I recently received a letter from a former associate. In it, she expressed immense gratitude for my role in both her professional and personal development. She said that I helped her to identify her strengths, which allowed her to confidently advance in, what remains, a successful career. In conclusion, she added, I had been a gracious mentor and would always be considered a friend. Suffice to say, I was touched. To be acknowledged in such a way to realize the positive impact you can have on someone is incredibly rewarding.
Now, I dont wake up in the morning saying, Hey, I think Ill be a mentor to someone. Since Ive attained a position to manage other managers, however, I have a pay-it-forward mentality when mentoring opportunities present themselves, as I was the beneficiary of great mentoring during the formative years of my career. I have seen that the best mentors have a sincere desire to help mentees grow and flourish inside and outside of the workplace. There may be varying goals for a mentor-mentee relationship, but Ill offer some personal perspectives.
The primary objective of a mentor is to provide measured guidance not rapid, concrete solutions. I prefer to have frequent conversations, asking a line of what if questions to stimulate analysis. For me, its necessary a mentee is allowed the opportunity to think toward solutions without my overly detailed input. When Im able to assess situations quickly because of my experience, its still best to be patient as the mentee continues to grasp whats taking place. As I see it, its up to the mentor to offer frameworks and perspectives, not easy answers.
Its critical, too, that a mentee feels supported throughout the relationship especially through errors, complications, and not seeing eye to eye. A nuanced statement such as, I mightve handled that differently, may be in order. It gets the mentors point across in an effective, but tactful manner. Building up the mentees confidence is an important benchmark of the relationship. I try to find a sweet spot in my style avoiding the extremes of spelling everything out but never allowing egregious errors for the purpose of learning a lesson.
That letter from my old coworker will remain in my desk drawer, serving as a reminder of such a gratifying experience. Yes, the best mentors can offer an invaluable service to their mentees. I have found, though, the benefits are for both parties. In my experiences as a mentor, my thinking has been sharper and notably the interactions reveal some of my blind spots. In its finest example, learning is a two-way street in a mentorship. If your experience allows you to serve in the role of mentor, pay it forward. Help someones career!
