Networking · 5 min read

How to Ask for Referrals Without Sounding Desperate

Practical approaches for networking and requesting referrals professionally.

Key takeaways

  • Building relationships first
  • Outreach message examples
  • Follow-up etiquette
  • Common mistakes

Build the relationship before the ask

Referrals convert far better than cold applications, but they work because of trust. Lead with genuine interest — engage with someone's work, ask a thoughtful question, or reconnect before you ask for anything.

When you do ask, make it specific and easy to say yes to: name the role, share why you're a fit, and attach your resume so they don't have to chase details.

Outreach message examples

  • Warm contact: 'Hi [name], I saw [company] is hiring a [role]. Given my work on [X], I think I'd be a strong fit — would you be open to referring me, or pointing me to the right person?'
  • Reconnect: 'Hi [name], it's been a while since [context]. I'm exploring [role type] roles — would you have 10 minutes to share how things are at [company]?'
  • Always include the role link and your resume.

Follow-up etiquette

  • Give it 4–6 business days before a single, polite follow-up.
  • Make the follow-up easy to ignore without guilt.
  • Thank people regardless of outcome — and close the loop later.

Common mistakes

  • Asking strangers for referrals with no context.
  • Sending long, vague messages that create work for the other person.
  • Following up too often or too aggressively.
  • Never reciprocating or saying thanks.