“Whether seeking to strengthen your own mentoring practice, administer a mentoring program within your organization, or develop your ability to ‘tune in’ to others and navigate candid conversations—Starting Strong provides a unique avenue to help mentors and mentees become more reflective, observant, and introspective—to allow them to grow into the type of professionals they wish to become.”
—Peg McCue Guillon, chairperson, MetLife Legal Affairs Mentoring Program
“Remarkable! One of the finest books I have read on mentoring, this accessible and practical book reads like a novel, and rings with the reality of the business world even as it brilliantly moves us deep inside the mentoring relationship at its best. Zachary and Fischler both entertain and instruct us as we watch how a savvy yet very human mentor works with an earnest younger protégé, artfully ripening the relationship into the kind of respect and affection that characterizes a powerful mentoring experience. For anyone wanting to learn more or teach others about how mentors can make a difference in real peoples’ lives, this trove of practical advice and genuine wisdom is pure gold.”
—Laurent A. Parks Daloz, Senior Fellow, Whidbey Institute, and author of Mentor: Guiding the Journey of Adult Learners
“In this strikingly engaging book, Zachary and Fischler focus on one of the most important dynamics in mentoring: how trust is established at the beginning of the relationship. The story of Rafa and Cynthia is one of bumps and affirmations, growing understanding, and the conjunction of ambition and experience. Through a series of conversations that show the ways listening and questioning work to deepen communication, Starting Strong takes us to the heart of what it means to be a mentor.”
—Stephen Brookfield, John Ireland Endowed Chair, University of St. Thomas, Minneapolis-St. Paul
“Congratulations, you have a mentor (or mentee)! Now what? Instead of winging it, hoping for the best, you can now structure the relationship right from the beginning to make it a satisfying experience for both of you. Part fable, part guidebook, part manual, the authors have highlighted the keys to success for a rich mentor-mentee partnership. Starting Strong is not to be missed by anyone open to this life-changing partnership.”
—Marshall Goldsmith, author of the New York Times and global bestseller What Got You Here Won’t Get You There
“I love this book! It captures the essence of mentoring in a very unique way by taking the reader on an intimate journey as two individuals create and foster their mentoring relationship. The insights gained will enable those new to the mentoring process and those who have been involved for years to acquire insights and understandings they’ve never before fully explored. If you buy only one book on mentoring this year, it should be this one.”
—Dr. Frances Kochan, Wayne T. Smith Distinguished Professor, Auburn University
“Lois Zachary and Lory Fischler provide insight into the distinction, yet interdependence, of a mentoring and coaching culture. Highlighting the keys to fostering successful and sustainable mentoring relationships, their easy-to-read storytelling style and practical working guides make this an invaluable resource to any individual or group mentoring or coaching program looking to adopt successful techniques.”
—Dr. Joanne Robinson, director of professional development, Ontario Principals’ Council
“Starting Strong is a very readable, real-world how-to reference for understanding just how mentoring works. Once you read the fable and use the playbook, you will have all the tools you will need to deepen and enrich your mentoring practice.”
—Michele D. Klein, senior engineering manager, Fortune 100 Aerospace Corporation
“Starting Strong is an engaging story that contains all of the most important elements of successful mentoring relationships. This incredible format will make the tools of mentoring accessible to many people who are unlikely to read workbooks and manuals. I thoroughly enjoyed and appreciated Starting Strong and look forward to using the book in our program.”
—Joanne Goldberg, Medtronic Women’s Network
Strategies for Success in the First 90 Days
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Zachary, Lois J.
Starting strong : a mentoring fable / Lois J. Zachary, Lory A. Fischler.
pages cm
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-1-118-76771-9 (hardback); 978-1-118-76790-0 (ebk.); 978-1-118-76805-1 (ebk.)
1. Mentoring in business. 2. Corporate culture. I. Fischler, Lory A., 1947- II. Title.
HF5385.Z334 2014
658.3'124—dc23
2014013596
In Starting Strong, Lois Zachary and her colleague, Lory Fischler, craft a memorable fable that takes us inside and alongside a mentoring relationship as it plays out over time. We find ourselves listening in on the conversations and learning firsthand about the issues a mentor and mentee experience at the start of their relationship.
The story these authors relate focuses on the evolution of one particular relationship. Yet, its characters, conversations, and context are familiar enough that they will be recognized by anyone who has been in a mentoring relationship or has been charged with supporting mentors and mentees.
