Building a Diverse Professional Network

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Summary

Building a diverse professional network means creating meaningful connections with individuals from various backgrounds, industries, and perspectives. This approach fosters learning, collaboration, and unique opportunities to grow both personally and professionally.

  • Focus on shared activities: Engage in purpose-driven events like volunteering or collaborative projects to meet people with diverse mindsets and create more authentic, lasting connections.
  • Expand beyond your bubble: Audit your network to ensure it includes individuals from different regions, industries, and cultures to gain diverse perspectives and avoid echo chambers.
  • Embrace one-on-one interactions: Build deeper connections by prioritizing personal conversations, such as coffee meetings or video calls, over large networking events.
Summarized by AI based on LinkedIn member posts
  • View profile for Heather Inocencio

    Founder & CEO, The Product Consult | Fractional CPO | Former Chief Product Officer at The RealReal | Product Coach | Chief | Sidebar | Techstars Mentor | Startup Advisor

    6,010 followers

    For introverts (or shy extroverts like myself) in product management, building a broad and diverse network might seem challenging. But in a recent conversation with Su Belagodu, she insipired me with some ways to make it more approachable and rewarding. ✨ A strong network leads to more opportunities to learn, collaborate, and grow. It opens doors to career opportunities, new perspectives, and creative problem-solving while ensuring we stay connected in a field that can sometimes feel isolating—especially in smaller teams or companies. 🤝 Leverage Second and Third-Level Connections Focusing on second and third-level connections can make networking feel less daunting. Instead of cold outreach, ask for introductions from mutual connections. These “warm introductions” create familiarity and help break the ice. 👂 Be a Listener First Introverts excel at active listening, which is key to building meaningful connections. At networking events or online, focus on understanding others’ challenges before offering your perspective. It’s a great way to create an authentic connection. ☕ Utilize One-on-One Connections Instead of large events, focus on deeper one-on-one relationships. Casual coffee meetings or short Zoom calls allow for more intimate, focused conversations. ✍️ Use Content to Connect Sharing insights via articles or posts (like this one!) can establish your voice and spark conversations. It’s an organic way to build connections with like-minded individuals. Respond to commenters and connect with them. 💻 Join Online Communities and Slack Groups Introverts can thrive in niche online communities. Start with smaller, product management-specific groups where you can engage slowly and at your own pace. 📊 Focus on Quality, Not Quantity Instead of trying to meet everyone, focus on building a smaller, engaged network. Deeper relationships often yield better results. 🎨 Get Creative with Networking Explore networking activities that spur creative thinking and collaboration. Roundtable discussions, think tanks, or webinars are excellent ways to connect over shared interests, especially around impactful, inclusive product-building. 💡 Networking doesn’t have to feel forced. With the right strategies, it can be a rewarding and growth-inducing practice, even for introverts. I've been trying these, and not only is it working, but it's fun and rewarding. How do you build meaningful and diverse connections? I’d love to hear your thoughts! #ProductManagement #NetworkingForIntroverts #ListeningSkills #Community #BuildingMeaningfulConnections #Growth

  • View profile for Chris Schembra 🍝
    Chris Schembra 🍝 Chris Schembra 🍝 is an Influencer

    Rolling Stone & CNBC Columnist | #1 WSJ Bestselling Author | Keynote Speaker on Leadership, Belonging & Culture | Unlocking Human Potential in the Age of AI

    57,190 followers

    Pro tip if you want to get ahead in life: build your relationships through shared, purpose-driven activities. I’ve found that some of the most powerful relationships in my career, ones that have led to real revenue and meaningful opportunities, didn’t come from a “networking mixer.” They came from volunteering, or from being shoulder-to-shoulder with others at a philanthropic event. The FIRST article I ever read when I invented my own pasta sauce ten years ago was in the Harvard Business Review (linkedin in bio) that showed that shared activities, whether it’s volunteering, serving on a nonprofit board, or even something as simple as playing a weekly sport, create deeper and more diverse connections than traditional networking ever could. It's called the Shared Activities Principle. They unite people from different backgrounds around a common purpose, rather than clustering like-minded peers in the same echo chamber. At our dinners, we would get people to work together to create the meal, essentially inventing a container for shared activities for strangers to meet, to serve others. HBR wrote that if more than 65% of your network is made up of people you introduced yourself to, your network is probably too homogenous to bring you new ideas or opportunities. Shared activities break that pattern. When you volunteer, you’re meeting other people who also have a giving mentality. They’re givers by nature. Which means when life or business gets tough, those are the people most likely to show up for you. That’s not something you often find in a transactional cocktail-hour exchange of business cards. So here’s my invitation: Instead of another “networking event,” try joining a fundraiser, a Habitat for Humanity build, or a nonprofit board meeting. Invest your time in something that matters. You’ll not only serve a cause you care about, you’ll build a network rooted in generosity, trust, and shared purpose. For the leaders reading this, try sponsoring a volunteer day for your team. An entire day where your team still gets paid, but gets paid to do good. Bonus points if you can get folks from different teams that normally don't talk, to volunteer together. That's when cross-functional creativity, innovation, and mentorship occurs. P.S. If anybody has any ideas for volunteering in NYC, my DM's are always open. Me, Andy Ellwood, and John Vatalaro love volunteering on Saturday's at a Food Pantry in nyc, but would love so many more opportunities, please!

  • View profile for Robyn Cohen

    ⭐️ OOH Media Sales Leader | Keynote Speaker | Founder of The After Party | Helping Women 40+ Reinvent Their Next Chapter | 30 Women to Watch 2024

    8,454 followers

    If you care about diversity and inclusion, it will start with your network. I often look at who is commenting and engaging with people’s content, especially on LinkedIn. It’s truly amazing how many men have predominantly men in their network. Worse yet, only white men. Although, I will say, when I look at a black woman’s posts, it’s mostly (not predominantly) black women commenting and engaging. The beauty about social media, particularly LinkedIn, is that your network doesn’t have to be pigeon-holed in a specific gender or ethnicity, or in one city, state or country. I took a good look at my network and felt that who I was engaging with had created a really small bubble around me. I’ve lived in some amazing cities: 🏙 Toronto 🍟 Montreal 🗽 New York 😇 Los Angeles 🤑 Reno, NV 🏔 Park City, UT 🍹 Sao Paulo, Brazil ...and now Salt Lake City But who I was engaging with put a very heavy emphasis in one region and I realized I was missing what was happening with people in my other networks. So I did a major purge with my connections. I wanted to make sure I was engaging with people in my old networks in those different cities. And I’ve been making sure I’m following a really good diverse set of thought leaders from different backgrounds. I’ve even been following people that have completely different political and religious backgrounds so I’m not living in a bubble of ONLY like-minded people. So take a moment to look at your networks on your social media platforms, LinkedIn specifically. Make sure you’re creating a diverse and inclusive network. Make sure you’re learning about other people’s perspective on a myriad of life topics. Make sure you’re following different people in your industry from around the country or the world. Make sure you’re learning from different thought leaders from completely different backgrounds. And once you see how cool, impactful, and wonderful your network becomes, then maybe you will understand why diversity matters and how you can apply it to other parts of your life both personally and professionally. Do you pay attention to the amount of diversity your LinkedIn network has? Do you think this is only a LinkedIn issue compared to other social networks? (I think so) Have you ever taken the time to edit, purge, and diversify your network and if you have, has it made a difference? #robynsthoughts #diversitymatters #yournetworkisyournetworth

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