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Welcome to the Manager Lab episode on mentorship, inspired by Andy Lopata's HBR article "Weave Mentorship into the Fabric of Your Organization." This episode argues mentorship should be a daily leadership behavior, not just a formal HR program.
Traditional mentorship programs often fall short because they are time-bound, top-down, and optional. When mentorship is embedded into everyday work—ongoing, peer-driven, informal, and everyone’s responsibility—it becomes how work gets done and how people develop.
Key takeaways: everyone can be a mentor (including reverse and peer mentoring); shift from giving advice to holding development conversations; make mentorship visible and valued in performance and recognition; and create conditions for mentorship by building psychological safety and protecting time to learn.
Challenge: this week, intentionally mentor one person by asking powerful questions to help them think, decide, and grow.
By Dr. J. Gregory Gillum, CPCCWelcome to the Manager Lab episode on mentorship, inspired by Andy Lopata's HBR article "Weave Mentorship into the Fabric of Your Organization." This episode argues mentorship should be a daily leadership behavior, not just a formal HR program.
Traditional mentorship programs often fall short because they are time-bound, top-down, and optional. When mentorship is embedded into everyday work—ongoing, peer-driven, informal, and everyone’s responsibility—it becomes how work gets done and how people develop.
Key takeaways: everyone can be a mentor (including reverse and peer mentoring); shift from giving advice to holding development conversations; make mentorship visible and valued in performance and recognition; and create conditions for mentorship by building psychological safety and protecting time to learn.
Challenge: this week, intentionally mentor one person by asking powerful questions to help them think, decide, and grow.