I am a great believer that the continuing learning conversations that take place over time are the core of a mentoring relationship. In the most effective mentoring relationships, there are many learning conversations: one in the head of the mentor and mentee before they meet; one after they meet, reflecting on the conversation and the learning to be taken from it; the spoken conversation during the mentoring meeting; and the unspoken, silent conversation in the heads of mentor and mentee as they converse. Zachary and Fischler expose all these conversations. Experienced mentors, like the one in this fable, continuously work at honing this skill.
The mentor and mentee in this fable are both keen to establish a clear sense of direction in their early conversations. They cast this purposeful activity in the language of goals because this is part of the managerial culture and education. We know that setting goals that are too specific at the beginning can be detrimental to the quality of the relationship, causing it to focus on narrow, transactional outcomes. It gets in the way of one of the most powerful processes of effective mentoring—the gradual emergence and flowering of deeper goals, more closely aligned to the mentee’s personal values and energy. The mentor and mentee in this relationship do get to SMART goals, but only when the mentee is far enough along the path of understanding himself and his career purpose.
The mentor is very specific about what she will and won’t do on behalf of the mentee and makes it very clear from the start that her mentee must take responsibility for his own learning. When the mentor gives advice, it is timely and designed to provide context, so that the mentee can make up his own mind about what to do and how to apply it.
Successful mentoring relationships tend to involve periodic reviews of the relationship itself. What would we each like the other to do more or less of? Do we want to broaden or deepen the issues we explore? How can we be more honest with each other? What needs to change as the mentee’s knowledge (wisdom) grows and he becomes more aware of his inner and external environments? We see in this fable how the very act of asking questions like these enhances the mutual respect and trust between mentor and mentee and stimulates their conversations that deliver even greater value.
Stories, like this one have the power to capture our imagination in a way that textbooks can’t. Each mentoring relationship is a learning journey, in the tradition of the “hero’s journey”—a voyage into the unknown, meeting challenges and conquering fears, and gradually learning to know and respect oneself. Homer (the ancient Greek, not Simpson) would have approved of the lessons learned from Zachary and Fischler’s fable!
Maidenhead, Berkshire, UK
Plato said it first: “The beginning is the most important part of the work.” He wasn’t talking about mentoring, but he might as well have been.
Mentoring success depends on a strong beginning—the crucial first ninety days, when mentors and mentees, new to working together as mentoring partners, must build trust and lay the groundwork for realizing the full potential of the relationship. It is a critical time that sets the tone, direction, energy, and momentum for mentoring success. In Starting Strong, we invite you to sit in on the first three months of a brand-new mentoring relationship and observe it as it unfolds.
These questions were top of mind as we wrote this fable. Whether you are a new or experienced mentor, or a newly minted mentee, we encourage you to listen to the conversations and the inner thoughts of this mentor-mentee partnership as they work together to build their relationship.
Cynthia, the mentor, is a savvy and seasoned marketing executive, supervisor, and experienced mentor. She is well grounded in effective mentoring techniques, and she looks to learn something from every new relationship.
Rafa, the new mentee, is a young and ambitious former athlete turned financial analyst. He is unsure of what mentoring really means and what the process might be, but he hopes that mentoring will set him on the path to becoming a company superstar. The framework, obstacles, and successes of the mentoring process for both partners are revealed as their relationship grows and transforms through their conversations, challenges, laughter, and breakthroughs.
If you recognize elements of yourself or your coworkers in these characters, that’s because our fable is based very firmly in reality: Cynthia and Rafa are composites drawn from actual people. Their issues are based on those of the many mentors and mentees we have worked with, interviewed, and coached over the past decade, and their work together is authentic.
We have divided Starting Strong into two parts: Part One, The Fable, and Part Two, The Mentoring Conversation Playbook. Our fable follows one mentoring partnership, but it offers tools and skills that can be applied to any mentoring relationship in any setting. The Conversation Playbook is a quick guide to establishing a trust-based relationship and keeping it strong.
The Fable takes you inside the relationship in real time, as it is taking place. You’ll be privy not only to Cynthia and Rafa’s conversations, but also to their inner thoughts about the process.
