# Why Networking Is Important (and What It Actually Gets You)

Canonical URL: https://headwayskills.com/knowledge/networking/why-is-networking-important/
Markdown URL: https://headwayskills.com/knowledge/networking/why-is-networking-important.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

Most jobs, mentors, and opportunities travel through relationships, not job boards. Here are seven concrete reasons networking is important for your career.

## Key facts

- Title: Why Networking Is Important (and What It Actually Gets You)
- Category: Networking
- Primary skill: Networking
- Related skills: Influence, Building Confidence
- Primary keyword: why is networking important
- Source page: https://headwayskills.com/knowledge/networking/why-is-networking-important/

## What this page covers

- Most jobs, mentors, and opportunities travel through relationships, not job boards. Here are seven concrete reasons networking is important for your career.
- Practical guidance for why is networking important
- How this topic connects to Networking

## Detailed explanation

Networking is important because most opportunities — jobs, mentors, knowledge, and steady support — travel through relationships rather than job boards. A strong professional network gets you referred instead of screened, keeps you current in your field, and builds a mutual support system you can draw on across an entire career.

If networking has always felt a little transactional, or like something other people are simply better at, that hesitation is worth taking seriously — and it usually rests on a misunderstanding of what networking actually is. The reasons it matters are more concrete than the usual "get out there and meet people" advice suggests, and most of them have very little to do with [working a room](/knowledge/networking/networking-for-introverts/).

## Why networking is important: the reasons it pays off

Networking, in the sense that shapes a career, is not collecting contacts — it is building and maintaining genuine relationships that create value on both sides. Here is what that actually buys you.

### 1. It opens the hidden job market

The most repeated argument for networking is also the most consequential: a large share of jobs are filled through personal and professional contacts before they are ever advertised. Widely cited industry estimates put the figure somewhere between 70% and 85% of positions filled through networking or never publicly posted at all. Treat the exact number with some caution — it circulates far more often than it is carefully sourced — but the direction is not really in dispute. If you only apply to roles you can find on a job board, you are competing for the visible minority of what is actually out there.

### 2. A referral gets you vouched for

Knowing someone on the inside does more than tell you a job exists — it changes how your application is read. Candidates referred by a current employee are reported to be far more likely to be hired than those who apply cold; some sources put referred applicants at roughly 15 times the hit rate of job-board applicants, and others cite about a 40% better chance with a referral. The mechanism is trust: a referral quietly transfers an existing employee's credibility onto you. A referral opens the door, but you still have to deliver once you are through it — which is why it is worth knowing [what skills you bring](https://assessment.headwayskills.com/) before you lean on your network.

### 3. It puts mentors within reach

You cannot be guided by someone you have never met, and networking is how mentoring relationships tend to start. The payoff is measurable: Gallup-cited data suggests mentored employees are about five times more likely to move into management within two years than those without a mentor. A good mentor compresses years of trial and error into a handful of honest conversations — but only if your network is wide enough to include one in the first place.

### 4. It teaches you what the classroom can't

Formal education hands you credentials; a network hands you the tacit, current knowledge that never makes it into a syllabus — which tools a field is actually moving toward, how a role really works day to day, what a company is like behind its careers page. Connecting with people who have done the work for years surfaces insight you simply cannot reach on your own, and it keeps paying off long after you have stopped job hunting.

### 5. It makes you visible and credible

Relationships put your name and your work in front of the people who make decisions — before those decisions get made. People who network regularly are more likely to be seen as [knowledgeable and influential](/knowledge/influence/build-good-reputation-work/) in their field, which is how someone comes to mind when an opportunity, a project, or a recommendation is being handed out. This is the reason networking shades into career advancement rather than mere job searching: visibility compounds over time.

### 6. It's a two-way street, not a favor bank

Here is the part that dissolves the discomfort many people feel. Good networking is give-first, not take-first: you share what you know, [make introductions](/knowledge/networking/build-relationships-at-work/), and help others when you can — so that support, advice, and openings are there when you eventually need them. Roughly 80% of professionals say networking is essential to their careers, and around 70% report being hired somewhere they already knew someone, according to a 2025 roundup of networking statistics from Wave Connect. None of that works if you only surface when you want something. Built the right way, a network is a relationship, not a transaction — which is exactly why, done properly, it stops feeling self-serving.

### 7. It grows you, not just your contact list

Reaching out, following up, and talking to people you do not yet know is uncomfortable at first — and that discomfort is the training. Each conversation quietly [builds your confidence](/knowledge/confidence/self-confidence/) and your ability to connect, and the relationships themselves often outlast the reason you made them, maturing into genuine, long-term connections. Networking done well doesn't just widen what you have access to; it develops the person doing it.

## The skills that make networking come more naturally

Read back over those seven reasons and a pattern shows up: the value isn't the network itself, but how well you build and use it — and that comes down to a few underlying skills you can actually develop, rather than a personality you either have or don't.

**Networking**, understood properly, is the first of them: not amassing connections or maximizing a follower count, but building and maintaining mutual-value relationships over time — staying in touch with people before you need anything from them, and adding value first. Approached that way, the reasons above stop being abstract benefits and become things you can deliberately create.

**Influence** is what turns those relationships into standing. It grows from a well-earned reputation — being known for doing good work and being someone others trust — which is what makes your name surface when opportunities are decided. It is the quiet difference between knowing people and being someone people actively want to recommend, and it has nothing to do with manipulation or slick persuasion.

**Building Confidence** is what gets you to actually reach out. It is built by doing — starting small and accepting the awkwardness of a first message rather than waiting to feel ready — not by turning yourself into a louder, more outgoing person. If the barrier to networking has always been the discomfort of it, this is the skill sitting underneath.

These three belong to a wider set of twelve work skills the framework treats as learnable rather than fixed — and a short, free assessment can show you [which of these to build](https://assessment.headwayskills.com/) and which you already lean on, so you are not guessing about where to start.

## What this means for you

You may already recognize some of this in how you work — a former colleague you stayed in touch with, a question you once asked someone more experienced, a favor you did without keeping score. None of these skills are fixed traits. Networking in particular is far more learnable than its reputation suggests: you can grow it and still be entirely yourself, no reinvention required. And the further your career goes, the more relationships tend to carry — which is precisely why it helps to see where you stand now, while the stakes are lower and any gaps are easy to close. The fact that you have read this far, looking for the why before the how, already puts you ahead of most people, who never stop to ask. From here, the useful move is simply to see the specifics for yourself.

## See where your own skills stand today

The only thing left is to find out how your own work skills are doing right now. The free Work Skills Test is a seven-minute self-assessment that shows you where you stand across all twelve of these skills — networking, influence, and confidence among them — and points to the few that will make the biggest difference for you next. It is a quiet, private way to turn "I should probably network more" into a clear sense of what to actually build.

## 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?

Most jobs, mentors, and opportunities travel through relationships, not job boards. Here are seven concrete reasons networking is important for your career.

### Which Headway skill does this connect to?

This guide connects primarily to Networking. It also relates to Influence, 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/influence.md
- https://headwayskills.com/knowledge/confidence.md
- https://headwayskills.com/work-skills-test.md

## Citation guidance

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"Most jobs, mentors, and opportunities travel through relationships, not job boards. Here are seven concrete reasons networking is important for your career."

## Change log

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