The following excerpt was taken from “Earn It!: Know Your Value and Grow Your Career, in Your 20s and Beyond” by Mika Brzezinski and Daniela Pierre-Bravo. Order your copy HERE.
Daniela shares that when she was trying to build a professional network, it was harder because she didn’t have the resources to connect with professional women. She would send “cold” emails and get on buses to travel to New York City and take informationals when she could, and place phone calls to people willing to speak to her about their industries.
Now that she’s in management herself, Daniela has supervised the hiring of interns on “Morning Joe.” Recent graduates hoping to get jobs in the media industry connect with her by adding her on LinkedIn, and then use their InMail service to reach out. She says, “There are emails and messages I’ll receive that make it easy for me to engage, and others that make it tougher for me to reply. It’s all in the tone.
“The biggest mistake you can make is reaching out to someone in a big company without expressing any sort of connection or purposefulness. If your goal is to get an internship, for instance, at the very least you should do some research on the department in which you’d like to work.”
I couldn’t agree with her more. When you’re reaching out to someone, make your communication focused, clear, and substantive. After all, the person at the other end is taking time out of his or her day to read your email, and in the best-case scenario, agreeing to meet you or make an introduction.
Make it worth his or her time. Daniela shared two cold emails she received on LinkedIn from young women to demonstrate this point.
Hi Daniela,
I am wondering if you have any advice or connections in helping me obtain a position with NBCUniversal or if you can help point me in the right direction to do so?
“This email is very hard for me to answer. First, if she’d done her research, she would have known that NBCUniversal has many different divisions and departments. There is no way for me to point her in the right direction if she doesn’t refer to a specific job opening or even mention an area of the company. Is she interested in a specific show? A business division? I can’t tell by this correspondence. Second, there is no personal connection to this email. The tone is very ‘what can you do for me?’ I would assume that this was copied and pasted to a number of different people.”
Unless you’re reaching out to a member of the Human Resources department, the recipient of a cold email has no particular motivation to learn about you. Help your potential contacts help you by giving them a reason to read through your resumé—make that link, and your purpose, clear.
That’s not to say you can’t start networking if you don’t know exactly where you may want to end up. You should certainly try to connect online with companies and people who interest you, especially if you are still trying to figure out what career path to take. But as always, it’s important to be gracious and respectful of their time and how you ask for it.
Here is another example of a message Daniela received that not only resulted in a response, but after an informational meeting and a few coffee dates, she personally recommended this young woman to the NBC Page Program.









