Top 10 Events You Can’t Miss at SwWeek


Before SwWeek: Plan with Intention

  1. Clarify your objectives

    • Decide what you want: hiring, partnerships, sales leads, mentorship, or learning.
    • Prioritize 3–5 specific goals to focus your time (for example: meet two potential partners; learn about three vendor solutions).
  2. Research attendees and sessions

    • Study the agenda and speaker list. Identify high-impact sessions and the speakers/panels you want to engage with.
    • Use the event app, LinkedIn, and company websites to compile a short list of people and organizations to meet.
  3. Prepare a concise introduction and value statement

    • Create a 20–30 second “meeting opener” that states who you are, what you do, and why you’re at SwWeek.
    • Prepare a 1–2 sentence value proposition tailored to your top objectives—what you can offer someone in a follow-up conversation.
  4. Set up your outreach in advance

    • Message a few target attendees or speakers on LinkedIn or the event app to request short meetups (coffee, 10–15 minute chat). Mention a specific topic or session to make the ask relevant.
    • Book any limited spots (workshops, dinners) early.

At SwWeek: Work the Room Smartly

  1. Prioritize quality over quantity

    • Aim for meaningful conversations rather than maximum handshakes. A 10–15 minute focused chat with a relevant person is often more valuable than multiple rushed handoffs.
  2. Use sessions as conversation starters

    • Arrive early and sit where you can be approached. After talks, ask thoughtful questions that show engagement—this makes it easy to transition into a one-on-one chat.
  3. Lean on micro-intros and context

    • When meeting someone new, reference shared context (the session you both attended, a recent keynote, or a mutual connection). Context shortens rapport building.
  4. Practice active listening and curiosity

    • Ask open questions about the other person’s work and challenges. People remember those who listen well. Keep notes (digital or a small notebook) about key points or follow-up actions.
  5. Exchange contact details efficiently

    • Use a digital business card, LinkedIn QR code, or the event app to swap details quickly. If you use paper cards, jot a one-line reminder on the back before putting it away.
  6. Use small group settings deliberately

    • Breakout sessions, roundtables, and meals are great for deeper engagement. Contribute useful insights, but avoid dominating the conversation—helpful balance builds rapport.
  7. Be memorable with a tiny, relevant takeaway

    • Offer a short, actionable tip, a relevant resource link, or an intro to someone you know. This positions you as generous and solutions-oriented.
  8. Manage energy and time

    • Block small breaks to recharge. Networking is draining; staying fresh keeps interactions positive and authentic.

After SwWeek: Turn Meetings into Momentum

  1. Follow up within 48 hours

    • Send personalized follow-ups referencing your conversation and a next step (share a resource, propose a short call, or introduce them to someone). Include a one-line reminder to jog their memory.
  2. Organize and prioritize follow-ups

    • Categorize contacts by potential value and urgency (e.g., immediate follow-up, add to newsletter, keep for later). Use a simple spreadsheet or CRM tags.
  3. Deliver on promises quickly

    • If you promised a resource or an introduction, do it promptly. Reliability converts a brief meeting into trust.
  4. Add value before asking for favors

    • Send useful articles, event recaps, or product notes that match their interests. This keeps the relationship warm and positions you as helpful rather than transactional.
  5. Schedule next steps with clear outcomes

    • When proposing calls or demos, suggest specific agendas and time windows. Include an expected duration (15–30 minutes) to make agreeing easier.

Networking Tactics for Different Goals

  1. For job seekers

    • Target hiring managers and company reps; ask about team needs and hiring timelines. Bring a concise story about a relevant accomplishment. Follow up with a tailored resume and a 60–90 second written pitch.
  2. For founders and startups

    • Focus on potential partners, early customers, and savvy investors. Use demo-ready materials and be ready with a one-slide pitch (problem, solution, traction). Ask for specific feedback and next-step intros.
  3. For established professionals and executives

    • Seek high-level peers for strategic discussions. Share sector insights and ask big-picture questions about trends and risks. Offer to host a small post-event gathering to deepen select relationships.
  4. For recruiters and salespeople

    • Build rapport with a research-backed approach—briefly reference the prospect’s challenges. Offer value immediately (benchmark data, case studies) and request permission to follow up with a tailored proposal.

Use Technology Wisely

  1. Event apps and LinkedIn

    • Use the official app for scheduling, session notes, and attendee profiles. Connect on LinkedIn with a short personalized note referencing where you met.
  2. Note-taking and CRM

    • Use a simple CRM (HubSpot free, Notion, Airtable) or even a dedicated notebook. Capture who they are, what they need, next steps, and follow-up dates.
  3. Calendar blocks and automation

    • Use calendar templates for follow-up meeting invites and email templates for common outreach to save time without sounding robotic.

Mindset and Etiquette

  1. Be generous and curious

    • Approach conversations with the intent to learn and help. People respond more positively to authentic curiosity than to hard selling.
  2. Respect time and boundaries

    • Ask if it’s a good time before diving into a deeper conversation. If someone is in-between sessions, offer to schedule a short follow-up.
  3. Maintain professionalism online and offline

    • Keep social media interactions polite and constructive. If someone declines to connect, be graceful and leave the door open.
  4. Remember inclusion

    • Invite quieter attendees into conversations, and be mindful of giving everyone space to contribute. Diverse connections often yield unexpected benefits.

Quick Checklist (Pre/During/Post)

  • Pre: Set 3 goals, research 10 targets, craft a 30s intro, schedule 2 pre-event meetups.
  • During: Prioritize 10 quality conversations, take notes, exchange contacts digitally, give at least one useful resource.
  • Post: Follow up in 48 hours, log contacts, deliver any promised items within a week, schedule next-step calls.

Networking at SwWeek is a multiplier: the depth of your planning and follow-through determines how much value you extract. Treat each interaction as the start of a relationship—small, thoughtful actions before, during, and after the event compound into meaningful professional gains.

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