friendlist for Business

Your network is only as strong as the relationships you actually maintain

Most professionals are great at making connections. The hard part is keeping them. A promising intro at a conference, a client you haven’t spoken to in six months, a supplier relationship that’s gone quiet — not from neglect, but from the simple reality that there are only so many hours in a day.

Built for the way professionals actually work

  • Keep everything in one place
    Clients, prospects, partners, suppliers, investors — every key contact with the details that matter: how you met, what you discussed, what to follow up on. No more digging through email threads to remember where you left off.

    Every relationship has a history, and that history is what makes the next conversation feel personal rather than transactional. When you remember that a client mentioned their company was expanding into a new market, or that a prospect said to follow up after the summer — and you actually do — that is the difference between someone who manages contacts and someone who builds relationships.

    friendlist gives every person in your network their own space: a name, a community, a set of notes, and a reminder. Small details that add up to the kind of professional reputation that people talk about.

  • Follow up before it’s too late
    friendlist reminds you when it’s time to check in — a quarterly touchpoint, a contract renewal coming up, or simply someone you haven’t spoken to in a while. Consistent communication builds the kind of trust that turns contacts into long-term relationships.

    Most deals don’t close because of one great meeting. They close because someone followed up when others didn’t, checked in when it wasn’t expected, and stayed present long after the initial conversation ended. The professionals who are known for “always being on top of things” are not superhuman — they just have a system that makes sure nobody important gets forgotten.

    friendlist is that system. Set a reminder once, and let it do the work of keeping you consistently present in the relationships that matter most to your business.

  • Organize by what matters to your business
    Group contacts into communities that reflect how you actually work: Clients, Investors, Partners, Pipeline, Board. See exactly who’s in each circle and act on it.

    Because the way you manage a client is nothing like the way you manage an investor, and both are completely different from how you handle a supplier mid-negotiation. When your contacts are grouped by the role they actually play in your business, you stop wasting time searching and start spending it on the relationships that move things forward.

    Add a new lead to Pipeline on Monday. Move them to Clients when the deal closes. Your network grows, your communities stay clean, and you always know exactly where every relationship stands.

  • Keep sensitive relationships private
    VIP clients and confidential contacts stay locked behind a PIN — invisible to anyone else who picks up your phone, accessible only to you.

    Not everyone needs to know everyone. A business relationship you’re not ready to disclose, a private number someone trusted you with, a contact that belongs to one part of your life and not another — Hidden Communities keep these exactly where they should be: secure, organized, and completely out of sight until you need them.

    No names, no numbers, no traces. Just a PIN between your most private connections and the rest of the world.

  • Plan and run professional events (coming soon)
    Organize client dinners, networking evenings, or team workshops — invite the right people from the right communities and make sure no one gets missed.

Why it works

Deals don’t close because of one great meeting. They close because you stayed in touch when others didn’t. friendlist is the quiet system behind professionals who seem to effortlessly remember everyone, follow up consistently, and always know who to call.

Learn more about friendlist for personal use.

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friendlist in the Social Networks