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The event aimed at teaching students key networking and communication skills left many with newfound confidence

UNE鈥檚 inaugural Career Connections Mixer draws overflow crowd of 200

The event aimed at teaching students key networking and communication skills left many with newfound confidence

In a crowded communal area in the 91直播视频鈥檚 Ripich Commons on the evening of Feb. 18, the University's first Career Connections Mixer got off to a rousing start. And the impromptu conversations between employers, alumni, local civic leaders, entrepreneurs, faculty, alumni, and students didn鈥檛 end when the event was supposed to wrap up at 7 p.m. 

鈥淚t was the first time I ever did anything like this,鈥 said first-year student Jackson Lochmandy (Sustainability and Business, 鈥29), who admitted he initially was nervous.  

鈥(For) the first 30 minutes, I definitely needed to learn how to do it. But then, after I had a conversation with a man from the Biddeford (Cultural and Heritage Center) who shared some of the history of Maine, it was a bit of an ice breaker.  

鈥淭hen, I thought, 鈥極K, I can replicate this. I feel more confident,鈥欌 Lochmandy said. 

That interaction between strangers was exactly what Ashley Bigda, M.S.Ed., hoped for when she sent out invitations asking faculty, alumni, local employers, industry experts, and community leaders to come help students learn to network at a professional social mixer. UNE鈥檚 new Office of Career Readiness and Workforce Development, which Bigda directs, organized the event in partnership with the Office of Institutional Advancement. 

UNE鈥檚 inaugural Career Connections Mixer draws overflow crowd of 200
UNE鈥檚 inaugural Career Connections Mixer draws overflow crowd of 200

鈥淪trong communication skills can be taught in business class or explained by AI, but AI can鈥檛 replicate the human connection you get from the lived experience of walking up to a stranger and introducing yourself. That builds confidence,鈥 Bigda said. 

91直播视频created the Office of Career Readiness and Workforce Development last year to serve as a hub of student career support, with a mission to integrate career development across all academic programs, connect students with professional networks, and prepare graduates to adapt to the realities of a rapidly changing economy. 

鈥淭his replicates real life. But it鈥檚 a safe space. There are faces the students recognize, faculty members they know.鈥 鈥 Ashley Bigda, Office of Career Readiness and Workforce Development director

Last fall, in partnership with the College of Business, Bigda鈥檚 office rolled out UNE鈥檚 first Industry Exploration Day to introduce students to employers and alumni in a classic job-fair-style symposium. But Bigda wanted to simulate an authentic social gathering, the kind where business deals happen, communication skills are honed, and networking opportunities abound.  

So, she created one. 

This first such event drew more than 200 attendees, including employers or alumni representing 45 companies. So many walk-in student registrants showed, the welcome table overflowed at the start. 

鈥淭his (format) replicates real life,鈥 Bigda said, as she looked around at a few dozen small groups talking in the Commons lounge. 鈥淏ut it鈥檚 a safe space. There are faces the students recognize, faculty members they know.鈥 

UNE鈥檚 inaugural Career Connections Mixer draws overflow crowd of 200
UNE鈥檚 inaugural Career Connections Mixer draws overflow crowd of 200
UNE鈥檚 inaugural Career Connections Mixer draws overflow crowd of 200
UNE鈥檚 inaugural Career Connections Mixer draws overflow crowd of 200
UNE鈥檚 inaugural Career Connections Mixer teaches students the value of networking

Workforce development has long been a priority at UNE, where as many as 95% of students are employed or pursuing an advanced degree within a year of graduation. In addition, as many as 40% of students work on published research side-by-side with faculty.   

But 91直播视频is not stopping there, President James Herbert said in his opening remarks, noting that the University is rapidly expanding those efforts. 

鈥91直播视频has always been a place that prepares students to thrive in their careers. That's not something new to us,鈥 Herbert said. 鈥淏ut today, given today's marketplace and the highly disruptive effects of AI and the impact that's having on jobs, we want to make sure that our students are ready to hit the workforce running and have that extra edge.鈥  

Herbert applauded the first-annual Career Connections Mixer, coaching students before it kicked off 鈥渢o talk to different people outside of your particular field.鈥 He also highlighted how the social and communication skills honed at the event would help students later on, when they need to reinvent themselves mid-career amid ever-changing workforce demands. 

Nathan Delgado (Sport Leadership and Management, 鈥27) was one looking to learn and hone skills that he could use to land a summer internship opportunity. He quickly pivoted from a conversation that was winding down and stepped toward another stranger to introduce himself. 

Earlier in the evening, Delago found success with this bold approach when he introduced himself to an alum who had turned a summer internship into a promising career path working for a minor league baseball team 鈥 the exact thing Delgado hopes to do. 

鈥淪he told me to apply for an internship with her team. Just seeing how she got to work for a minor league team was encouraging,鈥 Delgado said.  

Media Contact

Deirdre Fleming Stires
Office of Communications