Tag Archives: Sun Microsystems

Best Practices for Mentoring Programs

12 Best Mentoring Practices GHC2013 Poster Chart by Katy Dickinson 2013

Answering two questions I am often asked about best practices for mentoring programs:

What are key motivations for mentoring?

Mentoring is a professional methodology with remarkably good payback. Between 1996-2010, over 7,300 technical employees participated in very successful formal mentoring programs at Sun Microsystems. Sun mentoring was reported to yield over 1,000% return on investment (ROI), with more than twice the normal promotions, 93% satisfaction, 88% mentors working remotely (with mentees in 30 global sites), and 70% executive mentors. These excellent payback metrics provide clear motivation for a company or organization to implement a mentoring program. However, it is the motivation of the mentors that is key to program success. A mentoring program cannot succeed without mentors, preferably mentors who come back year after year. Mentors want to give back, to help others as they themselves were helped during their professional development.

At Sun Microsystems, mentors were helping co-workers who may have been in another discipline or division but all were working for the same technical company. For the successful TechWomen mentoring program of the US Department of State, I helped to create a program for STEM professional women from 16 countries in Africa and the Middle East. 250 mentors from 89 Silicon Valley companies have served in the TechWomen program since the first term in 2011. About half of the 160 mentors in 2014 had been TechWomen mentors before. These mentors are not working in the same company as their mentees but they still want to give back – to share their knowledge and their valuable time.

What are best practices for mentoring programs? What are some common mistakes?

A successful mentoring program uses the 12 Best Mentoring Practices (see chart above, from “Lifetime Value of Mentoring“), and includes the 5 Key Elements:

12 Best Practices of Successful Formal Mentoring Programs:

    1. Program Benefits and Goals Clear
    2. Strong Management Support
    3. Mentors, Mentees Selected
    4. Detailed Data Reporting
    5. Meeting 3 or More Times / Month
    6. Match for 6 or More Months
    7. One-on-One Mentor-Mentee
    8. Mentor Training / Orientation Given
    9. Program Continues and Improves for Years
    10. Some Remote Meetings
    11. Paid Program Staff
    12. Ongoing Support Provided by Staff

5 Key Elements for Successful Mentoring Programs:

    1. Strong and visible long-term executive sponsorship and funding.
    2. “Real work – real time” Mentoring and being mentored is professional work done as a part of a day job, during business hours.
    3. Well-managed program (including Process, Training and Educational Materials, Management and Web Tools, and Staff) attracts and supports a wide diversity of participants from many cultures.
    4. The program is run for the convenience of the mentors – to respect their time and experience, to keep everyone safe and productive.
    5. Automated web tools and individualization are balanced to accommodate the size and seniority of the group served.

Common mistakes of professional mentoring programs include:

    1. No program staff, or expecting staff to create and manage the program in their spare time.
    2. Taking all applicants – not having clear and implemented selection criteria for both mentors and mentees.
    3. Not allowing enough time for the relationship to develop between the mentee and mentor – not setting clear time and delivery expectations.
    4. Not collecting early feedback from both mentee and mentor, so startup problems can be addressed effectively.

More Information:

Image Copyright 2013 by Katy Dickinson, All Rights Reserved

1 Comment

Filed under Mentoring & Other Business, News & Reviews

Expert Mentoring Advice: Best Practices / Worst Practices

7 Best Practices _ Worst Practices

I think this has been the single most popular 1-page mentoring summary I ever published:

“Best Practices / Worst Practices” may have been published in other places as well – please tell me if you see it!
12/27/2014: another reference published by talentmanagement360.com.

To get “Mentoring in a Box” free:

  • Sign up using the Mentoring in a Box Registration (registration allows Everwise to follow up with updates)
  • Once you have had a chance to review “Mentoring in a Box” material, Please take this short survey so Everwise knows how to improve.

9/16/2015 update: Several of the documents in “Mentoring in a Box” have been updated and are available by Mentoring Standard.

Steven Spielberg

Sara Blakely

“Expert Mentoring Advice: Best Practices / Worst Practices” is adapted from “Sun Mentoring: 1996-2009” SMLI TR-2009-18, by Katy Dickinson, Tanya Jankot, and Helen Gracon. Copyright 2009, Sun Microsystems, Inc.. All rights reserved. Unlimited copying without fee is permitted provided that the copies are not made nor distributed for direct commercial advantage, and credit to the source is given.

Links updated 13 June 2020

1 Comment

Filed under Hopper - Anita Borg Institute, Mentoring & Other Business, News & Reviews

Mentoring in a Box

Sonia Sotomayor

9/16/2015 update: Several of the documents in “Mentoring in a Box” have been updated and are available by Mentoring Standard.

For several months, Everwise has been developing “Mentoring in a Box” materials, to present best practices and structure for small mentoring programs. Some of the content is original to me, other materials were created by Everwise President Collin Schiller and the team.  Other sources include TechWomen Emerging Leader Seham Al Jaafreh (from Jordan), and material adapted from my Sun Labs Technical Report “Sun Mentoring: 1996-2009”.

To get “Mentoring in a Box” free:

  • Sign up using the Mentoring in a Box Registration (registration allows Everwise to follow up with updates)
  • Once you have had a chance to review “Mentoring in a Box” material, Please take this short survey so Everwise knows how to improve.

