{"id":3828,"date":"1995-07-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1995-07-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-76-no-4-july-august-1995-acting-as-a-mentor\/"},"modified":"2022-11-27T02:06:05","modified_gmt":"2022-11-27T02:06:05","slug":"vol-76-no-4-july-august-1995-acting-as-a-mentor","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-76-no-4-july-august-1995-acting-as-a-mentor\/","title":{"rendered":"Vol. 76 No. 4 &#8211; July\/August 1995 &#8211; Acting as a Mentor"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">&#8216;Mentoring&#8217; has lately become a trend in                     management science as its importance to the wellbeing of organizations                     here has finally been recognized. It should be taken very                     seriously. Which is not to say that it can&#8217;t be fun&#8230;<\/p>\n<p> What is a mentor? Our exploration of that interesting question                     takes us all the way back to the western world&#8217;s earliest                     literature. The character in Homer&#8217;s <em>Odyssey<\/em> named                     Mentor is a friend of Odysseus who undertakes the education                     of the hero&#8217;s son Telemachus. Later, Mentor helps the youth                     track down his missing father, but by then he has been possessed                     by Athene, the Greek goddess of war, patron of the arts and                     crafts, and paragon of wisdom. Athene, in the guise of Mentor,                     pilots Telemachus past ambushes and other deadly hazards to                     see him safely through his quest.<\/p>\n<p>Thus the word derives from the image of a loyal, wise and                     helpful friend &#8211; a teacher, protector and guide who uses his\/her                     experience to show a person how to overcome difficulties and                     avoid dangers. Homer&#8217;s mythical figure was undoubtedly drawn                     from the real life of his time, for clearly there have been                     mentors for as long as there have been human beings. From                     the stone age on, youngsters learned how to hunt, gather and                     prepare food and fight their enemies under the guidance of                     older members of their family, tribe or clan.<\/p>\n<p>The very first mentors as we understand the concept today                     were probably aunts, uncles or older cousins. The relationship                     between parents and their children and between older and younger                     siblings is usually too sensitive for ideal mentorship. Less                     intimate relatives can talk to young people with a degree                     of confidence and understanding which immediate family members                     can seldom muster. To be a mentor requires both a warm interest                     in a learner&#8217;s welfare and a certain objectivity.<\/p>\n<p>In any case, mentorship tended to move out of the family                     circle as societies grew more sophisticated. A system emerged                     whereby apprentices learned their trades under masters who                     had gone through the same process themselves. The masters                     might be related to the apprentices, but more often they were                     non-relatives who engaged the youths in exchange for near-free                     labour. For centuries, apprenticeship was virtually the only                     method of passing on advanced technical skills and knowledge.                     Book-learning was confined to theoretical questions of religion                     and philosophy.<\/p>\n<p>And therein lies the essential difference between formal                     education and what now goes by the unlovely name of &#8220;mentoring&#8221;                     &#8211; the closeness to the subject being studied. Education, for                     the most part, tells people about things on paper or in a                     teacher&#8217;s words. Mentoring shows them how to do things in                     actual situations. An old- fashioned master craftsman might                     have been quite illiterate, but he could demonstrate how to                     saw a board or make a pair of boots using the right tools,                     and keep his apprentice at it until it became second nature.                     Unlike much of what we study through reading or other second-hand                     means, the things we learn by practice are not easy to forget.<\/p>\n<p>The apprenticeship system still thrives in large parts of                     the world, where it remains the chief form of technical training.                     In North America, formal apprenticeships have been replaced                     to some extent by schooling, but they still exist in various                     complex trades in which certified competence is required.<\/p>\n<p>Hands-on learning of this kind is not confined to industry.                     Medical interns and articled law students, among others, are                     expected to work for certain set periods under senior practitioners                     before they are considered fully qualified. Thesis advisors                     in universities occupy a classic mentor&#8217;s role vis-a-vis graduate                     students: they combine their knowledge and judgment with their                     juniors&#8217; boldness and energy to blaze new trails of learning.                     George Bernard Shaw caught the spirit of the relationship                     in his play <em>Getting Married<\/em>, in which a character says:                     &#8220;I am not a teacher, only a fellow traveller of whom you asked                   the way. I pointed ahead &#8211; ahead of myself, as well as you.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Not just another buzz-word, but the key to the survival of any group<\/h3>\n<p>In addition to teaching, mentors employ psychology to encourage                     people to make the most of their abilities and personalities.                     