Up to 85 percent of open job positions are filled through networking. However, building your professional contacts at events can often be intimidating, especially if you don’t anyone in the room.
“Anyone serious about their career and broadening their professional relationships will often find themselves in situations where they know very few people or no one in the room,” said Dee Poku-Spalding, founder and CEO of Women Inspiration & Enterprise (WIE), an influential women’s leadership network with 30,000 members, including 750 women at the senior level.
Poku-Spalding, known as the ultimate connector, recently shared her best tips with Know Your Value about how to break the ice when you’re networking solo.
Do some prep work
If you’re attending the type of event where you can look up who is attending or speaking and what organizations they are from, do your research well in advance. “Determine who you want to meet to help the right connections materialize and to make it a very fruitful experience,” Poku-Spalding suggested.
Get there early
If you’re a bit shy or reserved, it’s helpful to get to the networking event early. Not only is it harder to walk into a crowded room and mingle into a conversation that may have started before you arrived, but being one of the first attendees puts you in a situation where people will likely walk up to you and start a discussion. “Be the one people come to first,” she explained.









