A Simple Networking System That Actually Works (Without Feeling Salesy)

Networking gets a bad reputation because most people treat it like a transaction. The alternative is simpler: build a small, reliable system that makes it easy for the right people to find you, understand you, and start a conversation. This post lays out the approach I use—and what I’m building here on jackfwicks.com. The goal: make it easy to say “yes” When someone lands on your site (or your LinkedIn), they’re trying to answer three questions fast: Who are you? What do you do? What should I do next? If any of those are unclear, you lose momentum. 1) Clarity beats cleverness Use plain language. A strong one-liner is more valuable than a “creative” bio. If you work across roles or industries, describe the problems you solve and the outcomes you drive. 2) Proof beats potential Don’t just say you’re good—show receipts. Projects, milestones, metrics, screenshots, write-ups. People trust what they can verify. 3) A next step beats “let’s connect” Make the next action obvious: a contact page, a calendar link, or a short “start here” note. Reduce friction and you’ll get more high-quality conversations. My 3-part networking loop Here’s the lightweight loop I try to run consistently. It’s designed for busy weeks and long-term compounding.
  • Share: publish one useful idea (a framework, a lesson learned, a teardown, a recommendation).
  • Signal: make it easy to see what I’m working on and what I’m open to (collaboration, roles, intros).
  • Support: reach out to 2–3 people/week with something specific—an insight, a resource, or a thoughtful intro.

Good networking isn’t “more outreach.” It’s better context, better follow-through, and fewer dead ends.

What you’ll find on jackfwicks.com I’m using this site as a home base—something I control, can update quickly, and can point people to without a long explanation. Over time you’ll see: Ideas Short, direct posts on systems, career moves, and building credibility without playing games. Achievements Highlights, outcomes, and the work behind them—so you can quickly see what I’ve shipped and learned. Contact A simple way to reach me for collaboration, speaking, or opportunities—without the back-and-forth. A quick prompt (if you want to try this today) If you only do one thing this week, do this: write a 5-sentence “start here” note and put it somewhere visible. Use this template:
  • I help [who] with [problem].
  • My focus right now is [topic/project].
  • Recent proof: [1–2 outcomes].
  • I’m open to [collaboration/roles/intros].
  • Best way to reach me: contact.
If you want to compare notes or collaborate, reach out—tell me what you’re building and what “a win” looks like for you.