51 SEED Mentoring Applications

We are in the application cycle for the new
SEED
worldwide Engineering mentoring term for Established Staff (to run April-October
2009). The application forms will be open through Monday, 23 February 2009.
(That is: everything is due before midnight California time, 23 February.)
So far, 51 people have applied but only 5 of those applications are complete.

Some Metrics

    • Applications have been
      submitted from Sun staff working in Australia, China, Czech Republic, France, Ireland, Italy, New Zealand, Russia, Switzerland, and the USA (Arizona, California, Colorado, Illinois, Massachusetts, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Texas).
    • Applicants who have volunteered their countries of origin are from:
      Australia, Bangladesh, Belarus, China, Czech Republic, Germany, Hong Kong, India, Ireland, Italy, New Zealand, Romania, Russia, Slovak Republic, Taiwan, Trinidad & Tobago, USA, and Vietnam
    • Applications have come in from Sun Labs, Microelectronics, Sales, Services, Software, Storage, and Systems.

One of the fun aspects of a SEED application period is seeing where everyone is from and where they work now – like our own little world tour!

Question Call

Tanya Jankot and I will
offer the last of two phone-in presentation and question sessions tonight:

    • February 19, 8 p.m. or 20:00 (USA West Coast, Pacific Standard Time, PST)

SEED’s General Selection Criteria:

    1. All Participants are in Engineering.
    2. Only regular Sun employees may participate.
    3. Superior annual performance ratings are preferred.
    4. Manager support is required.

Next Terms

SEED runs seven terms a year. After this Established Staff, the next terms
will be for PreSEED and GSS SEED. Applications for PreSEED and GSS SEED
will be accepted starting in early April; the terms will run June-December 2009.

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Healing for Holy Land and Africa

The SAMA (St. Andrew’s Medical Assistance) auction and dinner will be held this Sunday, 22 February 2008. The fund raising event will be held at St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church Hall, starting with a silent auction at 5 pm, followed by a Middle Eastern Feast and live auction.

Tickets are $30/adult – $15/child – $100/family (pay at the door)
All are welcome!

St. Andrew's Medical Assistance tile, 2007 photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson Outreach programof
St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church

13601 Saratoga Ave. Saratoga, California 95070 USA

(408) 867-3493,
http://www.st-andrews-saratoga.org/

SAMA Programs

SAMA exists to provide hope and healing to a hurting world. SAMA raises support annually through the annual Middle Eastern Feast and Auction, Christmas Crafts sale, and other fund raisers.

Ongoing Medical Programs SAMA supports in the Holy Land include:

  • Ahli Arab Hospital (the only Christian hospital in Gaza)
  • The Four Homes of Mercy (a home for the severely disabled based in Jerusalem)

SAMA also supports health programs in Africa:

  • In 2008, SAMA supported St. Mary’s Hospital in Odibo, Namibia. St. Mary’s is an Anglican-supported hospital for which SAMA provided linens for 50 beds as well as funding expansion of their birth delivery room from one bed to two.
  • In 2008, SAMA also supported the Chiedza Clinic, in Harare, Zimbabwe. The clinic is part of the Chiezda child care center which serves perhaps 300 kids, many of whom are HIV positive, and their families.
  • As part of St. Andrew’s 50th anniversary celebration in 2007, SAMA raised
    almost $5,000 which (in conjunction with Episcopal Relief and Development) purchased 965 specially-treated mosquito nets to prevent malaria in Africa

Auction Catalog

Click HERE

      to see the draft (Feb 19) auction catalog (PDF format).

There may be some changes in the published catalog version.

