5 Reasons In-Person Networking Still Matters in a Remote World META DESCRIPTION: Remote work changed everything — except the way real professional relationships are built. Here’s why showing up in person still changes everything.
Introduction A few years ago, the working world changed overnight. Video calls replaced meetings. Slack replaced hallway conversations. We adapted fast — and in a lot of ways, we adapted well. But something quieter got lost along the way. Recently, I attended an event for the Quebec Produce Marketing Association. Within the first hour, I’d had three conversations that simply wouldn’t have happened any other way — not over email, not on a Zoom call, not through a LinkedIn message. The casual setting, the shared energy in the room, the way people open up when they’re not staring at a screen. It reminded me of something I think a lot of us have been missing since the shift to remote work. In-person networking didn’t become less important when the world went remote. It became harder to access — which made it more valuable than ever. Here are five reasons why showing up in person still changes everything, and how to make the most of it when you do.
Remote Work Quietly Stalled Our Networks When we moved to remote and hybrid work, most of us focused on what we gained: flexibility, no commute, fewer pointless meetings. What we didn’t notice as easily was what we lost. The serendipitous connection. The coffee-line conversation that turns into a referral. The casual intro from a mutual colleague across the office. The after-work drink where you discover someone has exactly the expertise you’ve been looking for. These weren’t inefficiencies we were better off without. They were the moments where real professional relationships were born. And the tools that replaced in-person work — as good as they’ve gotten — haven’t been able to replicate them. Post-COVID, a lot of professionals found their networks quietly plateauing. The new connections weren’t forming at the same pace. The warm introductions were harder to come by. The relationships that drive careers forward were stalling because the environments that created them had disappeared. In-person events — industry gatherings, association mixers, conferences, local meetups — are one of the most direct ways to restart that engine.
Trust Builds Faster When You’re in the Same Room There’s a reason important first meetings still happen in person whenever possible. The research on this is consistent: non-verbal communication — eye contact, tone of voice, body language, the small signals we send without thinking — plays a massive role in how quickly we decide whether to trust someone. When you meet someone face-to-face, you’re not just exchanging information. You’re giving each other a read. You’re answering, subconsciously, the question that underlies every professional relationship: Is this someone I can work with? Is this someone I can count on? That assessment happens fast in person. Sometimes it happens in ten minutes over a drink at an industry event. It can take months — or never fully happen — through a screen. For professionals who rely on relationships to grow their business, that speed matters. A trusted contact built in an evening can open doors that a year of email follow-ups might not.
Casual Settings Create Conversations That Formal Ones Can’t There’s something about the atmosphere of a well-run industry event that changes the dynamic entirely. At the Quebec Produce Marketing Association event I attended, I found myself having real, unhurried conversations with people I’d previously only known through email chains or brief calls. In a relaxed setting — warm lighting, good energy, no agenda beyond connection — people showed up differently. They shared challenges they wouldn’t raise on a formal call. They asked genuine questions instead of polished ones. They were curious, not guarded. That’s not a small thing. Some of the most valuable professional intel — what’s actually working, what problems people are actually facing, where the real opportunities are — only surfaces in informal conversation. The casual setting lowers the transactional pressure and creates space for something more honest. If your professional relationships have mostly lived inside video calls and email threads, you might be surprised what changes when you meet the same people in a room.
Events Compress the Relationship Timeline Building a professional network online is absolutely possible. It’s just slow. A LinkedIn connection might turn into a real conversation after weeks of content engagement. An email introduction might take months to lead anywhere meaningful. Even with the best intentions, remote relationship-building moves at a crawl. In-person events compress all of that. In a single evening, you can have meaningful conversations with 5 to 10 people who might take a year to reach the same level of connection with online. The shared context of being at the same event — attending the same talks, laughing at the same moments, bonding over the same industry frustrations — creates a shortcut to familiarity that’s genuinely hard to manufacture any other way. For anyone who feels like their network has been in a holding pattern since the remote work shift, one well-chosen event can do more for your professional relationships than months of digital outreach.
Showing Up Signals Something Important Here’s something that often goes unsaid about in-person networking: the act of showing up carries its own message. In a world where it’s easier than ever to stay behind a screen, the people who choose to get in the room are signaling something. That they’re invested. That they take their professional relationships seriously. That they’re willing to do something slightly uncomfortable — walk into a room full of strangers, start a conversation, stay present — in service of building something real. That signal gets noticed. By potential clients. By referral partners. By colleagues who are deciding who they want to bring opportunities to. You don’t have to be the most outgoing person in the room. You don’t need a polished pitch or a stack of business cards. You just need to show up, ask good questions, and listen well. The rest tends to follow.
Conclusion: Get Back in the Room In a world where remote work has made it easy — maybe too easy — to avoid being in the same space as other people, showing up in person has never been more valuable. The professionals building the strongest networks right now aren’t the ones with the most followers or the best-optimized LinkedIn profiles. They’re the ones saying yes to the in-person invitation. The ones who understand that some conversations, and some trust, can only happen face-to-face. If you haven’t been to an industry event lately, consider this your nudge to find one and go. You might walk in not knowing what to expect — and walk out with the conversation that changes things. Have a networking story of your own? I’d love to hear it — drop it in the comments or reach out directly.