| In order to make your mentoring
efforts as successful as possible, we recommend that you give
additional attention now to how your program is being evaluated.
Remember, even if you havent put formal evaluation
measures in place, its being evaluated informally
by those who participate in, observe, or hear about your efforts.
These comments apply mainly to mentoring programs. Those of you
who are reading this in the context of an individual mentoring
relationship can also evaluate your situation. Is your mentoring
partnership meeting your expectations?
Our bias is that your evaluation should focus most on what happens
to your mentees. At the very least, as our medical colleagues
first ask: Did you do no harm? Further, did the mentees
change for the better as a result of being in your program?
If youre not too sure how to conduct a program evaluation,
here are some ideas to discuss with the rest of your team.
1. What do we need to know in order to make decisions about
our mentoring programs future?
Always, your evaluation should be geared toward the decisions
that must be made by your decision makers. First, determine who
your decision makers are. Second, list their most important decision
needs, or ask them what they are. Usually these decisions
include some of the following: Should we spend our money on another
round of this? What, if anything, should we add or drop? What
were the anticipated and unanticipated outcomes of the effort?
What, if any, harm was done? Should the type or number of participants
be the same or different? Could we get the same effects with a
different approach?
2. What data will help answer these questions?
You have a large choice of data. The programs we evaluate and
others weve observed focus on some or all of these various
measures: program satisfaction; knowledge and skills acquired;
mentees career progress (e.g., promotions, raises, career
decisions); mentees self-confidence; employee retention;
contacts made/people met; risks taken; mistakes avoided; money
saved; products or processes created; best features of the program;
program weaknesses; recommendations for improvements. Your most
difficult task will be determining what exactly the mentoring
component (as opposed to other factors) contributed to these changes.
You also have to decide among data sources. Will you contact
mentees, mentors, mentees managers, program planners, others
in a position to know something about the program? Will you analyze
written documents such as training materials and the mentees
development plans?
3. Who should do the evaluations, an external expert, the
planning team, or some combination?
The planning/implementation group should collect at least some
of the data internally. Examples include: numbers of mentors and
mentees, participants satisfaction with training they received,
their satisfaction with the mentoring experience as a whole, whether
or not planned activities actually occurred. Participants can
turn in reports on what they did together, what they learned,
and suggestions for improvements. You can also get short-term
retention numbers (Do participants stay with your organization
after they complete the program?).
In addition, we strongly advise you to get outside evaluation
help. An outside source which specializes in mentoring evaluation
and which guarantees confidentiality will ensure that your participants
share more detailed and candid information. You and the team can
strategize with the evaluators on data needed, items to be asked,
procedures, and what you want the report(s) to cover.
4. What mistakes could we make?
The biggest mistake is not collecting any evaluation data.
Probably the second is generalizing too much from a small
number of data points. (In our opinion, you should have at least
20 respondents, and preferably more.)
You can also make mistakes in selecting of respondents,
wording of questions, interpretations of answers,
and conclusions drawn from the data. We think its
also a mistake to present too technical, dry, or sterile a
report, one without useful illustrations and quotes.
The sooner you think about evaluating your program, the better.
Ideally, designing the evaluation is one of your earliest tasks.
If you havent done much up to now, how about starting this
week?
Those are a few of our thoughts. Let us hear from you about how
youre currently evaluating your mentoring efforts. The Mentoring
Group is available to work with you in your evaluation. Contact
us at info@mentoringgroup.com.
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