Tuesday, April 14, 2020
How to Find a Mentor at Your First Job
How to Find a Mentor at Your First Job When you start your first job, youâll have plenty of questions about the real world that college might not have prepared you for. Should you dress up every day, even if your co-workers wear jeans? What email signature should you use? How do you stand out from your colleagues when youâre trying to keep up with all your new responsibilities? Luckily, you donât have to figure it all out on your own. A mentor â" or two or three â" can help you navigate office life, learn how to move up in your industry and weigh future job offers. But there are right ways and wrong ways to identify and work with mentors. Here are the dos and dontâs of mentoring from pros who have been on both sides of the relationship. DO: Consider a midcareer mentor from within your own network Youâll get the most out of a mentorship if youâre able to speak with someone in your field who understands the challenges specific to your industry. He or she will also have professional connections you might be able to call upon in the future. Start by considering former bosses from college internships or part-time jobs, professors who taught classes in your major or older alumni from your alma mater whom you admire. Your potential mentor should be someone you consider successful but who is also reliable, accessible and candid, and who will take the relationship seriously. âIt really comes down to the two parties. Do they click? Is there something there of value that they both see?â â" Paul McDonald, senior executive director, Robert Half âYou want to have somebody whoâs not too far advanced in their career compared to you,â says Paul McDonald, senior executive director of global recruiting firm Robert Half. Theyâre more likely to make time for you and to be aware of emerging trends in the field if theyâre between five and 15 years older than you, but a mentor in his or her 40s could be helpful, too. âIt really comes down to the two parties,â McDonald says. âDo they click? Is there something there of value that they both see?â If you work at a large company, you might also have access to a formal mentoring program, which pairs you with a higher-level colleague who can give you career guidance from within the company. Take advantage of this opportunity to meet colleagues you might not have had the chance to work with, and who can share with you valuable insight into how they were able to thrive in your work environment. In addition to keeping in touch with a more senior professional in your field, itâs worthwhile to seek out a second mentor who is in his or her second job out of college, called a âstep-aheadâ mentor, says Ellen Ensher, professor of management at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles and coauthor of âPower Mentoring: How Successful Mentors and Proteges Get the Most out of Their Relationships.â âTheyâll be able to empathize with what youâre going through,â she says. âAnd theyâll have all the cutting-edge knowledge.â DONâT: Be afraid to meet new mentors at industry events Joining a new organization or attending a networking event alone can be intimidating, but it can also be hugely rewarding. Thereâs a trade organization for nearly every industry, from the National Science Teachers Association to the National Exercise and Sports Trainers Association. Attend their monthly meetings or conferences and youâll get to know other professionals â" some who are entry-level like you and others who have risen to the top of the field. Youâre more likely to find a potential mentor, and make meaningful new connections in general, if you take an active role in the organization once you join, Ensher says. âVolunteer on a committee, and then you get partnered with these older, advanced professionals and you start to interact with them one-on-one,â she says. Helping other members organize an event or update the associationâs website will give you a chance to see your teammatesâ work styles and to recognize a great prospective mentor when you meet him or her. DO: Decide on specific goals and meeting times Once you have someone in mind, formally ask him or her to be your mentor. Using the word âmentorâ â" and not merely asking to speak on the phone every once in a while if you have a work-related question â" will make your expectations clear, McDonald says. âThat will help with the specificity and help qualify and quantify what you need from that person,â he says. Itâs important to be as explicit as possible when defining the relationship. Meeting once a month is standard, McDonald says, either in person or over the phone. You can schedule your conversation while youâre both commuting to work in the morning or on your lunch hour, as long as itâs at least a half-hour block of time when you know you wonât be distracted. Know what your goals are, too. Tell your prospective mentor that youâre particularly interested in learning how to communicate effectively with your colleagues, manage your time or build your confidence so you can negotiate a raise. Come to each conversation prepared with questions and anecdotes from work so you make the most of the time your mentor has carved out for you. The more specific you are, the more useful and targeted the answers youâll get. Take care to act professionally, though, and to focus on how you want to grow â" not on how frustrated you are with a boss or colleague. âItâs not a time to call out people as bad managers or bad employees,â McDonald says. DONâT: Immediately ask for a job Try not to view your mentor as merely a potential connection for a future job. Think of him or her as someone who will help you become the best current employee you can be so that youâre prepared to land an even better position next time youâre on the job hunt. If youâre currently looking for a job, you can bounce ideas off your mentor or ask for advice on how to frame your skills. Your mentor might even be more likely to suggest positions you should apply for if youâre professional, confident and inquisitive than if you hand over your resume or ask explicitly for a good word at their company. âYou have to feel the vibe,â Ensher says. âAnd a lot of times, if youâre asking provocative, interesting questions, the mentor will offer that up.â One of the best ways to make sure youâre a good mentee is to mentor others, Ensher says. You can work with current students at your alma mater â" in person or virtually â" or high school students through a local nonprofit. Youâll have a greater understanding of how important it is to make the best use of a mentorâs time when youâre on the other side. Youâll also gain confidence in your growing workplace knowledge, and maybe youâll be surprised by how much you already know when you advise others. âYou have to give them feedback, you have to provide them with coaching, you have to kind of explain your thought process,â she says. âWhen you teach someone else, you become better at what youâre doing.â Close Modal DialogThis is a modal window. This modal can be closed by pressing the Escape key or activating the close button. More from NerdWallet: 8 Tips for Standing Out on Your First Day of Work How to Negotiate Salary and Evaluate a Job Offer Knock âEm Dead: The Best Job Interview Questions to Ask
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