How to Grow Your Marketing Network (Without Feeling Salesy)

Want to meet marketers? Go where marketers hang out.

If you’re not sure what events are worth it, here’s our curated list of the top marketing conferences to join this year (Spoiler: Spotlight is top of the list).

Try groups like Superpath, Demand Curve, or Online Geniuses on Slack or Discord. Find communities that fit your niche. For example, if you work in SEO, then Women in Tech SEO is a great option.

Cohort-based learning experiences are goldmines for new connections. Again, if you’re working in SEO, the Semrush Bootcamp is the perfect place. 

To avoid spreading yourself too thin you’ll need to filter what spaces help you achieve your networking goals.

What to consider

Ask yourself

What you’re looking for

Shared context

Do they “get” my world?

Aligned roles, challenges, jargon

Value exchange

Are people helpful?

A give-and-take, not just promo

New perspectives

Is this stretching me?

People outside your usual circle

Deep insights

Am I learning anything new?

Substance > surface

Consistency

Do people return often?

Relationships need repetition

Format fit

Will I stick with this?

Async, in-person, Zoom (what you like best)

You don’t need to be everywhere. Just pick one or two places that make sense for you and show up consistently. 

 

That’s how people start to recognize your name, how relationships get built, and how opportunities start to appear.

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 Marketers networking at the Spotlight Conference

 

5. Give Before You Ask

We alluded to this earlier, but it’s worth driving home: relationships start with value, not with “Can I ask a favor?”

 

If your first message is a favor, pitch, or a one-sided ask, you’re not going to get very far. 

People can tell when you’re only in it for yourself. They’re much more likely to help when you’ve shown curiosity, interest, or support first. 

 

The fix? Give before you ask.

What Does “Giving” Actually Look Like?

Giving might sound difficult, but it can be incredibly simple. The key is to be sincere. 

 

  • Share their work – post a link to their article, reference their insights or a quote from them in a blog you’re writing
  • Send something useful – think “saw this and thought of you.” Whether it’s a podcast, a post, or related to something they’ve shared recently
  • Make an intro – if someone in your network could help them, then offer a warm, mutual intro 
  • Show up regularly – attend their session or reply to their posts on a regular basis, not just a few days before you need to ask for something

 

When you give first, you’re inherently telling the other person you’re paying attention, value what they have to say, and aren’t just “after” something. People want to help those who have shown up for them.

6. Reach Out the Right Way

You’ve found the right space. You’ve added value. Now it’s time to actually start a conversation.

 

This is where a lot of people hesitate. They’re worried about bothering someone or sounding awkward. But if your message is personal, relevant, and low-pressure, it doesn’t feel intrusive. It feels thoughtful.

 

A good message is:

  • Personal – it’s clearly written for them, not copied and pasted
  • Specific – it references something you saw, read, or noticed
  • Open-ended – it invites a reply that’s more than just “yes” or “thanks”

 

Sending a compliment with a dead-end is a common mistake people make when networking.

 

Instead of:

“Loved your post about content reporting–thanks for sharing!”

(Which leaves little room for interaction.)

 

Try:

“Loved your post about content reporting. I’m curious, did your team always track it that way, or did you evolve the metrics over time?”

 

Here are some more templates to help you do this:

 

If you’re reconnecting after a while:

 

“Hey [Name], hope you’re doing great! I was thinking about our time at [Company/Event]. I’d love to catch up sometime if you’re up for it. How have things been going at [Company]?”

 

If you’re reaching out with a specific reason:

 

“Hi [Name], I saw your recent post about [topic]—really insightful, thanks for sharing. I’m doing something similar and thought it’d be fun to swap notes. Would you be interested in catching up sometime next week?”

 

If you’re just starting a new path:

 

“Hey [Name], I’m just getting started with [marketing project] and immediately thought of you. I’d love to hear how you’d approach it if you have time for a quick chat.”

 

Sometimes the conversation won’t take off right away. That’s ok, you’re planting a seed. When your name pops up again next time (in a thread, comment, DM), it won’t feel so unfamiliar. 

7. Stay in Touch

You don’t need a master plan (or email lists) for staying in touch. But you do need to show up more than once.

 

Another typical mistake people make when building their network is that they’ll vanish. One message, one comment, one coffee–then they’re gone for months on end.

 

If you want your network to work for you, you have to keep it warm.

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Marketers networking at the Spotlight Conference

Make sure you recognize when it’s time to:

  • Reconnect after a long gap
  • Congratulate someone on a milestone
  • Share an event or opportunity
  • Follow up after a great conversation (even if it feels long ago)

 

A simple way to make people feel like they are staying in touch with you is to share what you’re up to. Post quick wins, lessons learned, or what projects you’re working on LinkedIn. 

 

Sometimes it doesn’t take direct outreach for people to get to know you. Plus, they’ll reach out if they relate or can help out. Staying in touch works both ways after all.

Build A Marketing Network You’re Proud To Be Part Of

“Networking” has a branding problem. It sounds like awkward coffee chats, fake small talk, and inboxes full of cold DMs. 

 

But, networking in marketing isn’t about schmoozing or self-promotion. At its best, it’s just about showing up with curiosity, generosity, and the willingness to be real.

 

You don’t need to be everywhere or know everyone. You just need the right people, in the right places, where real conversations happen. 

 

That will help open doors to new opportunities, fresh ideas, and meaningful connections—the kind that fuel long-term success.

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