What to Keep In Mind When Choosing a Mentor for Your Career
Legacy signals
Legacy popularity: 1,642 legacy views
Legacy rating: 3/5 from 1 archived votes
Finding a mentor can definitely help you advance your career, but there are several important points to keep in mind when choosing a career mentor. Usually people choose a manager, recruiter, or friend, but those choices might not be the best. A manager, for instance, might present a conflict of interest in certain situations, and they probably won’t have the time to help you. A recruiter just won’t do it–a recruiter’s primary conce
is to please their clients (the hiring company) and he or she won’t have time, either. A friend might be unable to give you any constructive criticism out of a desire to remain your friend!
Even though it can seem difficult to find a mentor, I can’t emphasize enough how valuable a mentor can be to your career. A mentor in your field has been there, done that, and can help you advance while also keep you from making mistakes. A mentor can see the big picture of your career, but still knows how to coach you through the details. Example: I recently coached someone through the interview process. We worked on his presentation, his answers to interview questions, documents like his 30/60/90-day sales plan and brag book, and his negotiation skills–and he got the job, with a $22,000 base pay increase!
I’m not saying you have to hire me–I primarily help people involved in medical sales, laboratory sales, medical device sales, biotechnology sales, imaging sales, pathology sales, pharmaceutical sales, and other health care sales. As a career coach, I help them move from sales to management, and from other sales areas into health care sales. You should find someone who’s an expert in your field that you’re comfortable working with. Finding a mentor (or hiring one) is an investment in yourself and your career that has the potential for huge dividends. It’s worth it!
Further reading
Further Reading
Article
Fastest Way to Find a Job - Tip 17 Newspapers (or Craigslist)
Newspapers (or Craigslist) If you know that I’m not very fond of job boards as a job search resource, then you must be really surprised that I would talk about newspapers or even Craigslist in a series about the fastest way to find a job. I’m sure you assume that I think newspapers belong to the Dark Ages and Craigslist is just the online version of classified ads. Which it is…but bear with me.
Related piece
Article
Fastest Way to Find a Job - Tip 15 - Alumni Organizations
Alumni Organizations Alumni organizations are great networking resources for you, which means they are also great resources to help you find a job.
Related piece
Article
Fastest Way to Find a Job - Tip 19 Industry Organizations
Industry Organizations Industry organizations are some of the best job search resources anywhere. These can be fantastic because they are a direct connection for you to people in your field—including potential hiring managers, but that’s not your only benefit here. You can expand your network, you can learn a lot about your field, and you can often find out about jobs that aren’t necessarily listed on national job boards. For instance, I was a part of several organizations when I was in clinical diagnostics sales: The American Association for Clinical Chemistry (AACC)r
Related piece
Article
How to Answer Interview Questions – Q79
What will you contribute to this job? This job interview question is very similar to “Why should we hire you?” Or, “Why do we want you over the other candidates?” The job interview is a sales process in which you are the product and the hiring manager and company is the buyer. Your salary is the price of the product, you and your skill sets. It’s fair for them to ask, “What are we going to get for our money?”
Related piece