# What Is Networking? A Beginner's Guide to Professional Relationships

Canonical URL: https://headwayskills.com/knowledge/networking/what-is-networking/
Markdown URL: https://headwayskills.com/knowledge/networking/what-is-networking.md
Entity type: Article
Last updated: 2026-07-07
Language: en
Primary audience: professionals improving networking at work
Owner: Headway Skills
Contact: https://headwayskills.com/contact/

## Short answer

Networking is building genuine professional relationships that create mutual value, not just collecting contacts. Here's what it really means and why it matters.

## Key facts

- Title: What Is Networking? A Beginner's Guide to Professional Relationships
- Category: Networking
- Primary skill: Networking
- Related skills: Communication, Building Confidence
- Primary keyword: what is networking
- Source page: https://headwayskills.com/knowledge/networking/what-is-networking/

## What this page covers

- Networking is building genuine professional relationships that create mutual value, not just collecting contacts. Here's what it really means and why it matters.
- Practical guidance for what is networking
- How this topic connects to Networking

## Detailed explanation

So what is networking, really? At its core, networking is the ongoing process of building and maintaining genuine professional relationships that create value for both people involved, through sharing information, help, and opportunities over time. It is less about collecting contacts than about getting to know people and being useful to them before you ever need anything back.

If the word makes you picture forced small talk and handing out business cards, you are not alone, because that is exactly the version most people dread. The real thing is quieter, more human, and far more learnable than it looks. Here is what networking actually is, the forms it takes, and why it ends up mattering so much.

## What networking really means

Strip away the awkward connotations and networking comes down to one idea: relationships. Career sources, from university career centers to sites like Indeed and BetterUp, land on more or less the same definition. Networking is building and maintaining mutually beneficial professional relationships so that information, support, and opportunities can flow between people. The word "mutually" is doing the heavy lifting. Good networking is not a string of asks; it is a habit of staying in touch, offering what you can (a useful article, an introduction, a bit of advice), and trusting that the value comes back around, often when you least expect it.

It also helps to picture what a network actually looks like, because it is not one flat list of contacts. Think of it as a set of concentric circles: an inner circle of people you are close to and stay in regular contact with, a middle circle of people who know and trust you and will respond when you reach out, and an outer circle of more distant or dormant connections you have not spoken to in a while. Networking is simply the work of tending those circles, deepening a few, [keeping others warm](/knowledge/networking/maintain-professional-network/), and occasionally reaching back out to the ones that have gone quiet.

## The main types of networking

Networking happens in a few distinct forms, and most people end up using a mix of them rather than picking one.

### In-person networking

This is meeting people face-to-face, at [industry conferences](/knowledge/networking/network-at-an-event/), seminars, workshops, alumni events, and local meetups. Its defining strength is speed of trust: conversations flow naturally, you can read body language and tone, and rapport tends to form far faster in a room than it does through a screen.

### Online networking

Here the connection happens through [LinkedIn](/knowledge/networking/linkedin-profile-tips/), professional forums, and webinars. What distinguishes it is reach. Online networking removes geography from the equation, letting you connect with people you would never meet otherwise and stay loosely in touch with contacts you rarely see in person.

### Mentorship networking

This is building relationships with more experienced people who can offer guidance, advice, and a longer view of your field. It is deliberately lopsided, focused on learning rather than trading favors, and a single good mentor often opens the door to their own contacts and communities as well.

### Referral networks

These are relationships built on enough trust that people will recommend or vouch for you when an opportunity comes up. Their distinctive value is the endorsement itself: a warm introduction or a good word transfers someone else's hard-won credibility to you, which is why referrals carry so much weight.

### Alumni and community networks

These form around a shared background, the same school, a former employer, or a professional association. The built-in common ground is what makes them easy to use: reaching out to a fellow graduate or former colleague feels natural in a way that cold-messaging a stranger never will.

## Why networking matters

You will often hear that networking is how most jobs actually get filled. It is worth being precise here. Figures get thrown around, that around 70 percent of jobs are never publicly advertised, or that most roles are filled through personal contacts, and while these numbers are repeated everywhere (often traced back to a CNBC report), they vary a lot from source to source and rarely come with a solid study behind them. Treat them as a directional signal rather than a hard fact. The underlying point still holds: a great many opportunities move through relationships and referrals before they ever reach a job board, and being known by the right people means you tend to hear about them earlier.

