The difference between an executive community and a networking group is not cosmetic. It is structural — and it determines the kind of value each produces, the kind of behaviour it incentivises, and whether it becomes more or less useful as time passes.
The Core Difference
A networking group operates on transactional logic: you attend to exchange value in the moment. You meet someone who can refer you business. You find a vendor you were looking for. You collect contacts you might use later. The value is captured at the point of exchange, and it does not compound. When you stop attending, the value stops.
An executive community operates on relational logic: you participate to build trust over time. The value is not a contact or a referral. It is a relationship with a peer who will tell you the truth, share what they have learned, and make introductions for you without being asked — and who you will do the same for. This kind of value compounds. Every conversation makes the next one more valuable.
What a Networking Group Is and Is Not
Networking groups are not inherently bad. Early in a career, when the goal is to expand the breadth of your network rapidly, they serve a genuine purpose. They are efficient mechanisms for meeting many people in a short time and identifying those worth knowing better.
But the same properties that make networking groups useful early become liabilities at the senior level. Open membership means everyone is performing for everyone else. The incentive is to present well, not to think out loud. The format — typically a mixer or a panel — rewards the polished and the extroverted and creates no conditions for candor.
What an Executive Community Provides Instead
An executive community provides four things that a networking group structurally cannot:
- 01Candor. Because the room is curated and confidential, members can say what they actually think — about their board, about an acquisition, about an AI decision that didn't go as planned. Candor is the most valuable currency in any senior conversation, and it only flows where trust exists.
- 02Depth. A conversation in a private dinner with eleven peers who are all navigating the same challenge produces a quality of insight that no panel, conference, or podcast can replicate. The depth is a function of the trust and the intimacy of the format.
- 03Long-term reciprocity. In a networking group, the exchange is immediate and visible: you give a referral, you expect one back. In an executive community, the exchange is diffuse and long-term. You contribute to the community over time, and the community returns value in ways you cannot predict or schedule.
- 04Peer-level advice. The most useful advice for a CFO comes from another CFO. Not a consultant, not a vendor, not a board member who hasn't run a finance function in fifteen years. Executive communities, when built around a specific function or role, create access to exactly this kind of peer-level advice.
Why the Distinction Matters for Senior Leaders
The distinction between networking groups and executive communities matters most at the senior level because time is the scarcest resource and the returns on time investment diverge sharply between the two models.
A networking group returns value roughly proportional to the time invested, and primarily through breadth — more contacts, more referrals, more visibility. An executive community returns value that is disproportionate to time and comes primarily through depth — one relationship with the right peer can change a decision that affects the entire company.
Senior executives who have stopped attending traditional networking events in favour of a smaller number of deeper engagements are not becoming less social. They are investing their social capital more efficiently.
Where Open Future Forum Fits
Open Future Forum is an executive community founded by Murray Newlands that hosts private, curated rooms for CEOs, CFOs, founders, investors and senior leaders navigating the AI era. It is not a networking group. It operates on a give-first philosophy: members share knowledge freely, make introductions without being asked, and contribute to the community without keeping score.
Forum Select — the private tier — is curated, invite-only, and runs under Chatham House rules. There is no pitch environment, no agenda, and no transaction. Forum Events is the open tier, where the broader community gathers and where Murray identifies the most generous leaders for the private rooms.
Last updated: June 12, 2026
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Join an Executive Community, Not a Networking Group
Open Future Forum is a private executive community for C-suite leaders built on give-first philosophy. No pitches, no agenda, no transaction. Just the right people in the right room.