Tuesday, August 1, 2017

The Management Tip of the Day from Harvard Business Review

 


THE MANAGEMENT TIP OF THE DAY: Harvard Business Review

August 01, 2017

Choose Your Mentee Carefully


When you agree to mentor someone, you’re trading away hours that you could use to pursue your own career goals and spending them on someone else’s. You don’t want to waste your time, so choose a mentee who you’ll be eager to invest in. Assess potential mentees for curiosity, organization, efficiency, and engagement. Ask candidates to prepare a presentation in their area of expertise, or to join you on a sales call or strategy offsite and then write up their observations. This will give you a good sense of their thinking process, communication skills, and level of interest. If they don’t complete the assignment, don’t be annoyed. Instead, breathe a sigh of relief that you avoided taking on an uncommitted protégé.

Adapted from "6 Things Every Mentor Should Do," by Vineet Chopra and Sanjay Saint


FEATURED PRODUCT

The Leadership & Strategy Boxed Set

HBR Press Book

The key concepts every manager and aspiring leader must know—from strategy and disruptive innovation to financial intelligence and change management—from bestselling Harvard Business Review authors.

Build your professional library, and advance your career with these five timeless business classics. The set includes “Financial Intelligence, Revised Edition”; “The Innovator’s Dilemma”; “Leading Change”; “Playing to Win”; and “Blue Ocean Strategy, Expanded Edition.”

Buy Now



FEATURED PRODUCT

HBR Guide to Performance Management

Harvard Business Review

Traditional approaches to tracking employee performance are increasingly coming under fire. The new HBR Guide to Performance Management provides best practices for creating an agile approach while still meeting annual organizational requirements. By understanding where standard practices succeed and where emerging tactics offer better solutions, you can customize a process to help you more effectively assess employees, close performance gaps, and ensure growth within the organization. You'll learn how to set clear employee goals that align with company objectives; observe progress and check in often; improve performance through ongoing feedback and coaching; create opportunities for development; and more.

Buy Now




ADVERTISEMENT


 

No comments:

Post a Comment