The payoff also runs well beyond the job hunt. A good network gives you mentors who can offer advice and help you sidestep mistakes they already made, exposure to people whose experience differs from your own, and a growing reputation in your field. For students and people early in their careers, this is exactly why it pays to start before you need anything: the relationships you build now, with professors, alumni, guest speakers, and classmates, become the guidance and introductions that matter most during an internship search or a first job hunt.

None of this requires being a [natural extrovert](/knowledge/networking/networking-for-introverts/). Networking is a skill you build, not a personality you are born with, and like any skill it helps to know your starting point. If you have ever wondered whether relationship-building comes easily to you or is something to work on, it is worth [getting an honest read](https://assessment.headwayskills.com/) before you throw yourself at your next event.

## The skills that make networking feel natural

Look closely at people who network well and you notice it is rarely about charisma. What they are actually doing is a handful of ordinary, learnable things, most of which have little to do with events at all.

**Networking** itself is the most obvious of the three, and it is worth naming plainly: the ability to build relationships before you need them and to add value without keeping score. Done well, it looks less like working a room and more like staying genuinely interested in people over time and being the kind of contact others are glad to hear from.

**Communication** is what turns a first hello into a relationship. The parts that matter here are the quiet ones, asking good questions, actually listening, and paying attention to the other person instead of rehearsing what you will say next. That is the difference between a conversation someone remembers and one they have forgotten by the time they reach the parking lot.

**Building Confidence** is what gets you to reach out in the first place. Almost everyone finds networking a little uncomfortable early on; the people who get past it are not the ones who feel no nerves, but the ones who start small, accept the awkwardness, and let it fade through practice rather than waiting to feel ready.

These three are among the twelve work skills the framework treats as buildable rather than fixed, and the same free assessment that gauges your networking habit also shows how the other eleven are shaping up, so you can tell where your effort will pay off soonest. If you want that map before your next conversation, you can see [which skills to build first](https://assessment.headwayskills.com/) in about seven minutes.

You might recognize parts of this in how you already operate: the colleague you stayed in touch with after a project ended, the classmate you introduced to someone useful, the question you asked because you were genuinely curious. Those are networking, even if you never called them that. None of it is fixed talent; it is a set of habits you can grow at whatever pace fits you, while staying exactly the person you are.

And it tends to matter more as you go, not less. Early on, a thin network is easy to shrug off; a few years in, when opportunities increasingly arrive through people rather than postings, the relationships you did or did not build start to show. The encouraging part is that this is one of the most learnable skills there is, and the fact that you have read this far, thinking about what networking really is instead of just being told to do it, already puts you ahead of most people who never stop to ask.

## See your starting point

So the only thing left is to find out where you are actually starting from. The free Work Skills Test is a quick self-assessment that shows you where you stand across all twelve of these work skills, networking included, and which ones will make the biggest difference to work on next. It takes about seven minutes, and you finish with a clear picture instead of a vague sense that you should "network more."

**Take the skills test**

## Who this is for

- Professionals building practical workplace skills
- Readers looking for specific, usable work advice
- Managers, educators, and coaches supporting career readiness

## Common questions

### What is this guide about?

Networking is building genuine professional relationships that create mutual value, not just collecting contacts. Here's what it really means and why it matters.

### Which Headway skill does this connect to?

This guide connects primarily to Networking. It also relates to Communication, Building Confidence.

### What is the recommended next step?

Use the free Work Skills Test to reflect on which work skill to improve next.

## Related pages

- https://headwayskills.com/knowledge.md
- https://headwayskills.com/knowledge/networking.md
- https://headwayskills.com/knowledge/communication.md
- https://headwayskills.com/knowledge/confidence.md
- https://headwayskills.com/work-skills-test.md

## Citation guidance

Use the canonical page when citing this content:
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Preferred summary:
"Networking is building genuine professional relationships that create mutual value, not just collecting contacts. Here's what it really means and why it matters."

## Change log

- 2026-07-07: Content collection version published.