22 February 2009 – Live Auction Items

WP668 with new Western Pacific herald photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson Item # 2004 Caboose Brunch
– by John Plocher – Brunch for six in a private 1916 historic railroad caboose (Western Pacific Feather River Railway WP668) in
Willow Glen, San Jose.
1964 Special Selection Cabernet Sauvignon by Martini photo: copyright 2009 Eleanor Creekmore Dickinson and Patricia Martini Item # 2005 Wine – 1964 Treasure from Louis M. Martini
– Martini Family wine collection – 1964 Special Selection Cabernet Sauvignon. This was a very good year – well known for excellence.
1959 Private Reserve Cabernet Sauvignon by Martini photo: copyright 2009 Eleanor Creekmore Dickinson and Patricia Martini Item # 2006 Wine – 1959 Treasure from Louis M. Martini
– Martini Family wine collection – 1959 Private Reserve Cabernet Sauvignon. A sleeper year but now one of the best. Delicious!
Eleanor Creekmore Dickinson etching of Edward Hopper and Walter Hopps Rabbits photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson Item # 2007 Rabbit Etching by Eleanor Creekmore Dickinson
– Original delicate and realistic black and white etching of two rabbits by famous San Francisco artist Eleanor Creekmore Dickinson. “Edward Hopper and Walter Hopps” 1983 14″x17″ framed with glass.
flight over San Francisco Golden Gate Bridge photo: copyright 2008 Charles Jackson Item # 2008 Private Flight Plus Brunch
– Private flight plus lunch. Experienced Palo Alto pilot

Charles Jackson
of the
Shoreline Flying Club
will be your host for 2 hours in a 4 seat
Cessna 182 Skylane II. Want to tour the San Francisco Bay and see the
Golden Gate Bridge from the air? Here’s your chance!
SAMA - St. Andrew's Medical Assistance tile photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson Item # 2010 Middle Eastern Dinner
– Middle Eastern Dinner for eight on a date after March 2009 that works for both cook and auction item winner.
Soquel Vineyards Partner's Reserve 2006 Cabernet Sauvignon photo: copyright 2009 John Plocher Item # 2012 Case of Wine – 2006 Soquel Vineyards Partner’s Reserve
– 2006 Soquel Vineyards Cabernet Sauvignon Partner’s Reserve case of wine (12 bottles) from the Garvey Family Vineyard in the Napa Valley
Exquisite Designer Necklace by Erin Mac photo: copyright 2009 Erin Mac Item # 2013 Exquisite Designer Necklace by
Erin Mac

– Necklace by Erin Mac who designs jewelry for the Hollywood Oscar event – Veridian Art Deco Venetian Master-Cut Briolette with an 18k White Gold and Diamond Enhancer on a Stainless Steel Cable with a 14k yellow gold lobster clasp. From the House of Erin MacGeraghty fine jewelry and watches.

Images Copyright 2008-2009 by Katy Dickinson, John Plocher, Charles Jackson, Eleanor Dickinson, Patricia Martini, Erin Mac

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New Mentoring Term Announced – for SEED Established Staff

Two days ago, executive sponsor

Greg Papadopoulos
(Sun’s Chief Technology Officer and Executive Vice
President of Research and Development) announced the opening of the application
period for the new SEED
worldwide Engineering mentoring term for Established Staff. The application
forms will be open through 23 February 2009.

There have already been 12 applications submitted (from Australia, China,
Czech Republic, Ireland, New Zealand, and the USA). Tanya Jankot and I will
offer two phone-in presentation and question sessions:

    • Call 1: February 13, 8 a.m. or 08:00 (USA West Coast, Pacific Standard Time, PST)
    • Call 2: February 19, 8 p.m. or 20:00 (USA West Coast, Pacific Standard Time, PST)

SEED’s General Selection Criteria:

    1. All Participants are in Engineering.
    2. Only regular Sun employees may participate.
    3. Superior annual performance ratings are preferred.
    4. Manager support is required.

SEED runs seven terms a year. After this Established Staff, the next terms
will be for PreSEED and GSS SEED. Applications for PreSEED and GSS SEED
will be accepted starting in early April; the term will run June-December 2009.

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Formal vs. Informal Mentoring

One of the common questions I am asked when speaking about the
SEED Engineering mentoring
program is about formal versus informal mentoring.
I have managed Sun Engineering’s worldwide mentoring program since
2001 for executive sponsor

Greg Papadopoulos
, Sun’s Chief Technology Officer and Executive Vice
President of Research and Development.

In eight years, SEED has developed into a formal system with published processes,
metrics, and web tools. However, as in most companies, Sun staff also benefit
from many informal mentoring relationships. I estimate that there are
at least three times the number of untracked informal mentoring pairs as there
are pairs in Sun’s formal mentoring programs, of which SEED is only one.

