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When somebody asks you to mentor them at work, it can be very tempting to get straight to the point. After all, you’re busy, you’re giving up valuable hours for no tangible reward, and there’s a clear objective you’re working towards.
It is important to set clear objectives in mentoring relationships and remain focused on the goal—and easy to dismiss small talk as superfluous. Nevertheless, small talk does play an important role in the mentoring process, and dismissing such pleasantries could negatively impact the effectiveness of your mentoring.
While one-off, single-solution mentoring conversations may well benefit from a strong focus in a tight time frame, longer-term mentoring relationships are more likely to flourish if the personal connection is deeper, trust is established, conversations become more wide-ranging, and both parties feel comfortable opening up and being transparent with each other.
The Role of Personal Conversations in Developing Trust
A mentee needs to trust their mentor in several ways. While that mentor’s position, expertise, or experience might provide reassurance about the solutions they are likely to offer, mentees still need confidence that their mentor has their interests at heart. Such confidence is vital when the mentor works in the same organisation and might have a direct or indirect influence on the mentee’s success.
Mentoring flourishes when mentees open up. If they feel that doing so might have negative repercussions, it’s difficult for the mentor to help them work on impactful and long-lasting solutions. Mentees believe that they won’t be judged for what they share, that their conversations will remain confidential, and that the mentor is invested in their success.
Faith is easier when there is a human connection. Small talk helps establish that connection. When you both share what you do when not at work, you can find interests or lifestyles in common. When you both talk about personal challenges, what’s happening with your family or your health, for example, you humanise yourself.
This makes you more relatable. Particularly if you are in a more senior role than your mentee, it’s important for them to see you as someone like them if you want them to open up. During the pandemic, one CEO of a major accountancy firm delivered Town Halls to staff virtually from his spare bedroom. Several employees reported that it shifted their perception of him, and they had a stronger connection to what he shared with them as a result.
Opening the Door to Broader Conversations
The deeper trust and engagement established through personal connections helps ensure better mentoring conversations. There are three ways in which this happens:
You Change the Way You Listen
When you feel a deeper connection to your mentee, you change the way you engage with and listen to them. You become more empathic and less judgmental, more committed to finding solutions, and more curious about what they are telling you.
That curiosity will lead to you asking more and better questions as you seek to truly get to the bottom of a challenge and find the right outcome for them, rather than jumping to conclusions and offering ideas that might have been the perfect fit for you but may not be as relevant to your mentee.
The more invested we are in someone, the more seriously we take the task of helping them to succeed. That mindset starts with making small talk and getting to know the person rather than just the job title or momentary challenge they face. As we truly connect, we truly engage.
Mentoring isn’t just about answering someone’s questions. Investing time in personal conversations with a mentee, bringing a more holistic approach to mentoring, and blending personal and professional threads—all will create a foundation for richer, more satisfying, and more effective mentoring relationships.
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