Reverse mentoring is a practical and powerful way for senior professionals to learn from more junior colleagues. There are two primary contexts in which it’s applied:
1. Technical Reverse Mentoring
This approach emerged in the 1990s to help senior executives keep pace with technological change, particularly in IT literacy.
- It is not the same as technical support or one-way tuition.
- When applied correctly, it becomes a co-learning partnership:
- The senior mentee gains both technical skills and a conceptual understanding of emerging technologies.
- The junior mentor benefits from exposure to strategic thinking and insights into career pathways.
2. Diversity-Focused Reverse Mentoring
This type supports co-learning across cultural and generational lines.
- It began with gender-focused initiatives: junior women mentoring senior male executives to share perspectives on navigating the workplace as a woman.
- This led many executives to question assumptions and recognise subtle barriers to gender equity.
- While its direct impact on gender equality is hard to quantify, it has significantly shifted mindsets.
- Over the past 20 years, reverse mentoring has expanded to include:
- Race, culture, disability, sexual orientation, and more.
- Generational dynamics: particularly between Baby Boomers/Gen X and Millennials, to foster mutual understanding and bridge generational gaps.
Good Practice Guidelines for Reverse Mentoring Programmes
- Clarify the learning agenda: Be specific about what both parties are expected to learn.
- Explain its business value: Help participants understand the purpose and how it supports organisational goals.
- Start at the top: Leadership participation signals credibility and encourages broader adoption.
- Train both mentors and mentees in managing power dynamics:
- Executives must avoid defaulting into authoritative roles.
- Junior mentors should feel safe and empowered to speak honestly.
- Ensure a significant hierarchical gap between participants:
- Junior mentors further removed from the executive level often feel more confident offering honest feedback.
- Monitor progress:
- Each pair may benefit from additional coaching or mentoring to explore issues that arise.
- Leverage upward mentors as a wider resource:
- Their diverse perspectives can support broader decision-making and strategy.
- Create group reflection opportunities:
- Bring senior mentees together to discuss insights and their implications for the business.
- Similarly, enable junior mentors to exchange ideas and reflect on shared experiences.
© David Clutterbuck, 2015