Career By Gregor Spielmann

Building a Professional Network When You Move Every Few Months

One of the unspoken costs of location independence is the constant rebuilding of your social and professional circle. You meet interesting people, form connections, then move on. After a year, you have contacts in 8 cities and deep relationships in none. This doesn't have to be the pattern. Here's how to build a professional network that compounds rather than resets every time you change cities.

The Loneliness Problem Nobody Talks About

Let's start with the uncomfortable truth: most digital nomads are lonelier than they admit. The Instagram version of location independence -- working from a beachside cafe surrounded by interesting people -- is not the daily reality. The daily reality is often: wake up in an apartment where you know nobody, work alone for 8 hours, maybe go to a restaurant alone, go to sleep. Repeat.

This isn't a personal failing. It's a structural consequence of frequent relocation. Building relationships takes time and repeated contact. When you're in a city for 4-6 weeks, you're constantly in the "acquaintance" phase -- past small talk, not yet at genuine connection. Then you leave and start over.

The impact on professional life is real:

Acknowledging this is step one. Step two is building systems that counteract it.

Coworking Communities, Local Meetups, and Online Communities

Coworking spaces are the most accessible networking entry point in any city. But not all coworking spaces foster community equally. Generic hot-desk spaces (WeWork, Regus) are typically transactional -- people come to work, not to connect. Smaller, independent spaces with community managers, regular events, and a stable membership base are where relationships actually form.

How to maximize coworking for networking:

Local meetups are underrated. Every meaningful city has tech meetups, startup events, or industry gatherings. Check Meetup.com, Eventbrite, Luma, and local Facebook groups. In Lisbon, there's a vibrant startup scene with weekly events. Medellin has a growing tech community with regular meetups. Valencia has several coworking-hosted events. These gatherings attract a mix of locals and expats, giving you access to a more diverse network than coworking alone.

Online communities provide continuity across moves. Key ones:

The common thread: you have to be proactive. In a traditional office, networking happens passively -- you meet people by proximity. In the nomad life, every professional connection requires deliberate effort.

LinkedIn as Your Anchor Regardless of Location

LinkedIn is the one professional platform that follows you everywhere. While your physical location changes, your LinkedIn profile is your consistent professional identity. Most nomads underutilize it dramatically.

Profile optimization for location-independent professionals:

Content strategy: Post regularly about your professional domain, not about being a nomad. Share insights from your work, comment thoughtfully on others' posts, and publish articles about your expertise. The goal is to be known for your professional value, with location independence as an interesting background detail, not the main story. Professionals who post primarily about digital nomad life attract other nomads. Professionals who post about their expertise attract clients.

Maintaining connections across moves:

The compound effect: after 2-3 years of consistent LinkedIn presence combined with in-person connections across cities, you build a network that's both global and deep. People in Lisbon know you, people in Medellin know you, people in Berlin know you -- and they all see your professional activity online between visits.

Travel Friends vs. Professional Relationships: Knowing the Difference

Not every connection is a professional one, and conflating the two leads to a network that feels large but produces nothing.

Travel friends are people you bond with over shared circumstances: being in the same coworking space, the same hostel, the same city at the same time. These connections can be genuine and enjoyable, but they're typically based on proximity and shared lifestyle, not shared professional interests. When you leave the city, most of these connections fade to occasional Instagram interactions. That's okay -- not every relationship needs to be strategic.

Professional relationships are connections where there's mutual professional value: shared industry expertise, potential for collaboration, referral opportunities, or intellectual stimulation around your field. These relationships are worth investing in regardless of geography.

How to tell the difference:

Investing appropriately:

The practical impact: when I need a referral, an introduction, or professional advice, the connections that deliver are the ones I've deliberately maintained -- not the 200 people I had drinks with in various cities. Quality over quantity applies to networks more than almost anything else.

When to Invest in a Place vs. Keep Moving

The tension between exploration and depth applies directly to networking. Staying longer in fewer places builds deeper relationships. Moving frequently broadens your exposure but keeps everything shallow.

The case for staying longer (3-6 months):

The case for moving (monthly or bimonthly):

The hybrid that works: Have 2-3 "base cities" where you spend 2-4 months each per year. Return to them annually. Build deep relationships there. Between bases, travel to new places for shorter stays -- these are exploration periods, not networking periods. This gives you the depth of staying while maintaining the breadth of moving.

My pattern: Valencia is becoming a primary base (strong professional community, good coworking, timezone works for my clients). Medellin is a secondary base (growing tech scene, good for Latin American market connections). Between these, I'll visit other cities for shorter stays, but I don't expect those shorter visits to produce meaningful professional relationships -- they're for personal enrichment and scouting.

The key insight: Your professional network doesn't need to be in every city you visit. It needs to be deep in 2-3 places and maintained digitally everywhere else. Accepting this takes the pressure off short visits and focuses your networking energy where it compounds.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I network in a city where I don't speak the local language?

Start with expat and international communities -- coworking spaces, English-language meetups, startup events. In most popular nomad cities, there's a substantial English-speaking professional community. For deeper local connections, learn basic phrases and show genuine interest in the culture. Consider language exchange events, which are simultaneously social and educational. The willingness to try the local language, even badly, opens more doors than perfect English in an expat bubble.

Is it worth paying for premium coworking memberships for the networking benefits?

It depends on the specific space. Some premium memberships (Soho House, higher-tier coworking spaces) provide access to curated events and a more established professional membership. If the events and community genuinely match your professional level and interests, the premium is justified. But don't pay EUR 300/month for a coworking space because it looks impressive -- pay it because the community actively generates professional value for you. Most of my best professional connections came from mid-range independent spaces, not luxury ones.

How do I maintain professional relationships with people I've met briefly in different cities?

LinkedIn is the backbone -- connect immediately after meeting, with a personalized note. Engage with their content periodically (genuine comments, not generic likes). When something relevant to them crosses your path -- an article, an opportunity, a connection -- share it. Schedule a brief video catch-up every 2-3 months with your strongest contacts. And whenever you return to their city, reach out to meet in person. The combination of digital maintenance and occasional in-person meetings keeps relationships alive across distances.