Weak-tie maintenance rituals
Build small, consistent touchpoints to keep acquaintances warm without heavy investment.
Why it works
Weak ties atrophy without any signal; they don’t require the same depth of maintenance as close friendships, but they need periodic activation to stay accessible. Low-cost signals — a comment, a share, a brief congratulation — reset the decay clock without demanding reciprocal depth, keeping the tie available when it matters.
How to do it
- Keep a simple list of 20–30 acquaintances you want to maintain.
- Set a recurring reminder to send two or three brief, genuine touchpoints per week (a relevant article, a congratulations on a milestone).
- Vary the medium — email, LinkedIn, a text — based on what each person prefers.
- Never make every touchpoint transactional; most should carry no ask.
Evidence
Weak ties require maintenance to remain accessible; this is a mechanistic inference from tie-strength research, not a directly studied protocol. Consistency of contact predicts tie strength. (mechanistic)
The specific cadence is practitioner heuristic rather than a studied interval. The underlying principle — that contact frequency is the primary driver of tie strength — is empirically supported.
Common mistake
Only reaching out when you need something, which makes every contact feel transactional and erodes goodwill.
Practice this with IX Coach
IX Coach tracks your weak-tie touchpoint cadence and nudges you when a specific person is going cold.
7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).