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Mentorship fundamentals

Posted 2/14/2012 Email story   Print story

    


Commentary by Shirley Ross
Force Development Talent Management


2/14/2012 - WASHINGTON (AFNS) -- I have studied, designed, launched, repaired and been a part of many mentoring programs during my 25-year-plus career in talent management. To be frank, at this point I have some pretty strong biases about how to design and execute mentoring programs because I have seen so many fail. They almost never yield what is hoped for, but there are some exceptions.

My own philosophy about how to construct mentoring programs is rooted in these exceptional successes.

What do you talk about?

Topics worked on in the mentoring relationship typically include areas such as strengths and weaknesses of leadership style, modifying damaging behavioral patterns, addressing gaps in leadership and management skills, or making a leap to the next level of responsibility.

Mentoring can be accomplished with a mentor either internal or external to the organization. An internal mentor, however, can offer significant advantages if well chosen. A senior executive will have a broader view of the internal working of the organization than the mentee, as well as a successful track record of negotiating success in that organization. Mentors should be chosen on several criteria, but one of the most important is their knowledge of how to make important and valuable things happen in that organization.

Mentors can also help with the landmines: where they are and how to avoid them, and how to recover from missteps. Yes, this is about politics, but politics are found in virtually every organization with people. If engaging in politics seems distasteful, then think instead in terms of influence, sensitivity to cultural norms, dealing with difficult people and knowledge of human nature -- because these are elements of politics. Political savvy and emotional intelligence significantly overlap.

Why mentoring fails

Lack of chemistry is the most common reason that mentoring relationships fail. Either the mentor or mentee just can't relate to the other or make a meaningful connection. When this happens, mentees can experience the meetings as too uncomfortable or just not productive, and mentors may consistently dodge their obligations to the mentee by being "too busy." If the pair does not work out, it is vital that changes be made quickly. If negotiated properly with the mentoring program lead, these changes don't have to be uncomfortable or seen as a failure.

What works in mentoring programs

Whether mentors are internal or external, I prefer to have mentorships reside in the framework of a formal program rather than relying on ad hoc arrangements. The successful mentoring programs that I've designed or experienced in industry have incorporated a great deal of structure. The structural components typically include:

1. A specified period of time for the program, say, for example, nine months. This way, both parties feel on point to accomplish their objectives, and there are established start and stop points so the relationship doesn't just fizzle out or uncomfortably fade away at some point.

2. Formal guidelines and training for both mentors and mentees. Expectations and commitments are clarified and both parties have a set of formal and firm guidelines to steer them through the process. This training can be accomplished on one session, but it is important and mentors can't be given a "pass."

3. A provision to quickly address pairs that are not working out or have failed to make a connection as I've mentioned above.

One successful example

One unusual program I participated in as a mentor really changed my outlook about what success looks like. Sponsored and structured by an outside third party, this program used the team approach: two mentors paired with four mentees. The mentees just loved it.

I had quite a different leadership style from the other mentor, and we approached problems very differently. Those differences were a favorite feature of the mentees. Our group sessions were remarkably dynamic, and the mentees reported it helpful to see that different approaches could work equally well. They could choose for themselves which approach in which situation played to their strengths.

The second advantage of this team concept, one I wouldn't have anticipated, was that the mentees felt less awkward calling on us between meetings if they had a problem. Because they could call one or the other of us, they felt the burden they imposed was less onerous.

The mentees spoke with great feeling about how we had helped each one of them through difficult decisions and missteps that year, all with positive outcomes. When a mentoring program does work, it can indeed be powerful.



tabComments
5/1/2012 2:47:27 PM ET
I believe the issue lies in what mentoring really is. What we have failed so miserably at is instituting a counselor/advisor program, but disguise it as mentoring. Mentoring is a process by which one individual may seek out to synch up with one or more individuals for long-term educational/spiritual, emotional, occupational, financial and relational rearing. A mentor is truly somoene who rears you over a long period of time much like a parent, minister, teacher or coach. What everyone is used to is that of a career advisor or guidance counselor, which is what we are really getting. if we move every 4 years, unless you stay in contact with that person and continue to grow instead of just checking a box, which is really a process for advancing, not actual growth, then you should not call it mentoring.
APH2013, DMV
 
3/2/2012 12:12:34 AM ET
Paul Hanscom in my Stewie voice THANK-YOU
Fair and Consistent SNCO, Worldwide
 
2/28/2012 5:20:53 PM ET
Airmen can request a formal feedback session with their supervision at any time. How many actually do this before their midterm feeback or before their EPR? That being said, how many do you think will actually want or benefit from these types of mentoring programs. When an Airman has a question or needs mentoring, they will go to their supervision. Forcing information means it will be less likely retained. I don't have an extensive resume or a 25-year-plus career, but in my three-year-plus time in I can tell you that no matter how many BTZ SrA's you pull to survey, in the end they'll just be telling you what you want to hear. Not saying that all BTZ's are like that, just saying they're a prime example of a horrible survey pool. There is looking good on paper and then there is doing your job well.
Airman, Mississippi
 
