From school-age children to the C-Suite, everyone can benefit from having a mentor at some point in their journey. Whether it is helping to figure out a new career path or how to become a people manager for the first time mentors teach, support, and challenge their mentees to help them achieve their goals.
The Center for Creative Leadership defines mentorship as “an intentional relationship where a more tenured and knowledgeable person nurtures the professional and personal growth of a less tenured and experienced person.” Keeping this definition as a foundation, mentoring can benefit both employees involved in the process. Developing a mentorship program at work is not a new trend – according to Forbes, around 70% of Fortune 500 companies have a formal mentor program.
Even though mentor programs exist across many industries, research has shown that cookie-cutter program styles can actually have the opposite effect on employees than what is intended.
For example, an HBR study analyzed 30 firms across size, global footprint, and industry and found that as these companies grew, they became more corporate and bureaucratic, leading employees to feel like “just a number” instead of an individual. Whitnie Low Narcisse, Senior Vice President at First Round Capital provides questions that mentors and mentees can ask themselves before committing to ensuring that their match is mutually beneficial:
Mentors:
The unprecedented increase in hybrid workplaces makes traditional mentoring programs harder to use. Your organization’s mentorship program must include guidelines around supporting the relationship while working a hybrid or remote schedule. Marianna Tu, CEO of America Needs You (ANY), offers some suggestions for how organizations can maintain their mentoring program in a hybrid world by building rapport and creating purpose:
As a defining piece of the Great Resignation, employees want to work for a well-rounded employer. They want to feel that companies care about their personal growth and well-being, not just their ability to get the job done. Employers of choice recognize the impact mentorship and career coaching can have on retention.
One of the most pivotal times for mentoring is during onboarding and the first few months for a new hire. Your employee’s initial experience with the organization sets the tone for how soon they feel part of the company culture. Add in the remote work dynamic, and it becomes even more crucial for new employees to feel a sense of belonging.
By bringing in employees from different levels and functions within the company and creating a structured program, organizations can help employees feel connected from day one and establish an internal network they can draw on for support throughout their journey. Forbes suggests taking a team-centric approach to your mentorship program and offers some implementation ideas:
In addition to fostering a people-centric and growth-oriented culture, an inclusive mentoring program helps enhance company-wide equity and diversity efforts by providing marginalized groups access to personalized, 1:1 career development and the opportunity to build a relationship with someone in leadership. These mentorship programs can also increase diversity in the organization’s talent pipeline, by giving visibility to these employees and preparing them for leadership roles.
A strong mentorship program is an invaluable resource for employee development. Providing internal career and personal growth must be part of strategic plans and your company culture. In a world where organizations constantly compete for talent, stand out with a mentorship program that reaches all employees- whether it is their first day or year 10.