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Relatable
NetworkingSeptember 16, 2023ยท1 min read

Join a damn community

A practical guide to join a damn community and why it matters for relationship-driven professionals.

relationship buildingprofessional networkingnetworking tipsconference networking
NETWORKING

The difference between a contact and a connection is not semantic. It is the difference between a name in your phone and a person who thinks of you when an opportunity crosses their desk.

Join A Damn Community

Consider how you currently manage your most important professional relationships. If you are like most people, the answer is: you do not. You respond when prompted. You follow up when reminded. You reconnect when you need something. This reactive approach works for maintaining existing business. It does not work for building the kind of network that generates unexpected opportunities.

The professionals who consistently punch above their weight in referrals and opportunities share one trait: they are proactive about relationship maintenance. They do not wait for a reason to reach out. They create reasons.

Making It Work

Here is a simple framework you can implement this week.

First, list twenty people who matter to your professional success. Not the biggest names โ€” the most genuine connections. The ones where the relationship feels mutual.

Second, for each person, write down one thing you know about their current situation. If you cannot, that is your signal to reach out.

Third, schedule fifteen minutes every Friday to send three messages. Not pitches. Not asks. Just genuine check-ins. "Saw this article and thought of you." "How did that project turn out?" "Hope the move went smoothly."

Three messages a week is 150 touchpoints a year. That is enough to maintain a strong network of fifty people with room to spare. The math works. The hard part is showing up consistently.

None of this is complicated. The best relationship-building advice fits on a napkin: care about people, stay in touch, and do not let the good ones drift away. The challenge is building the systems and habits that make this sustainable at scale.

Related Reading

Whether you use a spreadsheet, a notes app, or a purpose-built relationship CRM like Relatable, the important thing is that you have a system. Your network is too valuable to manage by memory alone.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many professional relationships can one person realistically maintain?

Research suggests most people can maintain about 150 meaningful relationships total โ€” personal and professional combined. For active professional networking, a focused list of 50 to 100 key contacts is more effective than trying to stay connected with thousands. Depth beats breadth every time.

What should I track about my professional contacts?

At minimum: when you last connected, what you discussed, and what is happening in their professional and personal life. This is not about surveillance โ€” it is about caring enough to remember. When you reference something specific from a previous conversation, it signals genuine interest and builds trust faster than any networking tactic.

Do I need a CRM for personal relationship management?

You do not need one, but it helps significantly once your network exceeds about fifty active relationships. A purpose-built relationship CRM like Relatable organizes contacts into priority tiers with engagement cadences, so you never lose track of who needs attention. Without a system, the urgent will always crowd out the important.

Ready to manage your relationships?

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