Title: Introduction for Evaluation Workshop
1Welcome to
OVERALL RESULTS, LESSONS LEARNED AND OVERALL
RECOMMENDATIONS FOR FINAL EVALUATION OF
THE PILOT MENTORING PROGRAMME
2Agenda
- Background to Mentoring
- Overall Results
- Mentees
- Mentors
- Line Managers
- Mentoring Process
- Approaches Used
- Key Findings Future Recommendations
- Overall Recommendations for Mentoring
3Background to Mentoring
- Pilot mentoring initiative setup by OHM in early
2001 - Sites included in the pilot are
- NEHB, NWHB, MWHB and ECAHB
- Beaumont and Mater Hospitals
- On average, had 12 pairs per site
- Pairs have been up and running for over 1 year
4Objectives of the Pilot
- To achieve a positive learning culture within the
organisation - Enhance communication across the organisation
- Broaden the knowledge base of our staff and
sharing best practice - Strengthen the management capability of the
organisation - Facilitate personal growth and professional
development - Help individuals plan their career development
within the service - Retain staff who will feel valued and supported
5Overall Results
Results in this presentation represent the
nationalresults for all organisations involved
with the pilotmentoring programme.
6Overall MENTEE Results
- Mentoring Programme has achieved significant
results for individuals.
7Mentee Satisfaction with Positive Impact of
Mentoring on Management Skills
8MENTEE Top Attributes Positively Impacted by
Programme
- Increase in confidence has led to increases in
the other attributes
9Overall Line Manager Results
- Very positive feedback on results of programme
10Mentoring has Increased Knowledge of the
Organisation
11Overall Results for Reflection
Reflection must become routine for all of us
12Overall MENTOR Results
- Results clearly indicate, significant positive
results for mentors personal development and
management skills
13- OVERALL RESULTS, LESSONS LEARNED
- AND OVERALL RECOMMENDATIONS
- FOR APPROACHES TO
- Nomination
- Selection
14Nomination and Selection Results
- Results indicate that SELF-NOMINATION was the
preferred option for the pilot - Longer-term, JOINT-AGREEMENT WITH LINE MANAGER is
the preferred option (tied to PDP)
15Communications to Line Manager
- Communications to line managers were minimal
- Received initial mentoring documentation and
requested to nominate employees - Resulted in some cases to incorrect nomination of
some employees - Communications on progress were left to mentees
- Resulted in mentoring being forgotten about in
some cases
16Timeframe for Pilot Programme
- The initial timeframe was 12 months
- 57 of mentees feel this was sufficient
- 30 feel it should be longer
- Average meetings per pair was 6
- Recommend that 12 month timeframe continues
- Recommend that pairs have 10 12 meetings a year
17Types of Issues Discussed
18Overall Recommendations (1)
- Mentoring is a proven, successful,
cost-effective, internal form of one-to-one
development - Almost all agreed that mentoring was a valuable
addition to existing forms of development - Provides a safe place for mentees to discuss
issues - Mentoring does not suit everyone
19Overall Recommendations (2)
- Prospective mentees should choose prospective
mentors outside their discipline area - Mentoring should be decided jointly by line
manager and staff member - Best achieved through a Personal Development
Planning (PDP) process
20Overall Recommendations (3)
- Mentoring should be introduced to all as part of
the Induction process - Mentoring should be available to all, but
particularly for - First Time Managers / Supervisors
- New Recruits
- Existing Staff in a New Role / New Work Setting
21Mentoring must have a place in the overall People
Strategy
People Serving People
22Overall Recommendations (4)
- Mentoring should continue to be offered in each
health board to - Maximise on the trained cohorts
- Build on the momentum
- Offer a cost-effective, internal form of
development
The worst thing would be to stop and do nothing
23Overall Recommendations (5)
- Review the results and identify where mentoring
fits in to their people strategy both in the
short and long-term - Need to setup a support /network for both mentees
and mentors - All staff to be educated on mentoring and its
benefits - The timeframe between training and the first
mentoring meeting should be a maximum of 4 6
weeks - Mentoring SHOULD NOT replace other forms of
development
24Overall Recommendations (6)
- Those engaged in conducting PDPs, to be aware of
all of the development interventions available
and the differences between them - Need to resource adequately for a mentoring
coordinator role