The following is an excerpt from Mika Brzezinski’s latest book Grow Your Value.
I cannot stress it enough: if we are going to grow our professional and inner worth, meeting people who either are or could one day be valuable associates, potential future colleagues or bosses, connectors, collaborators—and also personal friends—is simply essential. I see every moment out of my house (except when I’m on vacation) as a networking opportunity because I almost always get something out of every encounter. There should be nothing wrong about that.
But there is one thing I don’t do anymore. As I stated earlier, I do not do people-pleasing.
Networking is not about trying to get everyone to like you. It’s not about making close friends. I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again now: people-pleasing is poison. It is enemy number one for women who want to grow personally and professionally. It actually saps your value. If you are trying to be all things to all people, you will not leave a solid impression on anyone nor will you make any genuinely useful contacts. If you keep it up, eventually you will be seen as a sycophant, someone not to be trusted or taken seriously. People can usually sense an acting job, and that will make them uneasy and unsure about what your motives and intentions are. At best you won’t be seen as a serious person; at worst you’ll be looked on as vaguely devious and untrustworthy. In addition, people-pleasing will run you ragged. Networking, however, is seeing that there may be a useful connection between two people. It is either there or it is not.
Even more importantly, if you are playing to the crowd you may be giving them what you think they want, but you will not be getting what you want or need. To network effectively you must communicate who you are and what you have to offer. This is not to say it’s permissible to be rude; it is never permissible to be rude. But it is permissible—in fact, it’s advisable—to be powerful, open, fearless.