2/28/2012 12:56:58 PM ET
Another structured formal and inspectable program. Just what we need. How about this. The author prefers a structured mentorship program, but I prefer an Ad Hoc one. No special training. No CBTs. No structured timelines. No commitments. No boxes to check. I love my ad hoc program.
Maj, staff
 
2/28/2012 10:36:01 AM ET
Talk about over-engineering a process. The more elbows you put in your plumbing the easier it is to clog up your drain.
Andy, Texas
 
2/27/2012 2:26:52 PM ET
Senior officers should know they're responsible for mentoring junior officers. It's in their job description as leaders.
M, Retired Officer
 
2/27/2012 1:54:18 PM ET
The best mentorship you could give a subordinate is simply allowing them to do the job they were trained to do and giving them constructive advice on how to do the job better if needed. Very few junior airmen have an interest in these mentorship programs and with all the excess ancillary garbage the AF throws at us each day supervisors have even less time or motivation to implement these things. In turn more of it gets pencil whipped. We are here to kill people and destroy their stuff not PC but too bad. Let us maintain our equipment and put it to use as necessary without all of the corporate doublespeak and labeling. Mentee Are you serious
Bob, Wright-Patt
 
2/27/2012 12:24:05 PM ET
If you get mentored by anyone else besides someone that can directly influence the upward mobility of your career - you are wasting your time.
MSG Tired, CA
 
2/27/2012 11:25:11 AM ET
We had a quality Air Force. We ruined it with a program called Quality Air Force. Get the scientists out of the way please.
Scott, PNW
 
2/27/2012 11:17:39 AM ET
How about making everyone responsible for their actions and enforcing this all the time?
Lee, Dobbins
 
2/27/2012 9:31:37 AM ET
What we need to do is promote people that are leaders instead of trying to turn those we promote into leaders. We need to stop promoting box checkers and zero-risk takers that can't make a decision or develop people.
Paul, Hanscom
 
2/26/2012 6:37:19 AM ET
Does the AF in this economy employ people for talent management while 10000 military personnel are getting the boot to budget cuts In my experience structured mentoring programs are unhelpful take away airmen from their primary duties and really are only necessary if the supervisor has some kind of aversion to doing their job in the first place. Case in point the mentoring program at my workplace once had a mandatory guest speaker event--a high school football coach who we flew in from across the country-- who talked to us for 3 hours about his baseball card collection. I'm sorry but the day I can rationalize spending AF time and money on that is the day I eat my shoe. And the day I support a talent management program during a war abroad and economic crisis at home is the day I eat the other.
Lt , tired of forced mentoring
 
2/24/2012 12:16:30 PM ET
After reading this article I have just a few comments to add. First the more you try to codify and structure leadership programs in order to direct their implementation you remove the most important aspect of leadership the desire to lead and initiative that is intrinsic to that desire. Instead those in leadership positions have these programs imposed on them making the leader seem disingenous this is clearly visible to mentees. Second as a proud Airman I hope to avoid the trappings of a corporate culture like the one this article seems to convey. We have great leaders those leaders mentor not because of a program but because they are great leaders. Many of those mentored by those leaders will mentor the next generation and so on. Those who aren't leaders will in general self-eliminate over time. I don't need formal guidelines to guide my mentorship of Airmen as the author suggests. The guidelines of my mentorship were formed over years of experience...experie
Maj H, Hill AFB UT
 
2/23/2012 3:30:37 PM ET
Force Development and Talent Management That's about as fine an example of doublespeak as I've ever heard.
Sandi, Here
 
2/23/2012 11:10:55 AM ET
Mentee is the worst made-up word I've ever seen. Use a real word like protege to describe someone recieving mentorship. Mentee makes me think of manatee and I don't see them taking to mentorship too well.
Bob, FL
 
2/23/2012 8:55:17 AM ET
Force Development and Talent Management is a term used in the civilian corporate world and is commonly preceded with the word Sales. To be frank in return to Ms. Ross, I have some pretty strong biases against essays written by authors possessing narcissistic personalities. While I congratulate her for the accomplshments she made a point to highlight, her perspective on mentoring is the most ludicrous thing I've yet to read on the topic as well as this web site.
Spaz, USA
 
2/21/2012 4:03:58 PM ET
The program outlined here is doomed to fail as it appears to be more of a forced remedial training program. As long as a mentoring program is set up as this structured it will become a place to send your worse Airmen for improvement not your best Airmen.
Jerry, Oklahoma
 
2/16/2012 8:42:35 PM ET
I have to say that I agree with very little in this article. The only point I really agree with is that most mentoring programs fail. The level for formality and structure the author insinuates must accompany the program is exactly what makes both the mentor and mentee resent the mentoring activity. During my 6 years in the AF, I was subjected to both structured and unstructured mentoring. 90 percent of what I learned was as a result of trial and error the remaining 10 was perhaps cultivated. When I needed mentoring I came to my boss for what I needed then went about my business. If mentees don't have an intrinsic desire to learn, neither structured or unstructured programs will succeed. Also Ms. Ross please post your research data or quantitative analyses that support your conclusions. I would like to know how you determined a program was successful and what your measurements for success were.
Chris Kimball, Indiana
 
2/16/2012 1:31:23 PM ET
Nice article, short and concise, but well written. Thanks.
Kenneth Jones, Scott AFB
 
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