Each chapter in the Fable focuses on a particular mentoring meeting, and the chapter subtitles characterize the essence of the conversation that needs to take place. The Week Before is an email exchange that takes place before Cynthia and Rafa meet for the first time. In the First Meeting, the mentoring partners spend time getting to know each other and building the relationship. The Second Meeting focuses on conversations that establish mentoring agreements between them. The Third and Fourth Meetings highlight conversations about goal setting, taking Rafa’s starter goals and converting them into smarter goals. In the Fifth Meeting, Cynthia and Rafa encounter a stumbling block that they must address before they can move on. The Sixth Meeting takes place at the ninety-day mark, when Rafa and Cynthia check in on their overall progress. Finally, the Epilogue jumps forward five years, revealing what the future held in store for Cynthia and Rafa, and how their mentoring process played out over the long term.
In anticipation of readers who are looking to dig deeper, we’ve prepared a series of questions at the end of each chapter to help you integrate the lessons embedded in this fable and apply them to your current mentoring relationships. You can use the questions to trigger deeper understanding, to engage in conversation with your mentoring partner, or as a guide for group conversation. Whether you are preparing to embark on a mentoring relationship, just starting out, looking to improve a mentoring relationship, or reflecting on past mentoring experiences, these questions should help take you to the next level. You may choose to address the questions as you read through the Fable, or leave them until you are finished with the book, or even return to them later in the course of your own mentoring experiences. Ultimately, we hope they will stimulate your thinking and lead to more reflective mentoring practice.
If you are a new mentor, you will find it helpful to keep Cynthia’s tips (at the end of the Fable) in mind as you launch your own relationship. Think about how they might impact and influence your own approach. If you are an experienced mentor, you may find Cynthia’s tips useful as a way of evaluating your current mentoring practice. Ask yourself if any of her strategies might improve your own outcomes. For mentees, they provide a snapshot of good mentor practice.
Mentees can benefit from the tips Rafa provides at the end of the Fable. Rafa was also new to the mentoring relationship, so his tips can help you prepare yourself more effectively for what is to come. If you are a mentor, you may also want to glance at them to refresh your understanding of what it’s like to be on the other side of the relationship.
Part Two, The Mentoring Conversation Playbook, is a handy reference to specific strategies that underlie effective mentoring. We highlight six essential conversations you will want to have in the first ninety days—the ones you’ve read in the six chapters of the Fable. In this section we go deeper, offering strategies that enhance mentoring success and a set of probing questions you can use to deepen your discussion. At the end of each essential conversation you will find a readiness check-in to prepare you to move forward with your mentoring partner.
The resources in the Conversation Playbook are designed to be just that—an aid, not a script. Each relationship is different, as is each mentor and mentee. If you are experienced in mentoring, tap into the strategies that best enhance what you already do. If you are new to mentoring, use the Playbook as a way to familiarize yourself with the processes and topics that contribute to building trust, setting the stage, focusing on learning, and engaging the mentee. Mentees may find the probing questions useful as a preparation or reflection tool.
Whether you are new to mentoring or already highly committed to a mentoring relationship, we encourage you to read the Fable from start to finish first. Feel the rhythm of the relationship before you turn to the Playbook for the details. The mentoring partnership grows in the fertile soil of good conversation, in which mentors skillfully and thoughtfully use conversation to help their mentees probe their own thinking and discover answers for themselves. The mentor’s ability to do this isn’t magic; it’s grounded in a practical understanding of the levels of conversation and what it takes to move from level to level—strategies you will learn in this Playbook.
If you are about to embark on your mentoring relationship, we suggest that you and your mentoring partner review the questions and strategies in Part Two together. Decide jointly which strategies and probing questions might enrich your mentoring conversations, strengthen your relationship, and accelerate learning.
A few caveats. First, if you are a mentor, model Cynthia, but don’t try to imitate her: be authentic and true to your own style. Experienced mentors should look for ways to improve on what they do. This book provides some clear examples. Although we believe there are predictable phases and processes that all mentoring relationships need to address, they must always take a back seat to the immediate needs and concerns of the mentee. Don’t move forward until your mentee is ready.
We hope Cynthia and Rafa’s mentoring journey will generate insights that resonate for you on many levels. Perhaps your self-awareness will increase as you recognize yourself in the narrative; perhaps you will be able to identify what is missing in your personal mentoring practice. Rafa and Cynthia’s conversations may spark some new ideas for you, suggesting new behaviors, skills, and techniques to add to your mentoring toolkit.
There’s one thing we know from our own experience: no matter how many times you’ve been a mentor, you can always get better. One of the ways to get better is by reflecting on practice—your own and others’. This fable is our personal invitation to you to deepen your understanding of mentoring, further your own growth and development, and add value to your personal mentoring relationships by starting strong.
Questions for Mentors:
Questions for Mentees: