Top Five Signs You Need A Business Mentor

Often SME owners hesitate to bring in a business mentor, wondering if it’s right for their business. They may be strapped for time and energy at work, and wonder how they can add one more meeting to their day. Or, they may feel that they have a handle on their business, but are feeling awash in a sea of uncertainty about the direction their company should take in the future, and concerned that their business will stagnate. They ask themselves (and us) “How do I know when I need a business mentor?”

Sign #1: Your business has flat lined. Whether your business is seasonal or relatively unencumbered by consumer trends, business cycles have both peaks and valleys. If your business is in a state of suspended animation, a business mentor will bring fresh perspective and provide an experienced sounding board for new ideas, helping you get out of a corporate rut.

Sign #2: Your business is in the midst of rapid expansion. The opposite side of stagnation is explosive, uncontrolled growth. You may feel excited by the potential of your company’s growth, but fearful that it will runaway on you. Incoming revenue and outgoing resources are flowing at such a pace that you often lose track of the big picture, or wonder if the growth you’re experiencing is sustainable. A business mentor can help you focus on the core goals that you’re striving to attain and provide guidance to avoid major pitfalls that you won’t foresee when you’re in a flurry of growth.

Sign #3: Your product or service is threatened. Threats can come in many forms – a new or expanding competitor, the encroaching obsolescence of a product you’ve offered for years, or the emergence of a newer technology. When faced with a declining projection for your company’s revenues, often SME owners go into panic mode, freezing in uncertainty or worse yet, making snap decisions. Business mentors can provide you with the experience you need to restructure your product or service offering, advise you as to marketability of new products of services, or work with you on complimentary revenue streams you may not have thought of.

Sign #4: You feel alone and overwhelmed. Unlike larger corporations, small businesses tend to have flat hierarchies, and small business owners bear the burden of leadership with few internal resources to draw upon. They may feel the lack of a trusted advisor who understands their business, but who isn’t tied up in office politics, or who is fearful of delivering an honest assessment of the company’s performance. A business mentor has the advantage of getting to know your company’s profile, but is still able to provide objective advice, based on years of relevant experience that you need, but can’t afford to hire on a full-time employee basis.

Sign #5: You’re preparing an exit strategy. Perhaps you’ve decided that your personal goal is corporate acquisition, you’ve found your interest is in a different industry than your current business, or you simply don’t have the drive to carry on with your current company. Regardless, you want to move on, but you want your company to be transitioned to new leadership without going under. A business mentor can help you strategize over next steps, prepare a blueprint for your company’s change in ownership, and help you define what role you’re looking for in your next endeavour.

There are dozens of reasons why SME owners use business mentors every day, and these are just a small sampling. If you’re faced with a company dilemma or just wondering how else a business mentor could contribute to your success, contact us today.

Changing Mind-Sets

SPECIAL GUEST BLOG By Harley Murphy, Strategic Change Mentor, Mentors.ie

In an article earlier this year in McKinsey Quarterly, the results of a global survey carried out to find out how companies apply tactics to achieve transformational change, were outlined. They found evidence suggesting:

  • the importance of engaging employees collaboratively throughout the company for the transformation journey -
  • the importance of building capabilities – particularly leadership capabilities – to maintain long term organizational health.

Throughout the article reference is made to the requirement to identify the underlying mind-sets that would need to change. The survey revealed that 60 percent of the extremely successful companies in achieving their required change, focused their initiatives entirely or mostly on altering mind-sets.The dictionary defines ‘mind-set’ as an attitude, disposition or mood or an intention or inclination.

In his 2006 book, Mind Set!, the well known futurist author John Naisbitt outlined 11 mind-sets that he felt were key for dealing with the future.  He described mind-sets as how we receive information. Particularly relevant to the McKinsey survey is Naisbitt’s Mindset #7 is ” Resistance to change falls if benefits are real”.  In this chapter he states that ‘ people who like to move on in life usually do not resist change just because they cannot stand change. On the contrary, people usually embrace change when they perceive that it is to their benefit.’  It is important that companies therefore endeavour to understand the reasons why people are resisting change and use it as an opportunity to improve aspects of the change initiative. Too often companies just see resistance as ‘bloody mindedness’ and deal with it accordingly.

In her excellent book, Mindset- The New Psychology of Success, Carol S. Dweck, talks about mindset and leadership in her chapter on business.  She describes fixed-mindset leaders, who live in a world where some people are superior and some are inferior. They must repeatedly affirm that they are superior and the company is just a platform for this. They fail to value coaching, mentoring or any employee development programs.  In contrast leaders with a growth mindset leaders start with a belief in human potential and development. Instead of using the company as a vehicle for their greatness, they use it as an engine of growth and focus on their own, their employees and the company’s development. She provides specific examples of these two very different types of leaders and how the leaders with a growth mindset build sustainable success.

Coaching and change management is fundamentally about working with and on mind-sets and enabling new perspectives to be gained that will, in turn, facilitate real change to be achieved.

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