Day 12 Topic 10
You don’t need to “network”—you need to help people and be easy to help back. The fastest careers are built on small, consistent touches with lots of humans. Not just your inner circle—weak ties (acquaintances) are especially powerful for finding work. That’s not lore; LinkedIn’s at-scale experiment with ~20M users showed weak ties causally boost job mobility. Granovetter called it in 1973; the data now backs it.
Why It Matters
- Weak ties move you. The “friend-of-a-friend” layer exposes you to new gigs and info your close circle doesn’t see. It’s not about schmoozing—it’s reach.
- Orchestra & theatre ecosystems are human. Artistic planning teams, MDs, stage managers, and ADs make calls every week. If you’re helpful and remembered, you get “try this person” referrals. (The League of American Orchestras organizes these functions—know who does what.)
The Networking System (simple, repeatable)
1) Pack your kit
- One-line promise (“Lyric soprano for premieres & oratorio”).
- 45–60s reel (unlisted link), EPK page, and two upcoming dates.
- Two short emails pre-written: intro ask and thanks + takeaway + clip.
2) Make a week list (six names)
- 2 weak ties (friend-of-friend).
- 2 peers you can help this month.
- 2 buyers (conductor, casting, presenter). Keep a tiny CRM (sheet): date, context, next action.
3) At the event (script you can say)
- “Hi, I’m [Name], [lane in 5 words]. I loved your [specific]. If useful, I can send a 45-sec clip + a one-pager.” Specific, brief, useful. Then let them talk.
4) Within 24 hours: follow up once
Short, concrete, and skimmable beats long and gushy. (General professional guidance favors 24-hour follow-ups.) Use a precise subject line; front-load keywords; skip emojis—UX research shows they don’t help opens and can hurt sentiment.
5) One nudge a week later, then archive
If they reply, continue. If not, bless and move. Keep the water warm; don’t boil it.
Templates (steal these)
A) “Intro ask” to a conductor / artistic planner
Subject: Local soprano for spring oratorio — 45-sec reel inside
Hi [Name], I’m a [voice type] in [city]; I focus on [lane]. Here’s a 45-sec reel and a one-page EPK. If a [Messiah/Requiem/pops] slot opens, I’d love to be considered—happy to swing by for a 10-minute hearing. Either way, cheering on your season.
— [Name] | [mobile] | [site]
(Yes, “artistic planning” is the function that books soloists—learn who holds it in each orchestra.)
B) “Thanks + takeaway + clip” (after you meet)
Subject: Lovely to meet you at [event] — 45-sec clip
Thanks for your note on [specific takeaway]. Here’s the clip I mentioned ([role/piece], :45). If helpful, I can send a 35-min program one-sheet with two open dates. Either way, wishing you an easy tech week.
C) Informational chat ask (director/casting)
Subject: 15-minute chat about [company/show focus]?
I admire [specific production] and your [process note]. If you have 15 minutes, I’d be grateful for one piece of advice on [specific question]. If not, no worries—thanks for the work you’re making. (Direct, respectful requests beat vague “pick your brain.”)
Email that gets read (micro-rules)
- Subject lines: front-load the useful words; ~40 characters plays well; don’t repeat your name (it’s in “From:”).
- No emojis or clickbait. In tests, emojis in subject lines don’t improve opens and can backfire.
- One ask per note; 75–120 words; 1 link max.
- Make the next step trivial. Offer a hearing, a date, or a one-sheet.
Opera • MT • Directors: who to meet (and how)
- Opera singers: conductors, coaches, chorusmasters, artistic administrators, YAP directors. (Look on company sites for “Artistic Planning/Administration.”)
- MT performers: MDs, directors, choreographers, casting associates, accompanists at open calls.
- Stage directors: literary managers, ADs, production managers; submit packets (5–8 min reel + one-page “process & outcomes”), then ask to assist or observe.
Use the Topic 6 website CTA to turn interest into bookings.
Cadence (keep it light, keep it moving)
- Mon: pick 6 names and send 2 intros.
- Wed: go to something (studio class, reading, recital).
- Thu: send 2 follow-ups; log outcomes.
- Fri: one gratitude note + one peer assist (share a pianist, a venue contact, or a cut).
- Monthly: coffee or Zoom with one weak tie. (Yes, weak ties matter.)
Common Mistakes (and easy fixes)
- Vague intros. Fix: one-line promise + specific ask.
- Heavy attachments. Fix: link a :45 reel; keep the PDF EPK on your site.
- Three follow-ups. Fix: one follow-up after a week, then archive.
- No subject-line craft. Fix: front-load the useful words; stay under ~40 chars; skip emojis.
Pro Tips
- Be the person who forwards a pianist contact, a room lead, or a grant link. (Giving first builds durable networks; see Adam Grant’s research on givers vs. takers.)
- Stand near the exit. You’ll meet everyone on their way out—quick, low-pressure hellos.
- Name memory hack: repeat their name twice naturally in the first 10 seconds.
- “Close the loop.” When a referral helps, report back with thanks; they’ll help again.
Assignments (ship this week)
- Write your two emails (intro ask; thanks + takeaway + clip). Load them as templates.
- Build your week list (6 names) and send two intro notes today.
- Go to one event and do three specific, brief hellos.
- Follow up within 24 hours with your thanks + takeaway + clip note. Track replies.
References & Further Reading — Topic 10 (Networking)
- Science (2022) — A Causal Test of the Strength of Weak Ties (LinkedIn experiments with ~20M users): https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.abl4476 ; open PDF mirror: https://gwern.net/doc/sociology/technology/2022-rajkumar.pdf ; PubMed summary: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36107999/
- Granovetter (1973) — The Strength of Weak Ties (classic paper, PDF): https://snap.stanford.edu/class/cs224w-readings/granovetter73weakties.pdf
- League of American Orchestras — Artistic Planning overview (who plans programs and hires): https://americanorchestras.org/learn/artistic-planning/
- Nielsen Norman Group — Email subject lines (front-load keywords; ~40 characters): https://www.nngroup.com/articles/email-subject-lines/ ; Emojis in subject lines (don’t help, can hurt): https://www.nngroup.com/articles/emojis-email/
- Follow-up timing — Professional guidance to send within 24 hours: https://fellow.app/blog/meetings/meeting-follow-up-emails-and-examples/ ; additional etiquette overview: https://www.indeed.com/career-advice/career-development/networking-follow-up-email
- Asking for a conversation — Forbes: effective informational-interview request email (specific, brief): https://www.forbes.com/sites/josephliu/2024/01/10/how-to-write-an-effective-informational-interview-request-email/ ; Yale OCS sample emails: https://ocs.yale.edu/resources/sample-emails-requesting-an-informational-interview/
- Giving first — Adam Grant, In the Company of Givers and Takers (HBR): https://hbr.org/2013/04/in-the-company-of-givers-and-takers ; “Leaders Who Get How to Give”: https://hbr.org/2017/01/leaders-who-get-how-to-give
Work begets work. Your job is to make helping you easy—and to help first.
Tell me what you think about this and what you want to hear next!