SEED Update – 4-Site Term, and US vs. Non-US Metrics

Mentor Matching Cycle

The SEED Engineering mentoring program 4-Site Term (for Bangalore, Beijing, Prague,
and St. Petersburg, running June – December 2007) is now 86% matched (44
mentoring pairs). Starting from the date the first email invitation went out to
a potential mentor, here is a comparison of the matching rate
during the first three weeks of this term and three earlier SEED terms:

Term Participants Executive

Mentors
Week 1 Week 2 Week 3
Jun-Dec 2007

4-Site
51 participants

0% US-based
22 (50%)*

executives
19 matched, 37% 39 matched, 75% 42 matched, 82%
Jan-Jun 2007

Established


Staff
49 participants

61% US-based
36 (73%)

executives
26 matched, 53% 37 matched, 76% 37 matched, 76%
Sep 2006-Sep 2007

Recent Hire and


Sep 2006-Mar 2007


Established Staff
83 participants

40% US-based
63 (77%)

executives
42 matched, 49% 62 matched, 73% 69 matched, 83%
3 Term Average 61 participants 40 (68%)*

executives
29 matched, 48% 46 matched, 75% 49 matched, 81%

* The 4-Site term is not completely matched, so this data
is preliminary.

US vs. Non-US Metrics

It is interesting that even though the 4-Site term is solely made up of
non-US-based participants, the matching rate during the first three weeks of the cycle was
essentially the same as for terms with mixed US-based and non-US-based Sun Engineering
staff. The 4-Site mentor group is different so far in this incompletely
matched term in that there are fewer executive (Director, Vice President, Fellow,
Distinguished Engineer) mentors and more Staff Engineers and Senior Staff Engineer
mentors accepting 4-Site term participants as mentees. (We will not know for
several weeks if this lower executive mentor percentage holds true.)

The lack of difference in mentor matching cycle time is consistent with the lack
of difference in participant satisfaction ratings between mentoring pairs working
in the same geographic area and those working at a distance.
Tanya Jankot just finished publishing her analysis of SEED’s April 2007
quarterly feedback reports. As in prior terms, analysis of the 33 recent reports does not
show significant difference in responses to “Q15: Overall Worth of Meetings with Mentor”
and “Q24: Overall Satisfaction with Program” between participants at a distance from
their mentor and those co-located with their mentor. As reported in SEED’s

“5 Years of Mentoring by the Numbers”
(by Katy Dickinson, presented at the October
2006 Grace Hopper Celebration of Women and
Computing
, 30 pages, PDF format):

  • During the past four worldwide SEED Terms,
    68% of the mentoring partnerships have been
    at a distance. “At a distance” may mean on
    opposite coasts of the USA, or it may mean in
    different countries entirely.
  • Participants who are co-located with their
    Mentor report that they meet for longer than
    participants who are at a distance from their
    mentor. While mentoring pairs who are at a distance
    do report meeting slightly more often,
    co-located partners appear to spend several
    more hours together overall over the course of
    their relationship.
  • Whether participants are co-located or at a distance
    from their Mentor does not have any
    impact on their reported satisfaction with the
    SEED program.

This is interesting because one of the assumptions I often hear about mentoring
is that it works better if the mentor and mentee work in the same local area.
I have heard this assumption from both mentors and mentees within Sun and from
managers of mentoring programs outside of Sun. However, the metrics above
do not support that assumption. Mentors are just as quick to accept a potential mentee
regardless of relative location, and mentees (in our case, the SEED program
pariticipants who returned quarterly reports) say they are as satisfied with the
mentoring relationship whether their mentor is local or at a distance.

For more on the SEED Engineering mentoring program,
see <a href="
http://research.sun.com/SEED

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SEED has a new external-to-Sun webpage

The SEED Engineering mentoring program now has a web page available
outside of Sun:


http://research.sun.com/SEED/

We created this new page in response to many requests for information about
Sun Engineering’s mentoring program, usually from companies or
institutions looking for mentoring best practices. On the new SEED
web page is a list of other written materials about SEED which are
available to the public. We are thinking of adding a blog roll
plus a current events section.

Two current events:

  • “The Mentors in Our Lives”

    When She Speaks, FountainBlue Women in Leadership Series


    (I will be on the panel, thanks to SEED Alumna Sanghamitra Sinha for
    her recommendation!)


    When? – Thursday, May 10 from 4:00 – 6:00 p.m.


