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Build your network to boost resilience in times of change

Creating and maintaining a professional network is not something most of us find at the top of our to-do list, but it is essential to ensuring personal resilience.
Angela de Longchamps
By Angela de Longchamps, Founder and CEO of Inspired Leadership.
Johannesburg, 24 Jun 2020

The world is changing so fast. It’s as if the ground is shifting and the wave is building and either we get dunked onto the sand with our bikini around our necks, or we build a surfboard and learn to surf the wave.

The skills and personal competencies we need to survive and thrive in this rapidly changing world are not the same as they were 20 or 30 years ago when some of us entered the working world. Yesterday, experience and knowing the way things work, was a strength. Today, experience can be something that stops you from learning and seeing opportunities for change.

Many of us need to unlearn old and established thinking patterns and mindsets to remain relevant in a shifting world. We need to let go of the idea of company loyalty or vice versa as companies restructure and reorganise in an effort to surf the wave too.

Building personal resilience is absolutely key so that you can take advantage of the wave, and, if you find yourself on the sand after a wave has hit you, you can stand up, shake it off, and get back in the sea.

The first part of building personal resilience that has been incredibly valuable for me personally has been networking. Building and maintaining a network is NOT something that most of us find at the top of our to-do list, but it is essential.

I spent years training leaders on the importance of networking but doing very little myself, and it was only when facilitating a particularly great class in Dubai that I had a personal epiphany about networking and decided to eat my own cooking.

Many of us need to unlearn old and established thinking patterns and mindsets to remain relevant in a shifting world.

I was well known within my company globally, but not in my own country and local industry. This is largely due to having a really good “head down” approach: I loved what I did, I did it well and didn’t have a burning platform to change the status quo.

The problem, of course, is that the burning platform gets really hot really quickly and networking takes time and sustained energy. So it is not something you can build overnight by doing a three-hour LinkedIn learning course!

Main reasons for networking include:

  • Information-gathering and sense-making – because it is hard to keep abreast of what is happening, so tapping into the collective wisdom of the tribe is helpful.
  • Gathering expertise and insights – the more diverse your network, the better, as innovations and ideas often springboard from one industry to another.
  • Opportunity spotting – this is particularly useful if you landed on the sand recently!
  • Talent spotting – great for growing your team or recruiting partners and associates.

Most people have a small core network of 12-28 people. And an outer core much larger. And a social network that could go into the thousands!

I would like to encourage you to write down the names of the people you would put in your inner network, add the outer network and then interrogate the list for diversity. That can mean a lot of different things – age, level within organisation/industry/ profession, geography, gender, race…. If your network is narrow or homogenous you might limit the benefits it can bring you. That could be a signal that growth is needed.

I have personally found that networking has been easier than I thought it would be: mostly people are pretty open to a catch-up coffee even after a long silence; and the purpose of conferences and many events is to network… so people are expecting this and that takes a fair amount of the awkward out of the room.

First steps for hard-core networking:

  1. Update your LinkedIn profile (so when someone googles you, they actually find something useful).
  2. Identify a conference, training or networking event that sounds interesting to you.
  3. Actually attend.
  4. But attend alone, so you are forced to speak to the person next to you (leave your comfort buddy back in the office, otherwise you spend the whole time talking to them!)
  5. Tap in to your inner extrovert and introduce yourself to people. Ask them questions about themselves, and listen with an open mind. Don’t be scared to ask for their contact details (if they have a card, write on it some personal detail about them, or what you two spoke about, so you can follow up with it in a call or e-mail after the event).
  6. Send them an e-mail after the event and set up a coffee chat to build the relationship. This is not about closing a deal, it is about making a network contact who at some point you may be able to help or vice versa.

For an easier approach:

Set yourself a goal to connect-up with 10 ex-colleagues, people you studied with or were in a sports club with, on LinkedIn or other social media, and start a conversation to reconnect with them. Buy coffee. It is worth it.

Building your network is one sure-fire way of taking a proactive step to build personal resilience during times of change.

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