Most networking advice focuses on meeting new people. Attend the conference. Join the association. Go to the event. Connect on LinkedIn. Introduce yourself to someone new. Expand your network.

There’s nothing wrong with any of that advice. Meeting new people is important. The problem is that it’s only the beginning of the process.

What happens after the introduction is often much more important than the introduction itself. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve met someone who attended a conference, came home with a stack of business cards and genuinely believed they had a productive networking experience. Then six months later, when I ask whether they’ve spoken to any of those people again, the answer is usually no.

The same thing happens on LinkedIn. Someone sends a connection request, it gets accepted and they immediately think they’ve added someone to their network. But accepting a connection request isn’t a relationship. It’s the beginning of one.

This is one of the biggest networking mistakes professionals make. They spend a lot of time thinking about how to meet new people and very little time thinking about how to stay connected to the people they’ve already met. That’s unfortunate because some of the best opportunities don’t come from the introduction itself. They come from what happens afterward.

A referral rarely happens because of a single conversation. A speaking invitation usually isn’t the result of one networking event. New business opportunities often come from people who have seen your work, interacted with you, stayed in touch and gotten to know you over time.

Meeting someone is important. Staying connected is where things usually get interesting. One reason follow-up makes people uncomfortable is that many professionals associate it with sales. The phrase itself makes people uncomfortable. They immediately think about repetitive emails asking whether someone has made a decision or messages that begin with some version of “just checking in.”

Because that’s the image many people have in their minds, they avoid follow-up altogether. They don’t want to be annoying. They don’t want to come across as pushy. They don’t want to create an awkward interaction. This is where a lot of people get follow-up wrong. They assume it’s about getting a response. I think it’s more about keeping the conversation going and staying connected.

Think about the people you enjoy hearing from professionally. Chances are they aren’t only reaching out when they need something. They’re sharing an article that reminded them of a conversation you had. They’re congratulating you on a promotion. They’re introducing you to someone in their network. They’re reaching out after a conference presentation because they enjoyed what you had to say.

None of those interactions feel awkward because no one is asking for anything. They’re continuing a conversation that already started. This is where a lot of professionals get stuck. They treat networking like an event instead of a relationship. They focus on the conference and forget about the months that follow. They focus on the connection request and not the conversation that comes afterward. They focus on meeting someone and never take the next step.

Most relationships grow through a lot of small interactions that probably don’t seem important at the time. They’re built through conversations, introductions, shared experiences, comments on LinkedIn, quick emails, lunches, coffee meetings and occasional check-ins. None of those things feels like a big deal when it happens. Over time, though, they help people remember you, get to know you and feel comfortable reaching out when an opportunity comes up.

One of the things I love about LinkedIn is that it makes staying in touch so much easier than it used to be. Years ago, maintaining a professional network took much more effort. Today, LinkedIn tells you when someone changes jobs, receives an award, publishes an article or speaks at a conference. Every one of those updates gives you a reason to reach out.

A quick congratulations message takes less than a minute. A thoughtful comment on someone’s post takes even less time. Sharing an article with someone who would find it useful doesn’t require much effort. Those small actions help keep relationships active and help people remember you.

The people who are best at networking aren’t necessarily the ones who meet the most people. They’re often the ones who stay connected to the people they already know. If someone mentioned they were speaking at a conference, ask them how it went. If someone told you they were hiring, check in a few months later and see how the search turned out. If you come across an article that relates to a conversation you’ve had, send it their way. If two people in your network should know each other, make the introduction.

More importantly, pay attention. Most people are so focused on making an impression that they forget to listen. Meanwhile, the people who build strong professional relationships tend to remember things. They remember what someone was working on, what challenges they mentioned, where they hoped to take their career or what goals they were trying to accomplish. Those details create natural reasons to reconnect later without feeling forced or awkward.

Many professionals underestimate how much opportunity already exists within their network. They’re constantly looking for the next person to meet while overlooking relationships they’ve already started building. Meanwhile, some of their future clients, referral sources, speaking opportunities and career opportunities may already be sitting in their LinkedIn connections, email contacts and professional network.

I’ve seen this happen repeatedly throughout my career. Someone reconnects with a former colleague and ends up with a referral. A casual conversation turns into a speaking opportunity. A connection made years ago suddenly becomes relevant because someone’s needs have changed. In many cases, the opportunity didn’t come from meeting someone new. It came from staying connected to someone they already knew.

That’s one of the reasons I think people should look at networking a little differently. Meeting new people is important, but a lot of the value comes from the relationships you continue to build afterward. The strongest professional relationships aren’t built through a single lunch, one conference or one LinkedIn message. They’re built through conversations, introductions, shared experiences and staying in touch.

The next time you’re thinking about networking, spend less time worrying about how many new people you need to meet and more time thinking about the people already in your network. Most people spend so much time looking for the next connection that they overlook relationships they’ve already started building. Meeting someone is important, but it’s rarely the end goal. The conversations, introductions, referrals and opportunities people are looking for usually come from relationships that have been nurtured over time.

Stay in Touch! Connect with me on LinkedIn,  ThreadsYouTubeInstagramsign up for my email list and follow my blog. Obtain a copy of my LinkedIn Secrets guide. Sign up for my personal branding summer school course. Sign up for my LinkedIn Mastermind.