Wednesday, June 25, 2014

Help someone- Mentor somebody

Mentoring someone has the potential to be of the most rewarding and satisfying things you’ll ever do in your career.

What does an amazing mentor do? When people are asked to describe their most amazing mentors, here are the 14 characteristics most often mentioned:

1. They are “present”.
Amazing mentors are incredibly focused and in the moment. They take a sincere interest in their mentees, and treat their time spent as important. They hold their calls, shut their doors, turn off their phones, and give their mentee 100% undivided attention.
2. They listen.
While you can “feel” when someone is present, listening is the most visible skill most often used to demonstrate presence. Active listening comes across in making eye contact, attentive body language, paraphrasing, and giving encouragement to open up.  Great listeners are genuinely curious about learning more, and they listen for understanding, disciplining themselves to suspend their own judgment. Sometimes, that’s all someone needs – just to be heard, and to think things through for themselves. Listening is the ultimate form of respect!
3. They ask awesome questions.
Amazing mentors don’t just tell war stories and spew advice. In addition to listening, they ask awesome questions – lots of them! They use questions as a way to learn more, and more importantly, as a way to help the mentee clarify and solve their own problems.
4. They are role models.
Amazing mentors are always aware of the impact of their behaviors on others. The lessons learned are “do as I do, not just what I say”.
5. They keep their promises and hold their mentee accountable.
Mentoring sessions often end with a list of action items, and amazing mentors are very adept at summarizing who is going to do what by when. Then, at the start of the next session, they will report on what they did and ask the mentee to do the same. By doing so, they are role modeling personal accountability. And, they don’t appreciate it when a mentee hasn’t completed their homework, and will let them know that it’s an expectation and condition of continuing the mentoring relationship.
6. They learn from their mentees.
Amazing mentors learn as much from their mentees and their mentees learn from them – at least they try to.
7. They are humble.
Being asked to be a mentor can be a huge ego trip if you let it be. Amazing mentors realize mentoring is not all about them – it’s about the growth and development of the mentee. Being a role model does not mean having to be seen as perfect. Mentees can learn just as much about your mistakes and shortcomings as they can your successes and strengths. Sharing your mistakes and lessons learned, and what you are doing to develop yourself helps establish trust and gives your mentee permission to be vulnerable.
8. They share amazing stories.
In addition to listening and asking great questions, mentors can teach by telling compelling stories about their own lessons learned. Story telling is an art, and should not be overused – a good rule of thumb is one story per mentoring session, but make it a good one.
9. They give feedback.
When a mentor offers feedback, it’s offered as a gift with the intention of helping the mentee learn about themselves and grow. Amazing mentors – because they take such a genuine interest, listen, and ask such great questions – will learn a lot about what makes a mentee tick. They have the ability and sensitivity to offer specific, sincere, and timely feedback.
10. They are patient.
Amazing mentors remember what it’s like to be new or inexperienced, and will allow their mentees the time to reflect, form insights, make mistakes, learn, and grow at their own pace. While they set high standards and will push a mentee to do more than they thought they could do, they don’t expect unrealistic, overnight improvement.
11. They respect and honor confidentiality.
Amazing mentors expect what “is said in Vegas, stays in Vegas”.
12. They practice “Situational Leadership”.
The same approach shouldn’t be used for every mentee. Some people are less experienced and require more direction and support, while others are more experienced and may just need to be listened to and given a vote of confidence. Amazing mentors vary their approach to the individual and to the situation.
13. They set boundaries.
The best mentors don’t date their mentees, are not friends with their mentees, and know where to draw the line between a trusted professional relationship and an intimate personal relationship.
14. They value diversity.
Amazing mentors don’t just seek or do well with mentees that remind them of themselves when they were younger. They are willing to push themselves out of their comfort zone and mentor those are very different than themselves.

1 comment:

Road Warrior said...

I love this post,with the exception of #13.It seems all these guys I talk to,need a friend who understands the business,A FRIEND!It has to be someone who listens(but,I have a real good BULLSHIT detector)but does not lie about anything.They have to follow and remember what we talk about.I've seen guys who said they had driven 20 years,and could not read a map...I try not to condim,but sometimes my flip flops get wet...
Then on to#14,YES,everyone is different,backgrounds,experience..Ect....BUT,they all have one thing in common,they found a company they can make an honest living at,that treats everyone like family.I keep going back to that,it is one of the most important(to me)things that we all need...