Whether the mentee is a junior Engineer just out of the university looking
to learn basics from someone one or two grades above them, or an
already-accomplished technical star who wants to learn even more
working with a world-class master of their craft, mentoring is a key tool.
In as much as the experience, scope of understanding, and perspective
of the mentor informs, inspires, and strengthens the mentoring experience,
benefiting from the most senior mentor available is particularly important.
I am biased in favor of formal mentoring programs because in SEED
I have seen that a formal program can make the wisdom of executive
mentors more available longer-term to a larger and more diverse group of mentees.

Style and Focus are the two main benefits of
a formal mentoring program.

Style
By Style, I mean the personal manner, preferences, and comfort in communicating
between the mentor and the mentee. Even in professional or corporate circumstances,
mentoring requires a personal relationship and commitment that can be harder
to initiate and maintain in an informal environment, particularly when the
mentor is much more senior than the mentee (as is the case in most SEED
relationships).

    For the mentee:

      Some people are very comfortable with selling themselves, for example, they
      are confident enough to call up a potential mentor and just ask
      for time. Others find this approach too confrontational, or they may be
      too modest or private to approach a senior or very accomplished person
      in this way. Gender and cultural issues come into this as well: for example,
      a woman who wants to be mentored by a senior man may be concerned about how
      he would interpret a direct request, or in a strongly hierarchical culture, a
      junior staff member may feel it is not their place to ask for mentoring from
      someone outside of their management (or they are rightly concerned about how
      their management would respond to their making such a direct request).
      A formal mentoring program can be of great value to someone who is not
      comfortable selling themselves cold to a potential mentor. Knowing that their
      own manager has formally approved their participation in mentoring (that this
      professional development program is part of their “day job”) is empowering.

    For the mentor:

      Some potential mentors are comfortable being approached by junior staff
      asking for mentoring but others may find such a request offensively direct
      (inappropriate, pushy or arrogant). Also, the more senior a person is, the
      more valuable their time is. In particular, senior executives need to make
      the best use they can of their very limited time. SEED is run for the convenience
      of the mentors and is set up to make it as comfortable as possible for executives
      to participate. An executive may get too many requests for informal mentoring
      to evaluate the benefit and circumstances of each one, so they end up rejecting
      all, or just spending a little time with each, or only accepting requests from
      people they already know. Also, the executive may never have been a mentor and
      are not sure how to proceed (and they don’t feel comfortable
      admitting this). A formal program which includes training may get them
      started, to the advantage of their mentee, the company as a whole,
      and their own understanding. By evaluating and validating potential
      mentees in advance, a formal mentoring program can save time and avoid
      mismatches as well as avoiding the awkward or embarassing situation of
      a potential mentor rejecting or discouraging promising junior staff
      members because of lack of time.

In a program such as SEED, all mentor-mentee matches are made privately.
That is, the mentee submits to SEED a prioritized wish list of potential mentors
with whom they would like to work. The SEED program staff act as matchmakers
or brokers. SEED provides the available potential mentors with
validated background information on the potential mentee (that is, information
that the potential mentor can trust) and asks if they want to consider a
mentoring relationship for six months. The mentee does not
know which of the potential mentors on their wish list was contacted. Potential mentors are given space and time to consider the possibilities of a mentoring partnership without risk of offending the potential mentee or interfering with
future communications with them or their manager.

Focus

In the SEED formal mentoring program, the mentee’s manager advocates for
their staff member to enter the program. The manager also makes an
explicit time commitment for their staff member to be in the program.
That up-front awareness highlights the mentee’s strengths and often means that the
manager has a better focus, understanding, and value of their staff member.
Informal mentoring usually does not require
this kind of commitment or focus on the part of the mentee’s manager.
Once the mentee enters the program, their new mentor (who for over 70%
of SEED participants is an executive) also gains a greater appreciation and
understanding of the mentee’s work.

