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REASONS TO
BE A MENTOR
by Dr. Linda Phillips-Jones
Most people agree that mentees
receive enormous benefits from mentors. In fact, in the 23 years
I've been working with mentors and mentees, I've only met a handful
of individuals who didn't see any benefits of linking up with
a mentor.
Selling mentors, however, is
becoming more challenging. Successful people are getting busier,
and many aren't sure they want to make time to serve as mentors.
If you're debating about playing this role, here are some of
the most important reasons for investing at least two hours a
month (24 hours a year) to help a mentee.
- You'll learn. By serving
as a mentor, you'll learn from your mentees. They'll have knowledge
you don't have, maybe teach you a new job-specific skill, and
help you enhance your people-development skills, which you can
use with your own employees and even your family and friends.
In the process, you'll also learn more about yourself.
- This is a chance to pay back.
In the past, you may have received good mentoring from someone
and never had a chance to show your gratitude to him or her directly.
You now have an opportunity to reciprocate and "put something
back into the pot."
- You could receive recognition
from peers and superiors. Being an effective people developer
won't go unrecognized. In fact, if you're in management, you'll
be officially or unofficially rated on your ability to recognize
and groom talent. If you're in a formal mentoring program, it's
likely you'll be recognized for your contribution.
- You may get some extra work
done! Remember how you paid your dues by doing routine tasks
for a mentor? Within ethical limits, your mentees can work on
your research, help with a project, or finish other work that
remains undone.
- You'll review and validate
what you know and what you've accomplished. Teaching another
helps you review and reframe all you've learned about that subject.
You'll realize that you've accomplished much more than you thought.
- You'll be more likely to move
into "Generativity" (vs "Stagnation").
Erik Erikson said you'll reach a critical decision point in your
mid- to late-30s. You can give up (moving into a Stagnation phase),
or you can thrive, proceeding to Generativity and happy 40s,
50s, 60s, and beyond. You do this by realizing you've been through
and mastered much, a new generation is coming behind you, and
you have a lot to offer it. Being an effective mentor can actually
catapult you into successful Regenerativity.
- You'll probably feel
satisfied, proud, and other energizing emotions. When
you have a positive effect on your mentees, expect several positive
feelings of pride, satisfaction, happiness, contentment, and
excitement along with the enjoyable physiological reactions that
go with them.
- Mentoring could have future
personal payoffs. When mentees are successful, they often
reward their mentors. Even if this isn't your reason for helping,
you could receive grateful thanks, notoriety, jobs, invitations,
and other future opportunities to contribute and celebrate.
- You'll help your organization.
Mentoring employees can help give your organization a recruitment
edge, shorten learning curves, increase your mentees' job satisfaction
and loyalty, and improve productivity and quality.
- You'll leave the world better
than you found it. It's
been said before, and it's still true. Taking the time to reach
out to others, share your life's wisdom, and convey your respect
for them is probably the least expensive and most powerful way
to change the world, one life at a time.
For more ideas on being an effective
mentor, check our Product List.
CCC/THE
MENTORING GROUP
13560 Mesa Drive Grass
Valley, CA 95949
Phone: 530.268.1146 Fax: 530.268.3636 e-mail:
info@mentoringgroup.com
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