Reverse Mentoring : An Empirical study in India
Reverse Mentoring finds earliest references in GE ( 1997) & thereafter several organisations across the globe have adopted the concept to fulfill varied purposes under different business context. Used variously as enablers of technology & enhancing digital sensibilities, it is also emerging as a powerful tool for diversity management, employee engagement, managing an Inter-generational workforce etc.There are limited academic & scholarly literature on Reverse Mentoring & fewer still, empirical studies undertaken to test some of the underlying assumptions, particularly in the Indian cultural context. While the relationship between Reverse Mentoring & Technological Innovation may be universally applicable , some nuances particularly with respect to employee perception & readiness to learn from juniors, may be culturally in congruent.
It was decided to elicit responses from set of business organisation located in the same city in Eastern India , but having employees from different Industry verticals like retail, hospitality, manufacturing, banking, consumer goods etc. A 10 item questionnaire on 5 point Likert scale was distributed across different verticals. As there was no formal Reverse mentoring program in the organisations, the concept was explained by the survey administrators to each respondent. Some of the organisations were already having the traditional form of mentoring & hence they had no difficulty in understanding the concept. We present below some of the findings of the preliminary exploratory survey. 10 companies across different verticals participated & the total number of respondents were 205.
- More than 50% of the respondents strongly agreed that Reverse Mentoring would greatly benefit their organisation
- Regarding personal benefits accruing out of such a program 25% respondents were neutral, but the remaining 75% respondents were quite upbeat about it.
- On mutual benefits derived by the Mentor- Men tee pairs about 30% were unsure of the same, but the balance agreed that both mentors & men tees would benefit from such a program.
- Younger mentors seemed to have more faith on the capability to provide mentoring rather than the senior men tees, which reflected the confidence levels of Gen Y
- Only 29% seemed to confirm that paucity of time may prevent the program from being successful. Remaining 71% did not view time as a deterrent towards success of the program, This may be due to the potential of social media platforms.
- Only 12 % were neutral on the subject of need for training. The remaining 88% expressed need to be provided with training
- Incidentally 90 % of the respondents were of the view that maximum development comes from on the job - experience & exposure & only 10% through education in the class-room.
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