Workforce Wonk

By Alyah Khan

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What are the ingredients of a successful mentoring experience?

Most federal employees have had a mentor at some point, but it might not have been the greatest experience for one reason or another.

In the context of federal employment, a mentor can provide tremendous value to a younger or new employee who is unfamiliar with the agency's structure and processes. Yet formal mentoring programs often fail because people are mismatched.

Given that mentoring is a great idea in the public and private sectors, the question then becomes: How do you make mentoring a successful endeavor for both parties?

While contemplating that question, here are a few more: What qualities does a great mentor or mentee possess? What problems should a mentor address? And should agencies establish formal mentoring programs or encourage employees to set up those relationships on their own?

I will be asking experts for their opinions on those questions for an upcoming article on mentoring in the government. But I’d also like to hear readers’ thoughts on effective mentoring strategies and have them share their personal experiences.

What advice would you give to other feds interested in becoming a mentor or mentee?

Priscilla Guthrie, former Intelligence Community CIO at the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, said in an interview that she believes it’s up to the mentee to take the lead in the relationship by defining clear goals and arranging a schedule to meet or chat over the phone and follow up.

Guthrie said the best mentors are people who have a broad understanding of the world and aren’t competitive with the person they are advising. “If you pick someone who is not comfortable with themselves, they tend to not be as good a mentor,” she said.

According to Guthrie, mentoring is a “significantly underutilized opportunity” in the federal government. What do you think?

Posted by Alyah Khan on May 12, 2011 at 12:32 PM




 

Reader comments

Tue, Sep 20, 2011 CancerFromIRS northeast

Mentoring is a great idea, but they need good mentors. At IRS, the mentors terrorize probationary employees, bully them, threaten them with false accusations, etc... One particular mentor (and ex-marine) was really frightening - she actually showed up at a trainee's home during nonwork hours and walked in her front door while she was serving dinner to her kids! Nothing could have been more frightening than this nutcase, and she was in the "management cadre" at IRS. This might tell you a lot about IRS management - frightening!!!!

Fri, May 13, 2011 CJ

Like marriages and friendships, personal committment on both parts probably has the most to do with the success of a mentoring relationship. There's a fine line between "superlative mentoring" and cronyism - and some of the most effective mentoring relationships walk that line a little unsteadily. That said, overt cronyism is definitely frowned on in the public sector, so the best of the best in that sector are going to lay low.

Fri, May 13, 2011

I encourage and support mentoring. I work for the Army and my Career program has a wonderful menoring program. This is the second time I have participated in it, first as the mentee and now as the mentor. My Career program takes the proces seriously and gives us training, trips and graduation recognition. I also mentor several people here at my location in other areas of my expertise also.

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