Metrics:

In the SEED program, we regularly collect and evaluate a number
of program performance and success metrics:

    • Satisfaction (of mentee, mentor, and mentee’s manager)
    • Participation (number of applicants, number of managers who have had more
      than one direct report in the program, number of mentees returning as
      mentors, number of mentors who return term after term, etc.)
    • Diversity (demographic, geographic, professional)
    • Promotion Rate (compared to Sun overall and Sun Engineering)
    • Annual Performance Evaluation (percentage of Superior ratings, compared to Sun overall and Sun Engineering)
    • Retention (voluntary and involuntary)

These metrics enable us to understand how program participants and Sun as
a whole benefit from SEED. Because of the nature of informal mentoring,
such metrics are difficult to collect, particularly in an active work environment.
This makes improvement and valuation of informal mentoring almost impossible:
“If you can’t measure it, you can’t manage it”.

How it works:

In a formal mentoring program such as SEED, those seeking to become a
mentee must submit an application form, resume, and letters of recommendation
by their manager and others who think highly of them. Their direct manager
and others spend a significant amount of time preparing the initial recommendations,
and often follow up by advising the program participant on mentor
wish list selections. When it is time for annual evaluation (or, unfortunately
in these difficult economic times, lay off decisions), it can be
very much to the advantage of the SEED participant that their management
has seriously considered their capabilities and value. The SEED program has a proven track record of strong diversity, very high satisfaction, high regard by management, and high retention. SEED participants as a group earn more promotions and higher performance ratings than Sun overall. Individual experiences will vary.

You can see flow charts of how this process works at

“SEED: Sun engineering enrichment & development”

Research Disclosure Database Number 482013, defensive publication in Research Disclosure, Published in June 2004, Electronic Publication Date : 17 May 2004
(5 pages, PDF format)

This special and positive focus by their management on the SEED program
applicant entering the program is often enhanced by the work of the mentoring
pair once the SEED term gets going. Most SEED mentee and mentor pairs report
talking about the following topics:

    • Regular projects/work
    • Joint special projects
    • Setting goals (short/long term)
    • Finding the best path to success
    • Homework from Mentor: people to contact,
      reading material, etc.
    • Industry current events/trends in technology
    • Sun strategy/products/current events
    • Soft skills development (negotiating, public speaking,
      conflict management, etc.)
    • Career development
    • Personal development

By spending six or more months focused on these topics in discussion with
a talented executive or senior staff member, SEED participants usually improve
their value to Sun. In the quarterly feedback reports, mentees report that
participation in the SEED program positively influenced the following:

    • Greater understanding of Sun’s overall architecture, strategy, or business direction
    • Better career direction
    • Broader network of contacts (peer or executive)
    • Increased visibility, within or outside work group

Another aspect of Focus is geographic proximity. For years, 70% or more
of SEED mentoring pairs have worked at a distance, that is, the mentor and
mentee are based in different cities, states, or countries. It is harder to
make and maintain informal mentoring connections when the mentor and mentee are
not local to each other. In a global workforce, potential mentees may work
in an area where there are few or no senior staff available to mentor them.
In their case, being mentored at a distance is their only choice.
If only informal mentoring is available, promising staff who do not work
at headquarters or at other large sites may not get mentored. A formal
mentoring program allows potential mentors to focus on a broader group
of potential mentees, not just those staff who work near them.

Informal Mentoring

Despite my bias in favor of formal mentoring, I do see some ways in which
informal mentoring has advantages:

    • Informal mentoring has the advantage of a quick startup (no application
      forms) and less overhead in managing the relationship.
    • Informal mentoring may be more appropriate for peer mentoring in which
      hierarchy is less of an issue.
    • Informal mentoring may work better than formal mentoring for short-term
      task-based learning (“how do I do this?”) if that is the goal
      (as opposed to long-term professional growth and change).
    • Informal mentoring is less expensive to provide because program staff, tools,
      tracking and communication are not needed. However, this benefit must be
      balanced against the long-term cost to the organization of not taking
      full advantage of executive mentoring capabilities available through
      formal mentoring.
    • Because informal mentoring requires no administration, it scales
      – that is, many more can participate.

