10 Essential Contacts Every Professional Should Keep
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Direct Manager — Your primary point of feedback, assignments, and career guidance. Keep their preferred contact method and regular check-in cadence noted.
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Mentor or Career Advisor — Someone who provides long-term guidance, helps with professional development, and offers honest perspective on career moves.
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Key Team Members — Colleagues you collaborate with daily (peers, direct reports). Include role, responsibilities, and best times/methods to reach them.
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HR Representative — For questions about benefits, policies, payroll, and conflict resolution. Note HR contacts for both local and global offices if applicable.
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IT Support — Fast access for account recovery, hardware/software issues, and security incidents. Keep helpdesk number, ticket portal, and escalation contacts.
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Top Clients or Customers — Decision-makers and primary contacts at client organizations. Record contract details, renewal dates, and communication preferences.
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Finance/Accounting Contact — For invoices, expense reports, reimbursements, and budget approvals. Include billing codes or PO references when relevant.
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Legal or Compliance Contact — For contract reviews, regulatory questions, NDAs, and risk assessments. Vital for startups and regulated industries.
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Recruiter or Talent Partner — Useful for hiring needs, career opportunities, and market intelligence. Maintain both internal and external recruiter contacts.
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Professional Network/Industry Peers — A small list of trusted peers outside your organization for benchmarking, referrals, and confidential advice.
Quick tips for managing these contacts
- Keep a single, synced address book with tags/labels for roles (e.g., Manager, Client, IT).
- Note preferred communication channels, time zones, and any escalation steps.
- Review and update this list quarterly; archive contacts you no longer use.
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