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The Mentoring
Pocketbook
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Companies today are increasingly relying
on formal mentoring to tie in with their continuous learning and
development initiatives. The Mentoring Pocketbook shows how
to prepare to be a mentor, how to conduct mentoring sessions and how
to maintain the relationship through the different stages. Before
looking at the actual mentoring process, the authors deal with the
uses of mentoring within organisations (particularly in the context
of managing change and mission/value statements) and explain how
mentoring differs from coaching, training and appraisals. The
process of mentoring is explained with the aid of a 3-stage model.
This can be used to assess yourself as a mentor, as a map to guide
you through the process, as a review tool and as a means to develop
the mentee's ability to use the model independently. Subsequent
chapters explore the mentor-mentee relationship and address key
issues and questions. Although primarily aimed at the mentor, The
Mentoring Pocketbook is also helpful to mentees.
The Empowerment
Pocketbook
Empowerment is often confused with
delegation and, wrongly, is often seen as a form of power or
authority over another person. The authors of The Empowerment
Pocketbook prefer to liken empowerment to a licence that is
issued only after those concerned have proven their ability and only
when the scope and conditions of the activity to which the licence
applies are clearly defined. This Pocketbook explains what
empowerment is, what can be gained when it is in place and how to
put it there and keep it there. It will be helpful to managers,
trainers, consultants and all those people who are concerned with
getting the best from their workforce. Areas covered include:
identifying the need for empowerment, enabling the individual,
implementation (nine steps to get empowerment in place) and,
finally, monitoring and feedback.
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