When looking back at 2020 it seems hard to believe there were two months that the coronavirus didn’t dominate our lives. In mid-February, my friend and co-columnist for Know Your Value, Adrienne Elrod and I had done an interview with “Morning Joe” co-host and Know Your Value founder, Mika Brzezinski.
At the time we had no idea it would be our last in-person interview with Mika in 2020, and that a global pandemic was to follow. And while it was less than a year ago that we were all sitting together at Rockefeller Center, many of the issues we covered in that conversation are perhaps more relevant now.
A few months after the interview, Adrienne joined the successful Joe Biden campaign as director of surrogate strategy and operations. Since the election, she has stayed on as the Inaugural Committee’s director of talent and external relations, which is why she is not writing this column with me. Fortunately, we have her great advice and insights from February, which I can share with you.
RELATED: How the Biden Administration could mark a ‘turning point for women’
One of the topics we covered was the importance of having and developing connections, and how they help us throughout our careers. After recently watching the interview through the lens of Covid-19, it became evident that professional connections are more important than ever.
In the world of politics and government, as well as in business, most people assume that having a connection means you have access to someone powerful. Yet, having good connections should also be thought of as having strong relationships with a diverse group of people. However, building and keeping relationships usually takes a personal touch, which has been, to say the very least, difficult to accomplish during a quarantine.
It took months to figure out the best space to do our work: avoid a spouse that was asking what’s for dinner at 10:00 a.m. and figuring out a way to teach our kids the school assignment of the day. Then there were the personal tolls it took on each of us.
RELATED: How to accept what’s beyond your control in a COVID-19 world
Fortunately, with the news of viable vaccines, there appears to be rays of hope of getting back to “normal.” Of course, we must be vigilant as we still have several more months to endure, but we can start to imagine how to rebuild our professional lives.
In a world when in-person meetings are few and far between, maintaining our professional relationships are more important than ever, but how to revive them can also be a challenge.