Clergy persons, social workers, and concerned volunteers act                     as mentors when they help people get back on their feet in                     times of distress. In our own backgrounds, most of us can                     recall a teacher or athletic coach who went beyond the call                     of duty in attempts to bring our potential to its peak.<\/p>\n<p>But mentors need not hold an official position. Some of                     the best are not even conscious of the role they play. An                     example may be found in the story of a boy who was nine years                     old when his father died, and the man next door decided to                     &#8220;keep an eye&#8221; on his welfare. Over the next few years he encouraged                     the boy to do well in school, gave him odd jobs to do, and                     let him know that he was always welcome to come to him for                     instruction and advice. When the boy got into trouble with                     the police, the man interceded and pledged to see to it that                     the boy behaved himself in future &#8211; which he did, mostly out                     of a sense of obligation. To the man, it was all a just part                     of being a good neighbour. To the boy, it was an invaluable                     head start to a successful life.<\/p>\n<p>In the past few years, mentoring has come to be identified                     with management. In fact, it has become a kind of buzz-word                     in management theory, and that is not a good thing. Its popularity                     may lead people to regard it as just another theory of the                     month in a field where theories burn with the brilliance of                     Roman candles for a while, then fade into extinction. It should                     be understood that mentoring is not a fad; it is a serious                     and eminently practical matter, vital to the progress of any                     organization, whatever its purpose may be.<\/p>\n<p>History shows that, among any group of human beings, the                     nurturing of skills and talent from one generation to the                     next is the very basis of survival. To go back to ancient                     Greece, the fathers of western philosophy regarded the transmission                     of experience as nothing less than a moral duty. Socrates,                     for instance, declared that knowledge is the most valuable                     thing a person can have, and that it must be shared for the                     good of the community.<\/p>\n<p>No matter what size it is, every organization is a kind                     of a community. Like any village, town, or city, it has its                     body politic, its culture, its leaders and its specialists.                     One traditional feature of a well-ordered community is that                     its elders are called upon to share their wisdom with people                     who stand to benefit from it. If a community is not to wither                     away, it must perpetuate itself by a flow of new blood throughout                     its system. In a modern business or other organization, this                     new blood takes the form of abilities that are being developed                     bit by bit, day by day.<\/p>\n<p>The elders in an organization are the managers, supervisors                     and senior co-workers of &#8220;developing&#8221; employees at every level.                     To serve well as mentors, they must be aware that mentoring                     is not a peripheral task; it is an integral part of their                     jobs. Some companies drive this point home by specifically                     pairing off junior and senior employees. These designated                     mentors and their prot\u00e9g\u00e9s often work in teams,                     so that much of the learning and questing is done collectively.                     Nevertheless, an able team leader singles out individuals                     for special attention as required.<\/p>\n<p>In most organizations, mentoring is carried out informally,                     especially when both parties to the relationship are in white-                     collar positions. It would seem clear that fledgling white-collar                     workers are just as much in need of assistance and encouragement                     as their apprenticed blue-collar counterparts, but until lately,                     this need was widely overlooked. New people would arrive in                     the office, and &#8211; after they had been given a critical once-over                     &#8211; senior colleagues might or might not tacitly &#8220;adopt&#8221; them.                     In general, however, managers and supervisors in offices were                     expected to master their jobs through a combination of osmosis                     and time.<\/p>\n<p>Until a few years ago, there was enough time &#8211; and enough                     people in a typical office &#8211; for this slap-dash tradition                     to yield more or less satisfactory results. Curiously enough,                     there is more need for mentorship as a corporate way of life                     now that productivity has become a watchword and people at                     all levels have a full quota of work. In a busy shop, the                     development of abilities among the staff will tend to be neglected                     unless time and effort is expressly allotted to it. It must                     receive regular and continual attention, and not be left up                     to occasional training sessions or seminars. Mentoring is                     not a sometime thing.<\/p>\n<p>What makes a good mentor? First of all, he or she must be                     accessible. Today&#8217;s heavy workloads tend to pin managers down                     at their desks. Good mentors refuse to stay comfortably ensconced                     in their office chairs; they walk around, pop into people&#8217;s                     offices to see how things are going, keep in regular touch                     with people in the field over the telephone, and make sure                     their own doors are open. As one young manager approvingly                     described her boss, &#8220;She has a way of being there whenever                     I need her, and when I don&#8217;t need her, she lets me do my own                     thing.