FIVE EFFECTIVE NETWORKING TIPS FOR REDUNDANT WORKERS
Networking, sometimes, is something many workers misunderstand. The word itself often creates discomfort, because people associate it with forced business conversations, awkward events or fake corporate behaviour. Some imagine rooms filled with people exchanging rehearsed speeches and pretending to be more successful than they really are. Others think networking only works for executives, sales professionals or people with naturally outgoing personalities.
In reality, networking is far simpler and far more human than that. At its core, networking is about staying connected to people while rebuilding your professional life. It is about making sure others know who you are, what you can do and where you are trying to go next.
This matters because many opportunities never reach public job boards at all. Across countless industries, jobs are quietly filled through recommendations, referrals and personal connections long before formal advertisements appear online. Employers often trust referrals because hiring someone already recommended by a reliable contact feels safer than choosing blindly from hundreds of anonymous applications.
For redundant workers, networking can dramatically shorten the road back into employment. It can also open doors people never expected, including freelance work, temporary contracts, new industries and unexpected career directions. However, effective networking requires the right mindset. It is not about begging people for jobs. It is about rebuilding visibility, relationships and momentum during a difficult period.
Here are five networking strategies that genuinely help redundant workers get back on their feet faster.
1. Stop Keeping Your Situation Completely Private
One of the most common mistakes redundant workers make, is staying silent for too long. Many people feel embarrassed after redundancy, especially if they spent years building a stable career. Some fear judgement from former colleagues or friends. Others worry that openly discussing unemployment will make them appear unsuccessful or desperate.
As a result, they quietly update their CV, apply for jobs in isolation and tell almost nobody they are looking for work. Unfortunately, this often limits opportunities before they even begin. People cannot help you if they do not know your situation.
That does not mean making dramatic announcements or posting emotional breakdowns online. It simply means communicating clearly and professionally about where you are and what kind of opportunities you are seeking.
Many job opportunities begin through surprisingly ordinary conversations. A former colleague may know a manager searching quietly for staff. A neighbour may have a relative hiring in another department. A friend may hear about a temporary contract role before it becomes public. None of these opportunities happen if nobody knows you are looking.
Redundant workers often underestimate how willing people are to help when given clear direction. Most people genuinely respect workers who are trying to rebuild after difficult circumstances. Redundancy has become so common across many industries that many individuals understand the experience personally or know someone who has gone through it themselves.
2. Reconnect With Former Colleagues Before You Need Something Urgently
One of the strongest networking resources many workers already possess is their past professional relationships. Former colleagues often become incredibly valuable contacts because they already understand your work ethic, reliability and personality. Unlike recruiters or strangers online, they do not need convincing that you can perform well professionally, because they have already seen it firsthand.
Still, many workers only contact old colleagues when they become desperate. They disappear for years, then suddenly send messages asking directly for job opportunities. While some people may still help, this approach can sometimes feel transactional and uncomfortable.
A better strategy is to rebuild genuine connection first.
Reach out naturally. Ask how people are doing. Mention that you were thinking about them after leaving your previous role. Show interest in their current work or career path. Then, within the conversation, explain your own situation honestly and professionally.
Professional relationships are often far more powerful than people realise. The colleague you once shared lunch breaks with may now work in management somewhere else. Someone who sat beside you years ago may currently know about hiring opportunities before they become public. Even colleagues who cannot directly help may still introduce you to useful contacts.
Many workers focus so heavily on formal applications, that they overlook the relationships already sitting within their existing network. Yet referrals from trusted contacts often carry far more weight than anonymous online applications competing against hundreds of other candidates.
3. Use LinkedIn
The biggest mistake people make is trying too hard to sound overly corporate. You do not need dramatic success stories, inspirational speeches or daily leadership lessons to network effectively online. Most employers and recruiters are not looking for internet celebrities. They are looking for real people with useful experience and professional credibility.
Start with the basics. Update your profile properly. Add recent experience, practical skills and a clear professional headline. Upload a clean, professional photograph. Make sure your work history reflects your actual strengths clearly rather than using vague corporate language.
Then begin becoming visible again.
Comment thoughtfully on industry discussions. Congratulate former colleagues on achievements. Share updates about training courses or certifications you are completing. Mention professional insights from your previous experience. None of this needs to feel forced or performative.
4. Smaller Local Events Often Create Better Opportunities Than Large Corporate Ones
When workers hear the word “networking,” they often imagine intimidating business conferences filled with highly polished professionals exchanging rehearsed conversations. For someone already dealing with the emotional effects of redundancy, environments like that can feel overwhelming and exhausting.
Fortunately, networking does not need to happen in large corporate spaces to be effective.
In fact, smaller local events often produce far more meaningful professional relationships because conversations feel more natural and less competitive. Across the UK, there are countless community based professional spaces where workers can meet others without the pressure of formal corporate networking culture.
Local business meet-ups, industry workshops, library career events, council employment programmes, training sessions and trade association gatherings can all create valuable opportunities. These environments are usually smaller, more relaxed and easier to navigate emotionally for workers rebuilding confidence after redundancy.
The biggest advantage of smaller events is that people actually talk properly. Conversations last longer. Individuals remember each other more easily. There is more room for honest discussion about career transitions, industry changes and practical opportunities.
Many redundant workers discover entirely new directions through these conversations. Someone attending a local business workshop may meet a small company owner needing part time operational support. Another person may discover freelance opportunities they had never previously considered. Others may hear about industries hiring more actively than their previous sector.
5. Focus On Building Relationships, Not Collecting Favours
One reason networking feels uncomfortable for many workers is because they approach it purely as a search for immediate help. Every interaction becomes focused on whether the other person can provide a job lead, recommendation or opportunity. While that urgency is understandable, it can sometimes make conversations feel transactional.
The strongest networking relationships usually develop when people focus on genuine connection rather than immediate extraction. Even after redundancy, you still have value to offer other people professionally. You still have experience, knowledge, insight and practical understanding from your career. Networking becomes far easier when you remember that.
Perhaps you can introduce two contacts who may benefit from knowing each other. Maybe you can share useful industry information, recommend a training programme or help another redundant worker improve their CV. Sometimes simply listening and encouraging someone else creates stronger professional goodwill than aggressively asking for favours.
People naturally prefer helping individuals who also contribute positively to conversations and communities. Networking grows stronger when relationships feel balanced rather than one sided.
This mindset shift also helps emotionally. Redundancy often damages self-worth because workers begin viewing themselves only through the lens of what they currently lack. By contributing value to others again, people slowly rebuild confidence in their own abilities.
Finally, networking after redundancy is not about pretending everything is fine when life feels uncertain. It is about refusing to isolate yourself while rebuilding. The workers who recover fastest are often not the most qualified people on paper. They are the ones who remain visible, adaptable and connected to others despite difficult circumstances.
One conversation can lead to a recommendation. One message can lead to a contract. One introduction can completely change someone’s career direction. Opportunities often appear quietly and unexpectedly through human connection rather than formal systems alone.
This is a Legacy Project Of Olayinka Carew aka Jack Lookman.
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