A few people have contacted us regarding our most recent blog post about the differences of coaching and mentoring. Therefore, I would like to share with you some information we have listed on our website under Resources:
People often confuse coaching and mentoring. Though related, they are not the same. A mentor may coach, but a coach does not mentor. Mentoring is “relational,” while coaching is “functional.” There are other significant differences.
Coaching characteristics:
- Managers coach their staff as a required part of the job.
- Coaching takes place within the confines of a formal manager-employee relationship.
- The focus is to develop individuals within their current job.
- The interest of the relationship is functional, arising out of the need for individuals to perform the tasks required to the best of their ability.
- Managers tend to initiate and drive the relationship.
- The relationship is finite, ending when an individual has learned what the coach is teaching.Mentoring characteristics:
- It occurs outside of a line manager-employee relationship, at the mutual consent of a mentor and mentoree.
- It is career-focused or focused on professional development that may be outside a mentoree’s area of work.
- Relationships are personal – a mentor provides both professional and personal support.
- Relationships may be initiated by mentors or created through matches initiated by the organization.
- Relationships cross job boundaries.
- Relationships last for a specific period of time (nine months to a year) in a formal program, at which point the pair may continue in an informal mentoring relationship.
To learn more about starting a mentoring program in your organization, call us at 617-789-4622 or contact us today.