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>The wise mentor guards against the urge                   to play favourites<\/h3>\n<p>This is just the reverse of another young manager&#8217;s report:                     &#8220;When I have a problem, my boss comes in and solves it, and                     then he goes back to his &#8216;real&#8217; job.&#8221; A person in this position                     is left knowing as little about how to deal with the problem                     after the boss has disposed of it as he did before. Superiors                     who take such a &#8220;do it yourself&#8217; approach should consider                     its effect on their subordinates&#8217; future capabilities in terms                     both of know-how and confidence. They would do well to think                     of those old master craftsmen, patiently nursing apprentices                     along until they had become masters in their own right. Incidentally,                     at a time when technology is always likely to make sudden                     big changes in jobs, the &#8220;apprentices&#8221; are no longer necessarily                     rookies. They might have years of work behind them, and rank                     fairly high on the organization chart.<\/p>\n<p>In the old days, relationships between mentors and their                     prot\u00e9g\u00e9s usually depended on personalities.                     Senior people in positions of authority would sponsor those                     they particularly liked, and stand aloof from the rest. This                     was &#8211; and is &#8211; known as the &#8220;buddy system, &#8221; and it had the                     unhealthy effect of giving rise to office cliques and cabals.                     Often, there would be political struggles in which &#8221; Smith&#8217;s                     gang&#8221; would be pitted against &#8220;Jones&#8217;s gang.&#8221; Those outside                     of the buddy system would find themselves shoved aside and                     passed over for promotion. Nothing could be worse for overall                     morale.<\/p>\n<p>It is only human to like some people better than others,                     but any boss who aspires to be a responsible mentor should                     be on guard against the instinct to play favourites. Within                     working groups and teams, personal feelings must be set aside                     and everyone given an even chance.<\/p>\n<h3>Sympathetic to personal concerns, but seeing that the work is done<\/h3>\n<p>Management experts warn that, apart from any question of                     fairness, highly personal mentor\/learner relationships do                     not always yield the best results in the long run. People                     are drawn to each other by similarities. The danger is that                     the mentors will turn out clones of themselves who are followers                     instead of potential leaders. Juniors should be encouraged                     to act independently and pursue their own ideas, thereby reinforcing                     their individual strengths.<\/p>\n<p>Like parents, mentors who have their prot\u00e9g\u00e9s                     tucked too firmly under their wings are inclined either to                     be too hard on them or not hard enough on them. If the former,                     there is a danger of destroying their confidence; if the latter,                     the danger is that they will become overconfident and hence                     slack. It would be better for all concerned if, instead of                     playing the father or mother to their wards, mentors would                     play the concerned aunt or uncle &#8211; sympathetic to their personal                     concerns, but not trying to run their lives.<\/p>\n<p>Some people, of course, try to get close to the boss to                     push their own advancement. These sycophants are parasites                     who live off their superiors&#8217; vanity. Taking nothing away                     from their individual right to instruction and honestly-earned                     opportunity, the wise boss\/ mentor will subtly let them know                     that flattery will get them nowhere. Otherwise the bosses                     can bask in the glow of fake admiration while the morale of                     other workers goes down the drain.<\/p>\n<p>It takes a delicate balancing act to be both a good mentor                     and a responsible boss. Mentors must take a learners&#8217; weak                     spots into account and work to overcome them; at the same                     time, they must ensure that the necessary work is done, and                     done properly. They must therefore cultivate the art of gentle                     correction. When things are done wrong, it must be viewed                     as a learning opportunity and not as a occasion for recrimination.                     Set-backs are bound to happen, in which case the best course                     is to analyze the causes together, quickly pick up the pieces,                     and get on with the work at hand.<\/p>\n<p>The hardest judgment call in mentoring is how much support                     to give. Over-protection breeds the feeling that the boss                     will always come to the rescue, so that it does not matter                     much if work is well done. On the other hand, leaving people                     to go it alone can make them feel that the boss does not care                     about whether they look bad in the eyes of even more senior                     bosses. The worst case is when, under the pretence of mentoring,                     bosses get juniors to do their work for them, and then shift                     the blame on them when things go wrong.