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ake Advantage Of Reverse Mentoring To Advance Caree

Mentors have a long and respected place in the world of work. In fact, that role is growing in importance.

Usually, older and more experience, mentors provide coaching and serve as role models for neophytes who turn to them for advice on how to build and manage careers. This role is important to the success of individuals and organizations.

Mentoring is taking on a new dimension as increasingly younger careerists are performing that vital service for their older bosses and associates.

It's been named "reverse mentoring."."

This new mode of mentoring has been brought about by the technology spawned by computers and the Internet.

Older workers are usually lost balls in tall weeds when it comes to understanding the potential benefits of cyber technology and how to realize them. At the same time, younger people, sometimes referred as the twenthsomethings,have live all of their lives with cyber space practices are comfortable and adept with the tools of technology. New attitudes that are changing the work environment are also developed.

This emerging of reverse mentoring is not without some sobering and painful adjustments on both sides. Who hasn't had the un-nerving experience of a younger colleague solving in a flash a cyber challenge that has been baffling an elder for days?

Reverse mentoring relationships have traditionally evolved informally. Forty percent of senior executives have requested assistance from younger associates to assistance with text messaging, social networking and using iTunes.

Reverse Mentoring A Growing Trend

More and more companies are formalizing reverse mentoring programs by assigning younger people to act as technology guides.

The Edelman public relations firm is a good example of this trend. The agency has named its program Rotnem ( mentor spelled backwards) and gone worldwide with it. About 95 percent of the senior executives in its Chicago office are working with assigned Rotnems.

Learning how-to-do-it is only half the game. The rest of the equation--understanding the protocol and learning the appropriate way to employ it so that it benefits the organization--is equally challenging.

It takes some doing--and a healthy ego-- for senior executives to get comfortable being taught by a younger person.

"You feel stupid," says Janet Cabot, president of Edelman's central region. "...you get to a certain age and you don't want to feel stupid."

Those organizations that have instituted reverse mentoring program often find that the benefits go beyond improved use of technology. Breaching the hard and fast lines of corporate hierarchies is number one among these. Inevitably, younger mentors and their pupils are exposed to each other's knowledge and experience.

While benefiting from informed guidance on how to use technology, seniors are gaining insight in to what makes their younger associates tick and how to manage them.

"Even though I learned about the networking, what I really learned...it is important to understand what Rotnems think and how they spend their time," says Kathy Krenger, 42, an executive at Edelmen.

"The mentoring, the sharing diverse perspectives of an older generation versus a younger generation that produces a lot of magic. It breeds innovative thought," declares Raphael Viton, president of an innovation agency in suburban Chicago.

Seniors get a chance to spot and evaluate new talent.

At the same time, young people gain exposure to senior executives which carries with it opportunities to learn from them, not only what to do, but also how to get things done.

This exposure includes two other opportunities for young mentors. One, they have a chance to show their capabilities and their work ethic. Second, they can introduce new technologies and strategy that can benefit their employer and by extension themselves.

Reverse mentoring can come from the top down in organizations that want to full advantage of the sweeping changes that taking place in workplace technology. Or it can occur when younger staffers step forward to volunteer their expertise.

It's clear. Either way, all parties--employer, senior executives and younger associates--benefit when reverse mentoring takes place.

Ramon Greenwood

To get more common sense career advice on how to protect and advance your career during tough times, sign up at http://www.CommonSenseAtWork.com for a free subscription to Ramon Greenwood's widely read e-newsletter and participate in his blog. He coaches from a successful career as Senior VP at American Express, author of career-related books, and a senior executive/consultant in Fortune 500 companies.

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