Everwise “Mentoring in a Box” contents:

  1. Mentoring in a Box: Read Me First (PDF)
  2. Everwise Partnership Kickoff Guide (PDF)
  3. Everwise Getting Started Guide (PDF)
  4. Metrics Tracking Spreadsheet Template (Must Be Copied to Use)
  5. Mentoring in a Box – Mentoring Program Manager – Resources (folder)
    • 5.1 Mentoring Program Manager – Overview and Contents (PDF)
    • 5.2 Mentoring Program Manager – Basic Guidance (PDF)
    • 5.3 Mentoring Program Manager – Templates and Samples – Letters and Emails (Must Be Copied to Use)
    • 5.4 Template: Kickoff Call Agenda, Presentation Contents (Must Be Copied to Use)
    • 5.5 Everwise Mentoring in a Box, Sample Spreadsheet: Protege Roster (Must Be Copied to Use)
    • 5.6 Template: Pilot Program Candidate Selection (Must Be Copied to Use)
    • 5.7 Sample Pilot Results Report (PDF)
  6. Everwise: Mentor Recruitment (PDF). 9/16/2015: an updated version has been published by Mentoring Standard.
  7. Expert Mentoring Advice: Best Practices / Worst Practices (PDF). 9/16/2015: an updated version has been published by Mentoring Standard.
  8. Everwise: Mentoring vs. Coaching vs. Sponsorship (PDF). 9/16/2015: an updated version has been published by Mentoring Standard.

More materials will be added as they are developed.  Suggestions and your comments are most welcome!

Maya Angelou

Sheryl Sandberg

Links updated 13 June 2020

3 Comments

Filed under Mentoring & Other Business, News & Reviews

“Why Your Emerging Leaders Need Mentors” Everwise 1st Webinar

Katy.Everwise.WebinarTweet.Sep2014

I was honored to speak last week at the first Everwise webinar, titled “Why Your Emerging Leaders Need Mentors”. I think it went very well and was well-attended despite being at the same time as the big Apple product announcement! Ian Gover (Everwise Co-Founder) and I spoke on

  • Why developing top talent is more critical than ever
  • How mentoring can help solve this challenge
  • What measurable results leaders can expect from well-run mentoring programs

The webinar recording is available at Webinar On-Demand. I told stories about TechWomen (working with women and girls in the Middle East and Africa), and about the SEED Engineering mentoring program I ran at Sun Microsystems for ten years. The 2009 technical report about Sun’s program was also mentioned.

The next Everwise webinar will feature CEO/Founder Mike Bergelson interviewing Lauren Leader-Chivee on “Women in Leadership” on 14 October 2014.

Leave a comment

Filed under Mentoring & Other Business, News & Reviews

Long Time Lady Friends

P1220935

Theresa Halula and I have been friends since our early twenties – some time ago (ahem). We worked together at Sun Microsystems and our kids have grown up together. We are both dedicated gardeners – and Theresa has a second (third?) career as a certified horticulturalist. It was a delight for Theresa, Dan, Thomas, and Clara to be part of my son Paul’s college graduation celebration this weekend.

P1220939

Images Copyright 2014 by Katy Dickinson and John Plocher

Leave a comment

Filed under Home & Family

3 Mentoring Resources

IMG_8974

In preparing to go to the American Association of University Women (AAUW) national convention in New Orleans, Louisiana, next week, I have made three mentoring resources available for easy and free download:

IMG_8505

Images Copyright 2013 by Katy Dickinson

19 October 2019: Links updated. The conference book version of Triangular Partnership: the Power of the Diaspora is available for free download. For more about MentorCloud business practices, see Collecting a Labor Judgement (15 January 2016).

Leave a comment

Filed under Mentoring & Other Business, News & Reviews

MentorConnect with Vinod Khosla at TiEcon

IMG_8235

I got to work with famed-venture-capitalist Vinod Khosla again today at TiEcon. “The World’s Largest Conference for Entrepreneurs” is being held at the Santa Clara Convention Center in the Silicon Valley, California. MentorCloud powers the TiE Silicon Valley MentorConnect program:

TiE SV MentorConnect platform, powered by MentorCloud, is an online extension to TiE’s signature mentorship programs that already happen at each of its global chapters. The platform facilitates entrepreneurs to seek and connect with suitable TiE Charter Members as mentors, schedule face-to-face meetings at TiE chapter offices or at mutually convenient locations, and build on that relationship by having ongoing conversations online with each other. Entrepreneurs and Mentors can also form roundtables and have ongoing group conversations on topics of their expertise and interest.

Part of the MentorConnect program at TiEcon is a speed mentoring at lunch, today including two VIP mentors: Vinod Khosla and Kanwal Rekhi.  These mentoring sessions were fully booked three days ago – we have waiting lists but conference attendees are still asking to join!  Since I had worked with Vinod at Sun Microsystems, I managed his mentoring session today. You can see some of my mentoring session notes on my twitter feed.

Some of the publications Vinod referenced in his talk:

Radhika Padmanabhan managed the session for Kanwal Rekhi.  The forty lucky mentees were very enthusiastic about their discussions with these two remarkable men.

IMG_8260

IMG_8274

More pictures are on MentorCloud at TiEcon: MentorConnect.

Images Copyright 2013 by Katy Dickinson

2 Comments

Filed under Mentoring & Other Business, News & Reviews