Mentoring of any kind (formal or informal) may not be the best solution
for remedial learning, needed by staff members who are not meeting management
expectations. Informal mentoring shares a key place with formal mentoring:
both are important tools for professional development. An individual who
wants to see what mentoring can do (as either a mentee or mentor) may get a
better start within the structure of a formal program. An organization which
wants to build or nurture a mentoring culture should plan to encourage the
use of both formal and informal mentoring.

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Picnic at Johnson Park

My son Paul is still recovering from his
brain
surgery
last Friday. Today we passed two milestones: he took a shower,
and he got out of the house. Paul had permission as of today to get
the incision site wet, so this was his first hair wash in a week. (This is a 6
foot tall 16-year-old boy we are talking about!) He looks and
smells much better.

John and I took Paul out for a picnic lunch to Palo Alto’s

Johnson Park
. He asked for his favorite food from
Darbar Indian Cuisine. We sat on towels
at a damp wooden picnic table under the trees and
ate butter chicken (like Chicken Tikka), Bengan Bhurtha, rice, naan, dal and raita.
I held Paul’s arm to keep him from tipping or slipping as we walked on the wet pavement.
He is moving slow but making good progress in his recovery.

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Packard Hospital Model Train

During my son’s recent stay at
Lucille Packard Children’s Hospital
(LPCH) in Palo Alto, California,
we enjoyed playing with their model train. The HO-scale train layout is on the
main floor and provides entertainment as well as a focus for walking
directions. There is a sign inside the front door “… take the Elevators
by Model Train to Ground Floor…”. The meticulously detailed self-contained
layout is about 12 feet square under an arched roof. Inside are two
non-connected oval railroad track loops. The scenery is inspired by Northern California’s
Southern Pacific rail line, featuring mountains, a lake, the ocean (beach and
underwater), fields, and a small seaport town. Each of the four sides has two
large plastic buttons which do something: create a sound or flash model street
lights… Several friends of ours were involved in creating this layout
under strict hospital supervision. It is a huge kid magnet and brings joy to all.

    LPCH model train layout

    Lucille Packard Children's Hospital model train layout, Palo Alto California
photo: copyright 2009 John Plocher
    LPCH model train layout

    Lucille Packard Children's Hospital model train layout, Palo Alto California
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
    SP Engine closeup

    Southern Pacific engine closeup, Lucille Packard Children's Hospital model train layout, Palo Alto California
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
    John and LPCH model train layout

    John Plocher and Lucille Packard Children's Hospital model train layout, Palo Alto California
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
    LPCH model train underwater scene

    Lucille Packard Children's Hospital model train layout underwater scene, Palo Alto California
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
    LPCH model train layout

    Lucille Packard Children's Hospital model train layout, Palo Alto California
photo: copyright 2009 John Plocher

Photos Copyright 2009 by John Plocher and Katy Dickinson

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Out of the Hospital!

As I wrote
yesterday
, my 16-year-old son spent the last few days in
Lucille Packard Children’s Hospital (LPCH)
in Palo Alto, California, for brain biopsy surgery and recovery. We are delighted that Paul got to go home today! He ate some breakfast and a red
apple, walked most of the way up a hallway and back, and practiced going up
and down stairs with two physical therapists before being discharged. Paul
has been brave and patient with this whole scary experience and we are
very proud of him.

We are less happy not to know what is causing his sudden, severe, and constant
headaches. Paul continues to take strong prescription painkillers. He is
frequently nauseous and sees double sometimes but the nurse said those
symptoms will go away
as he recovers from surgery. Despite all of the adventures and excitement of
the past few days, we are still trying to figure out a solution to the original
problem. There are many test results still to come in. Early reports say
that the lesions
(abnormal tissue) in his brain are not malignant
cancer or an infection (hooray!). However, we do not even know if
the lesions are causing Paul’s headaches or just an unrelated thing he was
born with. We may not know for weeks. Once all of the
pathology (study
and diagnosis) is complete, if Pediatric
Neurosurgery
cannot resolve this, we will probably move on to Pediatric
Neurology.

Paul goes back to High School after the President’s Day holiday. Until
then, our job is to help him recover fully from surgery, grow strong again,
cope with the pain, and pray.

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