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Relatable
RelationshipsJanuary 17, 2023ยท2 min read

How to invest in a budding relationship

A practical guide to how to invest in a budding relationship and why it matters for relationship-driven professionals.

relationship buildingprofessional networkingrelationship managementmaintaining relationships
RELATIONSHIPS

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.

How To Invest In A Budding Relationship

What separates professionals who get consistent referrals from those who do not is rarely talent or charisma. It is follow-through. The willingness to maintain a relationship even when there is no immediate payoff. The discipline to check in with someone when you do not need anything from them.

This sounds simple because it is. But simple does not mean easy. Without a system to prompt these interactions, the urgent always displaces the important. You respond to the client emailing you today instead of reaching out to the connection from last month whose value has not materialized yet.

Making It Work

Start with your existing network. You do not need more contacts โ€” you need better engagement with the ones you already have. Identify your top fifty relationships. These are the people who have referred you business, opened doors, or simply shown up consistently in your professional life.

Now ask yourself: when was the last time you reached out to each of them without needing something? If the answer is more than three months for any of them, you have work to do.

  • Set a cadence. Not every relationship needs the same frequency. Your top tier might warrant monthly check-ins. Your broader network might need quarterly touchpoints. The specific intervals matter less than the consistency.
  • Use a system. A spreadsheet works. A dedicated relationship CRM works better. The tool matters less than the habit of tracking who needs attention and when.
  • Keep it human. A quick text asking how someone is doing will always outperform a templated email. Personalization is not a marketing tactic โ€” it is basic respect.

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

What is the difference between networking and relationship building?

Networking is collecting contacts. Relationship building is maintaining and deepening them over time. Most professionals over-invest in networking events and under-invest in the follow-through that turns a new contact into a lasting connection. The value is not in meeting people โ€” it is in staying connected to them.

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.

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.

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