<\/p>\n<h3>A generator of humour and friendship in our working lives<\/h3>\n<p>A careful mentor must have a feeling for when to exercise                     restraint by saying, in effect: &#8220;Don&#8217;t try to do everything                     all at once. What&#8217;s your hurry?&#8221; It is flirting with failure                     to allow too much independence too soon. At the same time,                     people hate to have superiors breathing down their necks.                     They have a basic human desire to be trusted, and they want                     their individuality to be respected. There are times when                     a mentor must recognize that if a person does things differently                     than they do, it is simply different &#8211; not inferior or wrong.<\/p>\n<p>A common way of displaying a lack of trust is by needlessly                     guarding information. People work best when they know exactly                     why they are doing something, and how that something fits                     in with an overall plan. Organizations by their nature tend                     to play information tight to their chests, and managers may                     keep secrets merely because it makes them feel important.                     Mentors should assess how much of what they know should be                     passed on to their subordinates to keep them in the picture                     &#8211; and the more the better, short of clearly damaging the organization.                     For a start, people should regularly be kept informed as to                     how the organization is faring. It strengthens their commitment                     to thus feel involved.<\/p>\n<p>Mentors must prove by their actions that they are worthy                     of their juniors&#8217; trust. These actions often take the form                     of using their superior &#8220;clout&#8221; and familiarity with the organization                     to clear away bureaucratic difficulties that can detract from                     their subordinate&#8217;s performance and impede initiatives. If,                     for instance, the purchasing authority of a person trying                     to run a project is restricted to nickels and dimes, he or                     she is not likely to feel very trusted. Mentors often find                     themselves acting as facilitators and friends in court, making                     it easier to get things done.<\/p>\n<p>Management experts have observed that much of the mistrust                     subordinates feel towards their bosses stems from poor communications.                     They must be told explicitly what is expected of them in advance,                     and not learn that they were supposed to do something only                     when their bosses complain that it was not done.<\/p>\n<p>If there are times when learners feel let down by their                     mentors, there will also be times when the mentors feel they                     have been let down, and they should let the learners know                     it. Being sympathetic towards people does not mean being soft                     on them. Good mentors are hard taskmasters, demanding that                     work be accomplished to the best of their subordinate&#8217;s abilities                     at their particular stage of development. They do not accept                     excuses easily, and they let it be known that they will not                     allow their juniors to take advantage of them. If such warnings                     must be given, they should be given early. A relationship                     that gets off on the wrong foot in this respect may never                     be put right.<\/p>\n<p>But this makes it sound as though mentoring is a grimly                     earnest affair, when in reality it is usually just the opposite.                     As in most other aspects of life, people most enjoy work when                     it is shared. A wholesome mentor\/learner relationship &#8211; one                     in which no undue advantage is taken on either side &#8211; adds                     a lot of fun to working. It brings exchanges of humour and                     the glow of warm human feelings, and it produces lasting friendships.                     For the mentor, it brings the gratification of exercising                     a kind of creativity. Yet another ancient Greek, Aristotle,                     said that he regarded his students with the affection an artist                     feels for his work.<\/p>\n<p>In the aftermath of the &#8220;me generation&#8221; when selfishness                     gained temporary approval in the public mind, mentoring represents                     a return to good old human values. On the part of the practitioner,                     it combines generosity, a concern for others&#8217; wellbeing, and                     the making of a contribution that will last beyond their own                     time. For its beneficiaries, it revives something that has                     been somewhat missing of late &#8211; respect for elders. Wherever                     they might be exercised, these are among the values that form                     the foundation of civilization. The great Greek philosophers                     would have approved.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[82],"class_list":["post-3828","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-82"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Vol. 76 No. 4 - July\/August 1995 - Acting as a Mentor - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-76-no-4-july-august-1995-acting-as-a-mentor\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Vol. 76 No. 4 - July\/August 1995 - Acting as a Mentor - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"&#8216;Mentoring&#8217; has lately become a trend in management science as its importance to the wellbeing of organizations here has finally been recognized. 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It should be taken very seriously. Which is not to say that it can&#8217;t be fun&#8230; What is a mentor? 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