Best Way To Get A New Job
By Tim Paradis, Business Insider, May 11, 2026
Networking can feel awkward. It can also be one of the best ways to land a job right now. Yet, if you’re busy actually doing your job, it may feel like one more obligation competing for your attention. So, you like a few posts on LinkedIn and move on.
Unfortunately, that’s not going to cut it, workplace observers say. In a job market that has cooled for industries like tech — and where applying to jobs online can seem downright fruitless — making connections matters. Professional elbow-rubbing is becoming more important, partly because white-collar employees, in particular, don’t hold the same bargaining power they enjoyed during the pandemic-era hiring frenzy. So, landing a new role can require more effort. Plus, as AI threatens to take on more work — and as companies pump more money into the technology — some employers are becoming choosier about the people they hire and keep. Add in economic X factors such as war, energy shocks, and inflation and you’ve got more reasons to treat networking like healthy eating or hitting the gym — and not something you do only in January.
“Networking is more about farming than it is about hunting. It’s about cultivating relationships with people,” said Ivan Misner, the founder of BNI, a business networking organization focused on referrals. That’s why he encourages people to start connecting with people before they need a job. Misner, a longtime networking evangelist, compares relationship-building to the old saying that the best time to plant a tree was 20 years ago — and the second-best time is today.
“For those employees who have not planted an oak tree, who have not been out networking, they need to go do it now,” he said.
“The thing that is going to get you to the front of the line when jobs are scarce is interpersonal relationships with people who are willing to go above and beyond and expend political capital to help you,” she said. Clark said that relying too much on social media for networking can be dangerous because it’s often a poor substitute for building deeper connections over time. “It gives you the illusion of productive networking. It gives you the illusion of connection,” she said. Instead, Clark advises workers and job seekers to look for more “bespoke” ways of connecting. It might be as simple as sending someone you know a text once in a while without expecting a response. She said that sharing something that reminds you of that person, or simply saying hello, can make a difference. “As long as you’re friendly, you’re thoughtful, you’re relevant, you’re not seeking something from them — most people will be very happy to hear from you,” Clark said. The gold standard, however, remains spending time with someone IRL, she said. When you don’t know someone well — and especially when there’s a power imbalance — it’s best to make a single small ask. That means you probably shouldn’t request a coffee date, a job referral, and a testimonial quote, Clark said. Instead, she said, think about what would be the “highest and best use” of how someone might help you and what feels appropriate as an ask.
Finding ways to stand out
Networking is also important because as piles of résumés stack up for an open job, sifting through them, even with the help of applicant-tracking software, can be a heavy lift for busy managers, said Gorick Ng, a Harvard University career advisor who’s the author of the book “The Unspoken Rules“.
Recent interesting articles pertaining to how best to manage one’s career:
There’s really only one way to get a new job these days (Business Insider, May 11, 2026)
How To Reinvent Your Career After A Major Setback (Forbes, May 21, 2026)
AI Might Not Bring On A Job Crisis, But A Workforce ‘Mismatch’ Could (Forbes, May 21, 2026)
Networking Isn’t Dead. The Old Version Just Doesn’t Work in the AI Era (Inc., May 24, 2026)
How To Grow Professionally When Your Job Isn’t Growing You (Forbes, May 24, 2026)
Networking is important. So is doing it right (Business Insider, May 24, 2026)
The secret to getting assigned high-value projects (Fast Company, May 24, 2026)
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Leadership Capital
Other recent interesting articles pertaining to how best to hire and manage great career:
The Ugly Side of Entrepreneurship (Inc. May 7, 2026)
The Hardest Part Of Leadership Is Winning Over The Team, (Inc, May 10, 2026)
5 Habits That Separate Great Managers From The Rest (Forbes, May 12, 2026)
3 Red Flags That Predict A Bad Hire Every Time (Inc, May 14, 2026)
How People Actually Get to the C-Suite in S&P 500 Companies (HBR, May 22, 2026)
5 leadership resets ambitious executives need now (Fast Company, May 26, 2026)
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Mortgage Capital
Recent interesting articles pertaining to the mortgage industry:
Mortgage Myths Persist: Buyers Misjudge Credit Scores, Down Payments (Mortgage Point, May 4, 2026)
Kevin Warsh Sworn In As Fed Pres (MortgagePoint, May 22, 2026)
Why servicing is so important to mortgage originators now (NMN, May 26, 2026)
Securitization standards evolve for mortgages, home equity (NMN, May 26, 2026)
Basel III relief could turn mortgage bankers into bank owners (NMN, May 21, 2026)
By Tallmadge Hill
May 29, 2026

