After 6 years in China, I was an HR Manager for a private school (because I was fluent in Mandarin and tired of just being a teacher but didn't know what kind of business to do).
I was fired by my American boss in China after 10 months because a recent severe concussion had me avoiding going outside because of the dizziness, blurry vision, and constant physical fatigue.
After 6 months of suffering, I got tired of it and decided to change my life and go outside, so I went to a picnic arranged by friends.
At the picnic, I met an American expat named Glen who told me he was planning a live speech event in English (not one of those events to learn English, everyone had to be fluent in English to attend because he wanted to have a very high quality and high-level experience), and since I had nothing going on, I offered to help him organize it.
A few weeks later, our first event happened, and with basically no money spent, we had 100 people attend.
We were so excited by what we felt was just the beginning of something, but Glen decided to step back and let me take it over because his plate was too full already.
I asked my brand-new girlfriend to join me and work on it full-time, and she agreed.
Our second event had 250 people in attendance, and soon after, the city government got wind of us and asked to meet us because we were already the largest event in a city of 15 million people.
Because I was fluent in Mandarin (they didn't speak any English) and my partner was Chinese, and they could feel we were only trying to do something good for society, they decided to give us access to their private venue (a government facility only meant for government meetings). They also gave us a stipend for each event, free media coverage, waived our requirement to apply for a license to assemble (since that's a thing in China), and gave us free reign to run our event how we saw fit (let's be honest, they were allowing us to exist).
By our third event, we had 400 people attend in the new venue and it was like wildfire for us.
Soon after, I was being asked to give interviews by local news outlets in Mandarin, give interviews by local radio stations in Mandarin, go on national TV programs in Mandarin to share how I felt about specific current events (since they only ever had citizens on, and I could give a different perspective).
The government also paid me to privately organize events for them, as well as give paid speeches in Mandarin, and other non-profit and for-profit entities asked me to give speeches. The government even paid me to do cross-cultural communications training for their city level officials, and a few publicly listed corporations hired me to do the same for their boards of directors.
Over the next 2 years, we continued to run these events, maxxing out at 700 people per event because the venue couldn't hold more and it was the largest venue in the city we could access.
This was the best time of my life, and it was all due to networking.
By being the co-founder (and a fluent Mandarin speaker as a foreign expat living in China), I was incredibly unique, and everyone wanted to know me.
But I didn't understand how to take more advantage of the situation and get myself into the real rooms I wanted to be in.
Not until I met Meir Simhi, one of the audience members from my event who decided to mentor me without me asking.
Meir spent the next 6 months teaching me how to understand my value as a connector. He said that since I had the position at the top of that community of 13,000 followers I built, naturally everyone was attracted to me and how I could help them benefit from the network, but because I didn't realize what I had built, I wasn't able to get my foot in those doors.
He said that if I figured out what the people who came to me wanted, and what they had to offer, I could find the other people in my network who needed those things. If I could put them together and make sure things happened, I could earn a piece of the pie.
Finally, I understood what I was missing to become a real entrepreneur, and it was only because I started the event with Glen and grew it with Lisa that I met Meir who taught me what I needed to blow up my career to the next level.