Let’s say this plainly: most networking events don’t produce clients.
They produce coffee, business cards, and the illusion of momentum.
Business owners love networking because it feels productive and safe. No rejection. No hard asks. No real accountability. Just conversations with people who are also trying to sell something.
But buyers don’t behave that way.
Real clients come from clarity and positioning, not proximity.
They come from:
They come from trust built over time, not handshakes collected in bulk.
Networking is not a strategy. At best, it’s a support activity. At worst, it’s a distraction that keeps you busy while revenue stays flat.
Here’s what actually works:
When your message is sharp, people come to you. When it isn’t, you chase rooms hoping someone notices.
Stop asking, “What events should I attend?”
Start asking, “Where does my ideal client already trust information?”
That’s where real clients come from.