next 45 days, using the RISE informational interview request template and three prepared questions for each conversation. |
| Strengthen Relationships | Follow up personally with five people I met through RISE - including my mentor - within the next two weeks, with a specific message sharing an update on how I have acted on something from our conversations. |




