You have to be good at what you do anyways
A practical guide to you have to be good at what you do anyways and why it matters for relationship-driven professionals.
Most advice about networking misses the point entirely. It focuses on tactics โ how many events to attend, how many LinkedIn connections to accumulate, how many follow-up emails to send. But the professionals who build the strongest networks are not doing any of that. They are doing something much simpler.
You Have To Be Good At What You Do Anyways
Here is what this looks like in practice. You meet someone at a conference, a client meeting, or through a mutual connection. The conversation goes well. You exchange contact information. And then โ nothing. Not because you did not care, but because your system failed you. There was no reminder, no follow-up prompt, no mechanism to turn a good conversation into an ongoing relationship.
This is the most common failure mode in professional networking. It is not a people problem. It is a systems problem. And it has a straightforward solution: treat your relationships with the same intentionality you bring to your work.
Making It Work
The first step is honest assessment. Pull up your contact list โ your phone, your email, your LinkedIn connections. How many of those people would take your call right now? Not because they have to, but because they want to?
That number is your real network. Everything else is a directory.
- Categorize ruthlessly. Not everyone deserves the same level of attention. Group your contacts by the depth of the relationship and the frequency of engagement each one needs.
- Automate the reminder, not the relationship. Use tools to tell you who needs attention. Then bring the human element โ a personal message, a relevant article, a genuine question about their life.
- Track what matters. When did you last connect? What did you talk about? What is going on in their world? This is not surveillance โ it is caring enough to remember.
Building a strong professional network is not a project with a finish line. It is an ongoing practice โ like fitness or meditation โ that compounds over time. The professionals who get this right are not the most connected. They are the most consistent.
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Tools like Relatable exist to make that consistency easier โ surfacing who needs attention, tracking engagement patterns, and ensuring no important relationship goes cold. But even without a tool, the principle holds: show up for the people who matter, and they will show up for you.
Frequently Asked Questions
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.
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.
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