Poynter Online Poynter Online
New UserLogin
Poynter Online Main Page
Poynter Career Center
Design / Graphics
Diversity
Ethics
Leadership
Online
Photojournalism
Writing / Editing
TV / Radio
Journalism & Business Values
About Poynter
Seminars
Faculty
Columns
Resource Center
The Poynter Store

Help Poynter


Create Your Personal Page
Add Your Bio
Add Your Photo
Share Your Favorite Links

Signup for Poynter Newsletters
Get Poynter Delivered to Your PDA

ASNE Online Ethics Tool



Colleen on Careers
Posted, Mar. 5, 2008
Updated, Mar. 5, 2008


Each week, "Colleen on Careers" offers employers tips on hiring. By continuously improving their hiring process, companies can ensure that they find the most qualified employees.

More Colleen on Careers QuickLink: A138869

Use Mentorships to Guide Career

By Colleen Eddy (more by author)
Director, Poynter Career Center

E-mail this item
Print this Page
Add Your Comments on this Article

I have been involved in mentoring throughout my work life, both as mentor and as protégé.

Mentorships are long-term learning relationships built on trust, a mutual understanding and a confidential communication that allows both mentor and protégé to share the things that can make us feel most vulnerable in our careers. A solid mentoring relationship can last a lifetime.

RELATED
We can help you with these tips and tailor them to your job search. For more information, e-mail Colleen at ceddy@poynter.org or call her at 727-456-2331.

Background on Poynter Career Center

Sign up to receive Colleen on Careers by e-mail.
The key -- and the toughest part -- is finding the right person. The ideal mentor allows you the freedom to be vulnerable and protects that vulnerability with confidentiality. Honesty, genuine sharing, the patience to listen and understand, learning about one another, and the ability to be candid and free to express appreciation for the relationship are the elements that make a mentorship last.

I have had the privilege to mentor protégés at all levels: college interns, higher-level directors under the Metro.biz Tribune program, and internal employees who chose me as their mentor from a formal program set up to encourage career advancement within our company. All of the mentorships had common traits:
  • The relationships were formal in that they established expectations at the beginning of the program, required regular meeting times, and included beginning and ending time frames for the mentorship;
  • All provided a way for the protégé to give candid feedback to an authority who was project-leading the mentoring program and to find a different mentor if the relationship wasn't working.
  • Each mentorship lasted longer than the set time frame, which was usually a year. Several of them concluded when the goal of getting the promotion, getting the job, or learning the competency was reached.
In each of these relationships, I learned as much (if not more) than the protégé. I have also chosen mentors for my own career.
 
Why make the effort to find a mentor or serve as one? It is one of the best things you can do for yourself.

A good mentor has life experience as well as professional experience. She will follow your career path, sharing both your celebrations of successes and your disappointments. By listening to you and understanding the things that move you most, your mentor is able to give you sound advice based on what she has learned in her life experiences.

When your career takes a turn in a different direction, when the challenges presented in the day-to-day are overwhelming, when you think you are cornered without any way out, a mentor can be there to help.

Mentors help you get acclimated to a new company. They help you search your soul about leaving a job, accepting a new one and dealing with the challenges that frustrate you.

If you are ready to mentor someone, or you are looking for a mentor for yourself, think about these three issues:

How to be a great mentor: Be compassionate, be ready to listen and understand, be eager to share and support a protégé, be willing to learn about yourself and about another individual. Most of all, be committed to following through with set times and expectations and be willing to be honest in a thoughtful way.

How to gain the most out of a mentoring relationship: Make the commitment to put the necessary time, effort, care, listening, understanding and learning into the relationship. Set shared goals at the outset and follow through on these goals. Live up to the expectations both of you have for the relationship. Open up to one another and protect confidences. Have some fun.
 
How to establish a mentor relationship: As a new hire, ask about formal programs first and follow procedures. If no formal mentorship is available, watch those leaders you admire (they may be managers or more seasoned employees) and define the qualities and skills you want to learn from them. Over several months, watch these people in meetings, in individual interactions and at their jobs.

Then, with a defined set of expectations, ask to meet with the person you have selected. Have in mind clear guidelines for meeting times and frequency, length of the mentorship and goals for what you need to learn. Approach the person openly and ask him or her to mentor you. If the person refuses for whatever reason, ask for a referral to someone who might agree to such a relationship.

Persevere. Finding the right mentor will be one of the best gifts you give yourself in your career.

Next week: Control your career destiny.


E-mail this item
Print this Page
Add Your Comments on this Article

Back to Top
More Colleen on Careers



Search Poynter Online
Search Poynter Online

My Boss Likes Me, He Likes Me Not
My Boss Likes Me, He Likes Me Not
New On Poynter
A Case for Subsidies?
By Rick Edmonds

Whither Bush's Blog?
By Alan Abbey

Olympian Ruling
Al's Friday Meeting

Tech-Savvy Cities
Al's Friday Meeting

Taking a Grammar Vote
By Roy Peter Clark

Covering Disabilities
By Susan LoTempio

News from Israel
Page One Today

Related Content
Poynter Career Center Testimonials
  Site Map | Advertise | Search | Contact | FAQ | Our Guidelines QuickLink  
  Copyright © 1995-2008 The Poynter Institute
  801 Third Street South | St. Petersburg, FL 33701 | Phone (888) 769-6837
  Site developed & hosted by DataGlyphics, Inc.



Poynter Career Center
Friday: Can New Media Save My Career?
Giving Credit Costs Little