These apps aim to make networking easier for women

Get your networking up to speed in the digital age.

May 3, 2019, 4:03 AM

How to navigate adult life like a boss, from turning your job into a career to investing your hard-earned mone to building relationships and more. Because adultingis not easy.

Networking. We all know we need to do it for our careers, but it can sometimes be painful to get it done.

Women in particular are often told they need to network more often and differently than men to close the opportunity gap in the workplace.

Technology created largely by women and for women is helping to bridge that gap. Here are five apps that aim to make networking more fun and more efficient for women.

1. Bumble Bizz

PHOTO: The makers of Bumble say that their app," brings dating, friend-finding, and career-building into a single social networking platform."
The makers of Bumble say that their app," brings dating, friend-finding, and career-building into a single social networking platform.
Bumble

Bumble was the first appthat let only women make the first move in dating. It's work-focused partner, Bumble Bizz, has the same female-first approach to networking.

Women make the first move to find professional connections, and the app matches you geographically so you'll find people in your local area. A new feature in the app, Women in Bizz, also lets women limit their professional networking to solely other women.

Bumble says the Bizz function has the same photo verification tool as the dating app to "ensure the people you’re connecting with are who they say they are."

2. Shapr

PHOTO: The makers of Shapr say that their app, "selects for you, each day, people to connect with."
The makers of Shapr say that their app, "selects for you, each day, people to connect with."
Shapr

Shapr is described as the “Tinder for networking” because you swipe right on professionals you want to meet.

You fill in your information plus what you’re looking for, whether it’s a job, a colleague, a friend or someone in your industry. You can also pick interests based on what you want to talk about, including one of the most popular: #FeministOnShapr.

The app sends you a curated feed of professionals so you don’t have to spend time searching. You can choose how to swipe on that smaller feed.

3. Present

PHOTO: The makers of Present say that their app helps ," join circles of local friends and neighbors who share your interests."
The makers of Present say that their app helps ," join circles of local friends and neighbors who share your interests."
Present

The Present app was designed specifically for women when it launched last year. It has since gone co-ed but still allows women to connect exclusively with other women.

Present uses common interests and location to help connect people, in what it calls circles. You can create a circle or join a circle of interest.

If you want to gather people for an event like happy hour, for example, you can start a circle and the app will notify friends nearby.

4. Femnesty

PHOTO: The makers of Femnesty say that their app "allows users to create and connect with groups of women around the world."
The makers of Femnesty say that their app "allows users to create and connect with groups of women around the world."
Femnesty

Femnesty is a free app that connects women around the world. You can use it to connect with individual women or with women-focused organizations.

The app also lets you create your own groups based on points of interest or experience, and is a discussion platform where women can share and write posts and articles.

5. Seneca Connect

PHOTO: The makers of Seneca Connect say that their app is ," designed to advance women in the economy and around the world."
The makers of Seneca Connect say that their app is," designed to advance women in the economy and around the world."
Seneca Connect

Seneca Connect is designed to help women "fast forward" their careers through networking, but is also a place women can go to shop from women-owned businesses and take part in women-focused events.

The app also features advice from women leaders and a curated news feed.

The app is part of the broader Seneca Women platform, named after the famous Seneca Falls Convention and based on the book “Fast Forward: How Women Can Achieve Power and Purpose.”