How To Be A Mentor

HOW TO BE A MENTOR

A mentor can take many roles in the mentoring relationship:

  • A guide
  • A sounding board
  • A challenger
  • A supporter and encourager
  • A confidante
  • A career coach
  • A networking facilitator

A developmental mentor is most often not the mentee’s line manager, or someone who is in that person’s direct line. It is usually someone from either outside the organisation or, if in the same organisation, then not in the same area, so that the mentor can be more objective and provide a fresh perspective.

It is important that the mentor responds to the mentee’s agenda. Many mentors leap straight into giving advice based on their own experience, spending a great deal of the time talking about themselves. Whilst this may help the mentee, it is helpful to ask questions and do some deep listening before handing over pearls of wisdom. Let the mentee drive the agenda and determine what they can best interpret from your experience.

A good mentor is able to:

  1. Listen well
  2. Provide guidance rather than advice when appropriate
  3. Challenge respectfully and be challenged without offense
  4. Be patient – he or she will let the mentee tell their story without rushing them to a solution, and will let the mentee tackle challenges at their own pace
  5. Offer different perspectives – and knows that there is no one right way to look at things
  6. Introduce the mentee to relevant people in her/his network
  7. Minimise the impact of the power difference between him or her and the mentee – especially if there is a big difference in level of experience or seniority
  8. Give time, encouragement, support, constructive feedback and unconditional respect to the mentee
  9. Know when to use each mentoring mode i.e. when to listen, when to give advice, when to challenge
  10. Maintain confidentiality

Refer also to:

MENTORSHIP

MENTOR

how to be a mentor

THE RIPPLE EFFECT

A guide to unleashing the hidden value in your organisation through high impact strategic mentoring programs.

Most human beings and organisations have one thing in common – they both want to do better. But it’s hard for one to achieve without the other. When you can harness both you can achieve great things.

Unfortunately, most organisational structures are hierarchical, which may aid efficiency but not necessarily “real” human interaction.

Solving the human equation is the cornerstone of great culture and the larger and more diverse the workforce, the more challenging it becomes, even before we factor in things like location, technology and pay rates.

Well designed and managed mentoring programs can have a dramatic impact on workplace culture and people engagement. A strategic mentoring program transcends hierarchy, creating relationships and interactions to build individual and hence organisational value.

In this guide we present you with proven practical insights on how to design, build, implement and automate a high influence mentoring program and create your own ripple effect.

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the ripple effect