The Ninja How to Network Like a Ninja When Making a Career Change Quiet Conversations. Powerful Connections. Real Career Change.
Are you stuck in a job that no longer fits? Ready to pivot into a new industry but don’t know where to start? Tired of sending out endless resumes with no response?
Ninja Networking is your secret weapon.
This practical, no-fluff guide shows you how to make a career change by building genuine relationships—not by begging for jobs. You’ll learn how to use tools you already have—like LinkedIn, Facebook, and even your local newspaper—to find real people in your target field, start meaningful conversations, and grow a professional network that opens doors.
Inspired by a true story of an unconventional drifter who landed jobs just by showing up, this book teaches you the power
Reaching out without awkwardness or fear
Asking for advice, not handouts
Preparing smart questions that build trust
Listening more than you speak
Following up in ways that keep your name fresh
Building a network of 50–100 industry insiders in just 90 days
You'll also
Sample outreach messages that get responses
Weekly trackers to stay consistent
Resume transformation tips based on real feedback
Success stories from real career changers who used this method
Whether you're changing careers after 5 years or 25, Ninja Networking gives you the mindset, tactics, and confidence to make it happen—quietly, skillfully, and authentically.
You don’t need to be well-connected. You just need to be brave enough to start the first conversation.
Michael Ehart's stories have appeared recently in Ray Gun Revival, The Sword Review, Every Day Fiction, Flashing Swords and Fear and Trembling, and in anthologies including Damned in Dixie, Return of the Sword and Unparalleled Journeys II.
His book The Servant of the Manthycore from DEP is considered by critics to be one of the best fantasy books of 2007. Michael Moorcock writes in the foreword, "It resonates with the authenticity of genuine myth, bringing a deep, true sense of the past; a conviction which does not borrow from genre but mines our profoundest dreams and memories; the kind which give birth to myths."
Ehart is married to one of the most beautiful women in the world and would offer "pistols for two, coffee for one" to anyone who disagrees but pesky laws get in the way and so offers instead to naysayers a referral to a good optometrist. You can find out more about what he is up to at http://mehart.blogspot.com .