Why
The authors define mentoring as “the act of helping another learn”. Notice that’s it’s not about “teaching”, it’s about ensuring the other person learns. Mentors help others to learn something that they might have learned slower, not as well, or not at all.
When you see it that way, the parallels between mentoring and selling and persuasion in general become obvious. Selling is the act of helping another buy, and persuasion is the act of helping another decide. The key theme is that the power to change comes from inside the other person. As the authors so eloquently put it, “change is a door opened from the inside.”
It’s not about you—it’s about the other person.
If you see mentoring as merely transmitting information and passing on responsibility to the listener to get it or not, the best you may get is heads nodding in agreement and immediate forgetting. If you see mentoring as helping the other to extract insight, you will get willing acceptance and learning that sticks. The same applies to persuasion or selling—if you see it as helping your listener or customer to extract insight that helps them improve their situation, you get sustainable agreements.
Some sections of the book stray a little too far into philosophical musings for my taste, but there is plenty of hard-headed practical advice and tools to compensate. If you’ve read books on selling and persuasive communication, you’ve been exposed to the same toolbox that Bell and Goldsmith cover: listening, building rapport and trust, using questions, etc. Yet, because of their long experience in mentoring and coaching, they bring some great insights. Here is a small sampler:
If you see this as a book just about mentoring, it’s mostly recommended for experienced, higher-ranking corporate executives. If instead you see it as a book that extracts insights on how to improve persuasive communication in general, anyone can benefit.
[…] more of the things that come naturally to them is certainly more appealing. Chip Bell, co-author of Managers as Mentors wrote me, “Jack, I would recommend always focusing on strengths…it keeps the betterment […]