Networking at EAG(x): How to Get the Most Value from Conversations

By Nina Friedrich🔸 @ 2025-09-24T11:42 (+15)

When I considered attending my first EAGx, I almost didn’t go. Coming from mathematics, I thought “conference” meant long technical talks, questions to show off, and only occasional chats squeezed between sessions.

EAG(x) is nothing like that. Yes, there are talks and workshops, but the real value is in the conversations - with peers, collaborators, mentors, or people you didn’t know you needed to meet. The structure is closer to a large-scale networking event, with tools and formats designed to maximise valuable connections.

After attending several, here are the practices that have helped me get the most out of those conversations.

Set Clear Intentions

Conversations don’t generate impact by themselves - actions do. It’s easy to leave with lots of enjoyable chats but little follow-through.

What helps me is to set two main goals for the weekend and a handful of side goals for variety.

If you only focus only on one topic, you might get tired of that halfway through. But if you spread yourself across too many, you’ll leave without depth. Two main goals plus some smaller ones strikes a good balance.

Use Swapcard Wisely

Swapcard usually opens a couple of weeks before the event. This is where the conference really starts.

Plan Your Schedule

Talks, workshops, and meetups are worth considering, but they can easily clash with 1:1s if you’re not careful. Block them out in Swapcard under “My Event / My Meetings” so the system doesn’t treat the slot as free.

Here’s the balance that works well for me:

Send “Meet” Requests, Not Just “Connect”

When reaching out, Swapcard gives two options: connect or meet. Both allow a short message.

That’s why I recommend meet + short message. The message is important: it helps the other person to decide if they want to accept the invitation.

And note: in a meet request, the message isn’t saved in your general inbox - it’s attached to the meeting itself, so you can easily recall the context when the conversation starts.

Prepare for 1:1s

Moving quickly between back-to-back 1:1s, it’s easy to forget what you wanted to discuss.

I keep a simple spreadsheet with:

Before each meeting, I skim the sheet so I don’t waste the first minutes recalling my agenda - and I make sure we cover everything that matters.

Beyond 1:1s

Capturing Value

Most of the value of EAG(x) conversations comes after the event. Two habits make a huge difference:

Closing Thought

EAG(x) isn’t about collecting as many contacts as possible. It’s about making the conversations you do have matter.

For me, the talks are the backdrop. The real conference is in the 1:1s, the spontaneous chats, and the collaborations that continue afterwards.