Table of Contents
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Introduction — Why Most People Miss the Real Point of Networking
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Curiosity Beats Desperation: The Psychology Behind Great Questions
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The Silent Trap: Why Talking Too Much Pushes People Away
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What Makes a “Good Question” in Networking?
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The Trust Formula: Ask → Listen → Connect → Follow Up
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The Science of Being Memorable — and Why Questions Work
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30 Powerful Networking Questions That Open Doors
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How to Keep a Conversation Flowing Without Forcing It
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Questions That Destroy Networking — Avoid These at All Costs
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How to Use Great Questions Online (LinkedIn, Email & Messaging)
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Real-World Scenarios: Questions You Can Use Immediately
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Final Takeaway — The Person Who Listens Wins
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Additional Resources
1. Introduction — Why Most People Miss the Real Point of Networking
Most people think networking is about talking — talking about accomplishments, talking about goals, talking about what they want.
But here’s the truth:
Networking isn’t about impressing people. It’s about connecting with them.
And nothing builds connection faster than asking good questions.
People are naturally drawn to those who show genuine interest in them. When you ask thoughtful questions, you communicate curiosity rather than desperation. You make the other person feel seen, valued, and respected — and when someone feels that way, they want to stay connected to you.
2. Curiosity Beats Desperation: The Psychology Behind Great Questions
When someone leads a conversation with:
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“Are you hiring?”
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“Can you refer me?”
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“Can you help me find a job?”
They send a message — I need something from you.
When someone leads with curiosity:
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“How did you get started in your role?”
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“What do you love most about what you do?”
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“What challenges are you solving right now?”
They send a very different message — I want to learn from you.
Curiosity builds confidence and trust.
Desperation builds distance.
This is why asking good questions is more powerful than trying to impress someone.
3. The Silent Trap: Why Talking Too Much Pushes People Away
Everyone has met someone who turns a conversation into a monologue. They list every project, every award, every achievement, and every personal story — before you can even get a word in.
It doesn’t build rapport.
It doesn’t build trust.
It builds exhaustion.
People don’t remember the person who talked the most. They remember the person who made them talk — and feel valued while doing it.
4. What Makes a “Good Question” in Networking?
A good networking question has three qualities:
| Poor Question | Good Question |
|---|---|
| “Are you hiring?” | “What roles or skills are becoming most valuable in your industry right now?” |
| “Can you help me?” | “What advice would you give someone trying to break into your field?” |
| “Can we book a meeting?” | “What would be the best next step for me to learn more about your work?” |
A good question:
✔ Shows curiosity
✔ Invites storytelling
✔ Gives the other person confidence and importance
And what happens when people feel valued?
They open doors.
5. The Trust Formula: Ask → Listen → Connect → Follow Up
The power isn’t just in asking the question. It’s in the sequence:
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Ask a thoughtful question
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Listen — really listen
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Connect something they said to your own experience
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Follow up afterward and reference your conversation
That formula builds trust — naturally and consistently.
6. The Science of Being Memorable — and Why Questions Work
Studies in social psychology (including those published by Harvard Business Review) show that people like those who let them talk about themselves.
Reference: https://hbr.org/2017/07/to-be-better-liked-be-a-better-listener
Why?
Because talking about ourselves activates the same pleasure centers in the brain as food and money.
So when you ask good questions, people literally feel better around you.
7. 30 Powerful Networking Questions That Open Doors
Here are ready-to-use questions for real conversations — in person or online.
Career-Focused Questions
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What’s the most exciting part of your role right now?
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How did you get started in your industry?
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What’s something you wish you knew earlier in your career?
Project-Focused Questions
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What are you working on that you’re excited about right now?
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What challenge is taking the most focus for your team this year?
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What skills are becoming most valuable in your field?
Leadership-Focused Questions
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What separates good employees from great ones in your organization?
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What qualities do you look for when hiring?
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What’s one decision you’re glad you made?
Personal Insight Questions
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What inspires you in your work?
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Who has helped shape your career the most?
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What advice would you give someone trying to follow a path similar to yours?
These questions create conversation — and opportunity.
8. How to Keep a Conversation Flowing Without Forcing It
Here’s the simple three-step formula:
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Ask
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Listen
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Build on their answer
Example:
They say: “We’re expanding into the U.S. next year.”
You say: “That’s exciting — what led the company to expand now?”
It’s organic. It’s genuine. It keeps momentum.
9. Questions That Destroy Networking — Avoid These at All Costs
❌ “Are you hiring right now?”
❌ “Can you get me a job?”
❌ “What can you do for me?”
❌ “Can you look at my résumé?” (too early)
These questions make the other person feel used and pressured, not valued.
Great networking leads to opportunities — after trust is built.
10. How to Use Great Questions Online (LinkedIn, Email & Messaging)
A powerful LinkedIn outreach sequence might look like this:
Message 1: Hi __, I’ve been following your content on __. I really enjoyed your post about __.
Message 2 (after 3–5 days): Curious — what challenges or opportunities are you most focused on in your role this quarter?
You’re not selling.
You’re not begging.
You’re building.
11. Real-World Scenarios: Questions You Can Use Immediately
At a networking event
“What brought you here today?”
After a panel discussion
“What was the biggest lesson you learned while working on that project?”
With a hiring manager
“What skills make someone stand out on your team?”
With someone more experienced
“What do you wish more people understood about your industry?”
With a peer
“What are you working on right now that excites you?”
These questions trigger conversations that naturally lead to job referrals, mentorship, collaboration, and opportunities.
12. Final Takeaway — The Person Who Listens Wins
Networking isn’t about being the most interesting person in the room.
It’s about being the most interested.
Ask good questions.
Listen deeply.
Follow up thoughtfully.
People remember how you made them feel — and the person who makes others feel heard will always be the person they want to help.
13. Additional Resources
Suggested resources to include as hyperlinks when uploading the blog:
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Harvard Business Review — Why Listening Makes You More Likable
https://hbr.org/2017/07/to-be-better-liked-be-a-better-listener -
LinkedIn Official Networking Guides
https://www.linkedin.com/help/linkedin -
HubSpot List of Professional Networking Questions
https://blog.hubspot.com/sales/networking-questions -
JobsHiringNearMe.ca — Local Job Search Platform
https://jobshiringnearme.ca
