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ATD Blog

Creating a Mentoring Culture: A Conceptual Tool

Monday, June 24, 2013
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When it comes to mentoring, everyone is interested in sustainability. The days of flash-in-the-pan mentoring efforts are long gone—it is a luxury few can afford in today’s workplace.

Help is on the way!

The ROS model provides a prescriptive and diagnostic tool for creating a sustainable mentoring culture and evaluating your organizational mentoring efforts. You can use the model in two ways: proactively, to analyze if you have the right elements in place as you plan, and reactively, to determine what elements you may be missing. The model consists of three components: readiness, opportunity, and support.

Readiness

Readiness is an iterative process. It needs to be created at every level of the organization, including with the individuals administering mentoring programs, leaders supporting organizational mentoring, and participants (mentor and mentee) and people supporting the participants (HR manager and supervisor). Readiness also must continually be recreated. Mentoring programs morph over time, and new players come on board. Unless you recreate readiness, past participants might assume that the program they signed onto is the same as it always was. Unless you recreate readiness, your leaders may be promoting an old program.

Strategies for creating readiness

  1. Make the business case. People put more energy behind an effort when it aligns with the strategic direction of the organization.
  2. Get everyone on the same page. This helps manage expectations.
  3. Define goals and success factors. You won’t be able to measure your success without them.
  4. Articulate roles and responsibilities. You can’t hold people accountable unless they know for what they are accountable.
  5. Establish criteria for selecting your participants. Arm twisting doesn’t work. Qualify your participants.

Questions to ask: What are our strengths and weaknesses as an organization when it comes to creating organizational readiness? What have we have learned from our experiences that will help us create readiness for mentoring in our organization?

Opportunity

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A mentoring culture generates multiple learning opportunities, settings, and processes to foster cognitive affective and behavioral learning. A mentoring culture honors all of the mentoring that goes on within an organization. It doesn’t treat one type as less important than another. It honors the uniqueness of the learner and offers opportunities to enhance the competence and capabilities of those engaged in mentoring, whether they are experienced at it or not.

Questions to ask: What specific opportunities currently exist that we can build on to engage people in learning through mentoring? What opportunities can we create that will serve the varied and diverse mentoring needs of the people in our organization?

Strategies for providing mentoring opportunities

  1. Plan “with” rather than “for.” It promotes ownership.
  2. Create opportunities to promote formal and informal mentoring. Help people become more competent and comfortable in both types of mentoring.
  3. Identify venues for sharing best practices. It raises the bar for everyone.
  4. Offer a continuum of mentoring education and training opportunities. There are many teachable moments in a mentoring relationship. Identify them and capitalize on them.
  5. Think outside of the box. New types of mentoring are popping up all of the time: group mentoring, cohort mentoring, reverse mentoring, peer mentoring, mosaic mentoring, and flash mentoring, for example.

Support

Organizational mentoring requires multiple supports—some are visible to the eye, others are not. Many of the same functions that are necessary to support mentoring relationships–listening, structure, positive expectations, advocating, and making the learning relationship special–are important when it comes to managing the mentoring process. The goal, in the final analysis, is to provide the right kind of support that helps everyone and the organization become successful at mentoring.

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Questions to ask: What structures and practices currently exist that function particularly well to support learning? What additional structures and practices do we need to put in place to support mentoring?

Strategies for building support

  1. Monitor progress and measure results. When you get your results, broadcast the news. There is nothing like having data to validate your efforts.
  2. Recognize, reward, and celebrate mentoring. This creates a demand for mentoring and increases its value and visibility.
  3. Strengthen your infrastructure. Make sure that you provide financial, technological, and human resources, as well as time and leadership to support mentoring.
  4. Provide a continuum of support. Think strategically about the kind of support you need to provide, when to provide it, and to whom.
  5. Provide development opportunities for your mentoring coaches and coordinators. They need to grow and develop, too.

For more on mentoring, check out the free ASTD webcast, Mentoring: What You Need to Know and Do, this Wednesday, June 26 at 1 p.m. ET.


About the Author

Lois J. Zachary is an internationally recognized expert on mentoring. She has been cited as “one of the top one hundred minds in leadership” today. Her book, The Mentor’s Guide, first published in 2000 and revised in 2012, is the primary resource for organizations interested in promoting mentoring for leadership and learning and for mentors seeking to deepen their mentoring practice. With her bestselling books Creating a Mentoring Culture (2005), The Mentee’s Guide: Making Mentoring Work for You (Jossey-Bass, 2009, with coauthor Lory Fischler), and the The Mentor’s Guide, five Mentoring Excellence Pocket Toolkits, and over one hundred published articles, Dr. Zachary has created a comprehensive set of resources for facilitating the practice of individual and organizational mentoring excellence.. Earlier this year her collection of poetry and reflection My Mother Has the Finest Eyes was released. Dr. Zachary is president of Leadership Development Services, LLC, a Phoenix-based consulting firm that specializes in leadership and mentoring, and director of its Center for Mentoring Excellence. Her innovative mentoring approaches and expertise in coaching leaders and their organizations in designing, implementing, and evaluating learner-centered mentoring programs have been used globally by a wide array of clients, including Fortune 100 companies, government organizations, and educational and other institutions, both profit and nonprofit.

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