Thursday’s session with Chris Williams, Director of Revenue at Stella Legal, examined a subtle but significant shift in how relationships are formed within the legal industry. As networking becomes more ubiquitous, it has also grown increasingly transactional, often reduced to surface-level exchanges and diminishing returns at large conferences. Williams, whose career in legal tech spanned over ten years including at Legora, challenged this model, arguing that the real advantage now lies in deliberately creating smaller, curated spaces for meaningful interaction. In place of volume, the focus is shifting towards depth, intention, and sustained connection.
From Networking to Room-Building
Williams positioned “room-building” or “forums” as a deliberate act of convening the right people, rather than passively attending events. Traditional networking, often characterised by badge scanning and fleeting exchanges, has lost depth. In its place, high-value interactions are emerging through curated gatherings, whether physical or virtual.
The key distinction is control: instead of seeking invitations, professionals are creating their own spaces. These “rooms” are defined not by scale, but by relevance, trust, and shared intent.
The Human Response to AI Saturation
A central theme was the growing demand for authentic human interaction in an AI-saturated environment. As content becomes increasingly generic and automated, individuals are placing higher value on genuine conversations and lived insights.
Williams noted that this shift is driving the rise of side events, informal meetups, and community-led initiatives. These formats offer what traditional conferences often lack: depth, spontaneity, and meaningful engagement.
The Power of the Host
Becoming a host, rather than a participant, was highlighted as a critical strategic advantage. Williams shared early-career experiences of facilitating introductions, demonstrating how even simple acts of connection-building can establish influence.
Hosting reframes networking from self-promotion to ecosystem-building. It enables individuals to:
- Build stronger, trust-based relationships
- Position themselves at the centre of conversations
- Develop long-term professional equity
Importantly, this approach does not require scale. A room of four people can be as impactful as a room of fifty.
Consistency Over Scale
A recurring insight was the importance of consistency. Successful communities are not built through one-off events, but through repeated, reliable interactions.
Examples such as “Legal Hops” illustrated how small, regular gatherings can evolve into thriving communities without significant financial investment. The emphasis is on continuity, not spectacle.
Inclusivity, Exclusivity, and Curation
The session addressed the balance between openness and curation. While exclusivity can enhance value, the real opportunity lies in thoughtful invitation, bringing together individuals who can contribute meaningfully to each other.
Williams emphasised that the most effective rooms are intentionally curated, often starting with just a handful of people who share complementary perspectives or interests.
Skills Shift in the Legal Profession
The discussion linked room or forum building to broader changes in legal careers. As AI reshapes technical work, human skills, relationship-building, communication, and curiosity, are becoming increasingly important.
Williams suggested that professional networks are less a reflection of status and more a reflection of curiosity. Those who actively seek, connect, and nurture relationships will be best positioned in the evolving landscape.
Practical Takeaways To Build Your Community
- Start small: identify 3–5 people who would benefit from knowing each other
- Focus on shared topics or interests to anchor conversations
- Prioritise regularity over scale
- Shift mindset from “being invited” to “doing the inviting”
- Build multiple rooms across different themes or interests