    Where? – EMC Corporation, 2831 Mission College Boulevard in Santa Clara, CA


    Ticket Purchases:

    FountainBlue Login



    More Information:

    FountainBlue Women in Leadership Series


  • “How to Present to Executives”

    Silicon Valley Chapter, Project Management Institute, Career Management Seminars


    (I will be the speaker with SEED Alumna Landyana Burnett, PMP, as
    the moderator)


    When? – Thursday, June 14, 6:00 – 8:30 PM


    Where? – Cubberley Community Center, H1 Lecture Hall, 4000 Middlefield Rd, Palo Alto, CA


    Registration:

    Event Information


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Caboose Lift Set for 11 May

John talked with the San Jose building department today and we
are approved to move! We are moving our 16 ton 91-year-old railroad
caboose this next Friday, May 11th. WP668 will be moved 3 blocks from its current storage location and then lifted by crane onto the tracks in our
backyard.

We bought WP668 in January 2006 (see

We Bought a Caboose!
blog entry). She moved from San Francisco
to San Jose in February 2006 (see

The Caboose Has Landed!
blog entry) and we have been working
to bring her home ever since.
Hooray!

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Senior Mailings

This morning, I mailed my daughter’s
CMU
acceptance letter plus the $600 deposit. The first, I am
sure, of many college payments during the next four years. I also
mailed Jessica’s invitations to the 8 people for whom we have tickets
to attend the Harker graduation ceremony
(announcements go out later), plus the invitations to her Senior
Recital. Jessica has been studying voice with Dina Mirskaya for four
years, so she and Dina’s other four almost-High-School-graduates
get to show off their music in a Senior Recital at
Le Petit Trianon in San Jose.
We have ordered the food for the recital reception from the
Russia Cafe and Deli.

Jessica spent last weekend constructing a mailing list, designing
name insert cards, folding and stuffing invitations, putting on
labels and stamps and generally learning how to communicate formally
with her friends and relations. We had a long discussion of just
why there was both an inner and an outer envelope in a formal invitation…
I think I remember having this conversation with my own mother many years
ago.

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39 SEEDs matched so far

Even though last week was very busy indeed – between my taking
2 days off for a last visit to prospective colleges with my daughter,
and a 2 day
TAB
(Technology Advisory Board) meeting for me to manage, plus
Sun Labs’ annual Open House adding
both interest and scheduling complexity, the SEED program still
had 6 more Engineering mentoring match acceptances. The 4-Site term
now stands at 76% matched (39 out of 51) after 19 days in the mentor
matching cycle.

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My Daughter is Going to Carnegie Mellon!

After a difficult 100 hour college visit trip (starting just after midnight last Friday and getting back at 2:30 a.m. on Tuesday), my daughter has decided she wants to attend Carnegie Mellon University
(CMU) as an undergraduate in September. After 18 months, I am so happy to be done with the college application process and to have Jessica be
accepted by and decide to go to such an excellent school!

Jessica and I spent 3 days visiting the lovely town of Northampton, Massachusetts and Smith College and then went to the Hartford, Connecticut airport (BDL) to fly to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania to visit CMU. We had
already spent several days at CMU last year (see my

“Warren Vache, Carnegie Mellon”
blog entry). The
Delta flight was delayed in BDL
and by the time we reached JFK (New York City) at about 10 p.m., the connecting Delta flight had left (despite our being told in BDL that the connecting flight
was also delayed and we could still catch it). There were no more flights that night and Jessica had an 8:30 a.m. meeting the next morning in Pittsburgh, so that night we drove 400 miles.

I called my husband John from the Delta
gate and he reserved us a car with a GPS so it was ready by the time we took
the JFK airport train to the car rental counter. We started driving at 11 p.m.
through New York City (and every NYC borough so far as I could tell), crossed
the Allegheny Mountains (lots of tunnels with signs saying Blue Mountain, Tuskaurora Mountain, and Allegheny Mountain but nothing to see in the dark) and got to
the Wyndham Garden Hotel in Pittsburgh hotel at 5 a.m. This was the second time we have
stayed at the Wyndham near CMU; I recommend it highly. The
Garmin Where2 GPS in the rental car gave flawless
directions. Where2 lost signal in long tunnels (of which there were many)
and sometimes referred to roads by names other than what was on the signs
but the directions were perfect.

After sleeping in the car and for 1-1/2 hours at the hotel, Jessica visited classes and had meetings with CMU’s Admissions, Humanities, and Music departments. By lunchtime, she had decided that CMU was where she wanted
to go. I am very happy with her decision. My satisfaction was not even
reduced by Delta deciding suddenly to interrupt our (late again) flight home in Salt Lake City to change flight crews so we arrived back in San Francisco
3 hours late.

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WP668 Caboose Move Update

This week, we finally got the formal recommendation from our Civil Engineer with regard to securing the WP668 caboose for earthquake safety. His formal report (with an official Registered Professional Engineer seal and everything) gets submitted with John’s latest drawings to request the San Jose building permit. The drawings are of the steps and railing which will enclose the entry platform of the caboose, and the associated deck. John will go over to City Hall early next week. Once we have the building permit, we can schedule the crane for the caboose lift onto the wheels and track in our back yard.

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