Are you comfortable networking, or do you find meeting strangers awkward? Nadia Tuominen, a Senior Lecturer in Police Practice at Brunel University, reveals why analysts should embrace such opportunites, and, unexpectedly, how it compares to Organised Crime Groups.
The word ‘networking’ makes many people cringe inside. Approaching strangers. Talking to strangers. Smiling through gritted teeth whilst you wish you could just hide in a corner and mind your own business. Those were certainly my feelings in the early stages of my career, and I stubbornly stayed a solitary node on the edges of a professional community for many years, much like the person circled in red below.
Whilst I would not normally advocate emulation of our criminal ‘kinfolk’, you only need look at successful Organised Crime Groups to know I’m right. The good ones are inherently resilient - highly interconnected, with plenty of access to opportunity and resources, and a readiness to reconfigure in the face of challenge. They can survive adversity and thrive (until a good analyst works out their centrality measures and makes insightful recommendations for their dismantling, of course).
If it weren’t for my network, I wouldn’t have the job I do today.
Networking does not have to loom over you as this terrifying, cringeworthy spectre. To ease yourself in, and tentatively dip that toe in the water, you might try:
If it weren’t for my network, I wouldn’t have the job I do today, have launched the Crime & Criminal Intelligence Analysis Research Aggregation (CCIARA) bulletin, or, indeed, be writing this blog post. You never know where professional connections might take you, and you won’t know until you make them.
Nadia is a Senior Lecturer in Police Practice at Brunel University, with a background in Criminal Intelligence Analysis & Investigations across policing, sports integrity, and the financial sector.
Aside from her continued passion for Intelligence Analysis, Nadia’s main interests are Thinking Skills and Well-being, in particular the neuroscientific footprint of and symbiosis between the two.