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What is the easiest way to market yourself as a researcher and find academic connections for the future?
I'm a high school senior who has one research paper currently being published and has worked in a psychology lab on Vanderbilt University's campus.
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2 answers
Chinyere Okafor
Educationist and Counseling Psychologist
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Answers
Port Harcourt, Rivers, Nigeria
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Chinyere’s Answer
Hi Julia,
You’re already ahead of the curve, having a paper in the publication pipeline and lab experience before starting college is a strong foundation. So the goal now isn’t to “start from scratch,” it’s to position what you’ve already done so it opens more doors. The simplest way to think about marketing yourself as a researcher is this: you’re not promoting yourself as much as you’re making your work visible, accessible, and easy to trust.
Start by building a clear academic identity. Even at your stage, you can confidently say, “I’m an emerging researcher interested in [your area, e.g., cognitive psychology, behavioral science, etc.].” That clarity helps people immediately understand where you fit and how they might collaborate with you. You don’t need to have it perfectly defined, just directional.
Next, focus on creating a small but strong “visibility ecosystem.” This doesn’t have to be complicated. A well-structured LinkedIn profile, a simple academic CV, and (if you’re open to it) a basic online portfolio or Google Drive folder with your research work can go a long way. When someone looks you up, they should quickly see three things: what you’ve worked on, what skills you’ve developed, and what you’re interested in next.
Where many students miss opportunities is in how they approach networking. It’s less about “asking for opportunities” and more about starting thoughtful, low-pressure conversations. For example, reaching out to a professor or graduate student with a short message that references their work and asks one or two genuine questions can be surprisingly effective. You’re not trying to impress, you’re trying to engage. Over time, those conversations turn into relationships, and relationships lead to opportunities.
Also, don’t underestimate the value of staying connected to the lab you’ve already worked in. That’s part of your professional network now. Maintaining those relationships, updating them on your progress, asking for advice, or even expressing interest in future projects, can create continuity in your research journey.
Another practical way is to position yourself around skills, not just titles. When labs or professors bring on students, they’re often looking for people who can contribute in specific ways, data collection, literature reviews, basic statistical analysis, writing support. If you can clearly explain what you can do, you become much easier to say yes to you.
Looking ahead, your next phase is about stacking experiences strategically. Try to move toward roles where you can deepen your involvement, perhaps contributing more directly to study design, analysis, or co-authorship. Each step builds your credibility and expands your network at the same time.
Lastly, allow yourself to grow into this. You don’t need to have everything figured out right now. What matters is that you stay visible, stay curious, and keep engaging with people and ideas in your field. You’re not just “trying to get into research”, you’re already in it. Now it’s about making sure the right people can see that and connect with you because of it.
Best wishes!
You’re already ahead of the curve, having a paper in the publication pipeline and lab experience before starting college is a strong foundation. So the goal now isn’t to “start from scratch,” it’s to position what you’ve already done so it opens more doors. The simplest way to think about marketing yourself as a researcher is this: you’re not promoting yourself as much as you’re making your work visible, accessible, and easy to trust.
Start by building a clear academic identity. Even at your stage, you can confidently say, “I’m an emerging researcher interested in [your area, e.g., cognitive psychology, behavioral science, etc.].” That clarity helps people immediately understand where you fit and how they might collaborate with you. You don’t need to have it perfectly defined, just directional.
Next, focus on creating a small but strong “visibility ecosystem.” This doesn’t have to be complicated. A well-structured LinkedIn profile, a simple academic CV, and (if you’re open to it) a basic online portfolio or Google Drive folder with your research work can go a long way. When someone looks you up, they should quickly see three things: what you’ve worked on, what skills you’ve developed, and what you’re interested in next.
Where many students miss opportunities is in how they approach networking. It’s less about “asking for opportunities” and more about starting thoughtful, low-pressure conversations. For example, reaching out to a professor or graduate student with a short message that references their work and asks one or two genuine questions can be surprisingly effective. You’re not trying to impress, you’re trying to engage. Over time, those conversations turn into relationships, and relationships lead to opportunities.
Also, don’t underestimate the value of staying connected to the lab you’ve already worked in. That’s part of your professional network now. Maintaining those relationships, updating them on your progress, asking for advice, or even expressing interest in future projects, can create continuity in your research journey.
Another practical way is to position yourself around skills, not just titles. When labs or professors bring on students, they’re often looking for people who can contribute in specific ways, data collection, literature reviews, basic statistical analysis, writing support. If you can clearly explain what you can do, you become much easier to say yes to you.
Looking ahead, your next phase is about stacking experiences strategically. Try to move toward roles where you can deepen your involvement, perhaps contributing more directly to study design, analysis, or co-authorship. Each step builds your credibility and expands your network at the same time.
Lastly, allow yourself to grow into this. You don’t need to have everything figured out right now. What matters is that you stay visible, stay curious, and keep engaging with people and ideas in your field. You’re not just “trying to get into research”, you’re already in it. Now it’s about making sure the right people can see that and connect with you because of it.
Best wishes!
Updated
Liam’s Answer
In 2026, the easiest way is to do so online. It costs nothing, it gives you face, and it lets people know what you are all about and capable of. My answer is basically "rely on social media!" like it is going to be you posting from a starbucks about the latest research analysis, but that's not exactly the case. Find your niche, and plan out what you want to research, what community you want to participate in, and how you want to share what you found. Be strategic. Think of your intended audience and write to them. Make it easy on yourself, don't respond to criticism, ignore it. Make this entire platform a one way conversation until it is worth your while to make it a two way conversation. Meaning, if you post something and there is a comment "fake news" or similar, don't respond, you don't need to. When a professor at a university comments and says "newer data might suggest something different" THAT is the one you want to engage in.
Your presence and availability online is one way you can get the word out about your path, but this can also be a showcase of what you produce. This is kind of the newer way to go about publicizing your skills. I think that a dedicated blog will lend you more control but will require you to dedicate more effort to maintain it. It's up to you, but right now that is the easiest and cheapest way to publish.
Don't ignore other avenues for publishing either. If you can take one research paper or article you made and figure out four different formats for it. Make it a 250 character post, a three paragraph read, something that can be an entire paper in itself, and maybe something like a quick podcast talking about it. Those are really rough examples. People today who publish usually do roughly the same or rely on other people with blogs and podcasts to help get their work to the public.
Your presence and availability online is one way you can get the word out about your path, but this can also be a showcase of what you produce. This is kind of the newer way to go about publicizing your skills. I think that a dedicated blog will lend you more control but will require you to dedicate more effort to maintain it. It's up to you, but right now that is the easiest and cheapest way to publish.
Don't ignore other avenues for publishing either. If you can take one research paper or article you made and figure out four different formats for it. Make it a 250 character post, a three paragraph read, something that can be an entire paper in itself, and maybe something like a quick podcast talking about it. Those are really rough examples. People today who publish usually do roughly the same or rely on other people with blogs and podcasts to help get their work to the public.