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Stop Networking. Start Building.

Why Kafe con Propósito is shifting from coffee chats to actually getting things done



Business professionals exchanging cards in a networking event. The setting is a modern office lobby. Attendees are smiling and engaged.

The Problem with "Just Networking"


In my experience, most networking events are a waste of your time.

You show up. You make small talk. You exchange Instagram handles. Everyone promises to "grab coffee sometime." And then... nothing. No projects together. No real friendships. Just another evening spent meeting people you'll probably never see again.

I know this because I spent months doing exactly that. This left me inspired but isolated, energized but ultimately unchanged.

Here's what I've learned: talking about our dreams feels good, but it doesn't pay the bills. Meeting interesting people is nice, but it doesn't move our careers forward. Good intentions without follow-through are just comfortable conversations.
That's why Kafe con Propósito is changing.

What We're Actually Building


Kafe con Propósito started as a space for women in Central Bohemia to connect over coffee. What it's becoming is something more practical: a place where women stop talking about what they want to do and actually start doing it—together.

This isn't about collecting contacts. It's about creating something real where women stop feeling like they're figuring everything out alone.

We're not getting rid of the coffee and conversation. We're just making sure something actually happens after we finish our lattes.

Whiteboard calendar features humorous text, days like "Shart" and events like "Make Dake Love." Planning theme with arrows and checklist.


How It Works Now: Three Simple Changes


1. Real Focus


Instead of vague "let's connect" gatherings, each month we tackle one specific thing professional women actually struggle with:

  • How to get people to take you seriously in your field
  • How to make money doing what you're good at
  • How to change careers without starting from zero
  • How to find people you can actually work with
  • How to lead without losing yourself

We don't just chat about these things. We come with real problems. We leave with plans we can actually use.

2. Accountability Partner


Here's the uncomfortable truth: most of us don't do what we say we're going to do when no one's watching.
So now, every time we meet:
  • You commit to one thing you'll do before next month
  • You get paired with someone who will check in on you
  • There's an actual date when you said you'd have it done

Because friendship is great, but friendship plus gentle pressure to follow through? That's what actually changes things.

3. We Share What We Know


Every woman who shows up knows something useful. Has done something hard. Knows someone who could help.

Looking for clients? Someone knows someone. Stuck on a problem? Someone's already solved the same one.

We're keeping track of who's good at what, who needs what, and who can help with what. Less "I'll send you that link" that never arrives. More "Let me introduce you right now."


Five women walking and smiling on a cobblestone street. They wear jeans and jackets, holding bags, coffee cup. Colorful buildings in background.

Why We're Still Meeting in Person


Yes, we could do this online. There are a thousand Zoom groups and Slack channels already.
But here's what I've noticed: when you commit to something and the person you committed to lives 10 minutes away, you actually do it. When you need help, and your friend is in the same town, things happen faster. When an opportunity comes up, and your partners are nearby, you can move on it.

This is a local group, but we're not small-minded. We bring big ideas and real ambition. We just happen to be executing from Central Bohemia.

Who Should Show Up (And Who Shouldn't)


This is for you if:
  • You're tired of meeting people, and nothing ever happens afterward
  • You have things you want to do and need people to help keep you honest
  • You're willing to help others, not just show up when you need something
  • You want to actually build something, not just talk about it
  • You're ready to come regularly, not just when you feel like it

This is probably not for you if:
  • You're looking for casual coffee with no expectations
  • You want someone to motivate you, but you aren't willing to do the work
  • You're not comfortable sharing what you're struggling with
  • You see community as something that exists to serve you

I'm not trying to create the biggest group in Central Bohemia. I'm trying to create one that actually works.

What Actually Happens When We Meet


We meet once a month. Here's what it looks like:

First 45 minutes: We dig into the month's topic. Not surface-level stuff—real frameworks and ideas you can use tomorrow.

Next 30 minutes: You bring your actual problems. Everyone helps figure them out. This only works if people are honest about what's not working.

Last 30 minutes: You say what you're going to do before next month. You find someone to check in with. You set the date.

Between meetings:
  • Private space where you can ask questions and share resources
  • Your accountability partner checks in
  • We track who's good at what, so you can find help fast
  • Sometimes we do quick skill-shares or workshops

Here's What I Need to Say


This only works if you show up more than once.
Come to one meeting and disappear? You'll miss everything. The trust builds over months. The results come from showing up even when you're busy. The real value is in doing what you said you'd do and watching others do the same.

I'm asking you to commit to three months minimum. To show up even when life gets messy. To follow through on what you promise. To help others even when you're the one who needs help right now.

This isn't something you watch happen. This is something you help create. And it only works if we all do our part.

Why This Might Actually Work


Here's what makes this different:

We actually do things. Connection is nice. Getting things done is better.
We have a plan, but we're not robots about it. Clear structure, but room to adapt to what people actually need.
We're local but think big. We live here, but we're not limited by here.
We're building something lasting. Not just hosting events. Creating something that keeps working.

The Real Questions


So here's what I want to know:

  • Are you tired of just collecting contacts?
  • Are you ready to be accountable to people who aren't your family or your boss?
  • Are you willing to help others even when you're the one who needs help?
  • If yes, then let's stop networking and start building something real.

The coffee's ready. The structure is clear. The commitment is real.

 
 
 

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