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When I
won a
small
part in
a
professionally
directed
summer
production,
I was
ecstatic.
After
the
director
agreed
to let
me sit
quietly
near him
and
observe
I
practically
went
into
orbit.
Mr.
Jones
was
amazing.
Often,
he would
turn to
explain
his
thinking
behind
some bit
of
business
he had
given
the
actors,
or to
reference
a
source.
I
learned
more
during
that run
of
“Teahouse
of the
August
Moon”
than I
had
attending
four
years of
college
drama
classes.
Perhaps
the most
important
lesson I
learned
was
simply
to not
be
afraid
to ask
someone
I admire
for
help.
A Mentor
Can Help
You Work
Through
a
Difficult
Project
or
Assignment
During
my
career,
I cannot
begin to
count
the
number
of times
I have
called
upon
someone,
for whom
I held
respect
and
admiration,
to ask
for
advice.
Yet I
don’t
remember
a single
incident
where I
was
rejected.
Sometimes
the
contact
has been
invaluable.
A number
of years
ago, I
was at a
crossroads
in my
career.
I was
stuck.
A friend
suggested
I talk
to other
financial
planners
who had
practices
that
looked
attractive
to me,
and see
how they
got
where
they
were.
There
were
some
excellent
planners
within a
reasonable
distance
from my
office.
I had
heard
some of
them
speak at
national
conferences
and had
actually
been
introduced
to a
couple
of them
at local
industry
functions.
But I
was
certain
they
wouldn’t
remember
me.
Deciding
which of
the half
dozen
planners
to call
was a
problem.
There
were
things
about
all the
practices
that
appealed
to me.
I wrote
out a
short
script,
promising
to stick
it out
until
someone
agreed
to talk
with me,
and then
dialed
the
first
number.
I was
surprised
to be
put
through
immediately.
Identifying
myself
as a
financial
planner,
I
explained
that I
had
heard/met
them at
such and
such a
meeting,
and
hoped
they
might
help me
with a
problem.
“Sure!
Let’s
have
lunch
one day
next
week.”
Not
certain
I heard
correctly,
I
repeated
myself,
and was
met
with,
“Why
don’t
you make
up a
list of
what you
want to
know,
and
we’ll
meet at
noon.”
We set
the
date,
and
encouraged,
I called
the next
planner
on my
list.
He, too,
suggested
a
meeting,
and
asked if
I was
calling
anyone
else. I
told him
about my
list,
and that
I was
meeting
the
first
planner
for
lunch.
His
response?
He asked
to join
us for
lunch.
I
stopped
making
calls
and
started
my list
of
questions.
That
luncheon
turned
my
practice
around.
Not only
were the
two
planners
eager to
tell me
about
their
practices
and help
me
employ
some of
their
strategies,
but they
were
interested
in what
I was
doing in
my
office.
Within
six
months,
we were
joined
by the
others
on my
list and
set up a
practice
management
study
group
that
meets
quarterly
to this
day.
During
the
initial
months,
I
honestly
felt I
was the
recipient
of the
greatest
benefit.
Before
long, it
became
clear
that
these
“mentors”
of mine
were
deriving
just as
much
good as
I was
from the
collective
brainstorming.
Had I
not made
that
phone
call,
asking
for
help,
I’ve no
doubt my
practice
would
still be
languishing
out
there
somewhere.
Finding
a Mentor
My
naiveté
during
those
early
years
continues
to amuse
me. Now
that I’m
in my
sixties,
I don’t
have
time to
waste.
When I
need
mentoring,
I go
grab a
mentor!
Not that
I don’t
take it
seriously,
but I
feel a
mentor
should
be
specific
to the
subject
requiring
help.
To
paraphrase
an old
adage:
if you
want to
know how
to build
a watch,
you’ll
do
better
with a
mentor
who’s a
watchmaker
than
with a
mentor
who only
knows
how to
tell
time.
That’s
why I’ve
developed
a list
of what
I’m
looking
for in a
mentor,
and
don’t
just
indiscriminately
go on
and on
about my
problem
to any
ear
willing
to
listen.
A
mentoring
relationship
is not a
one-way
proposition.
VIEW
MENTORING
CHECK
LIST
When the
Financial
Planning
Interactive
discussion
boards
first
appeared,
I went
there in
need of
support
as my
practice
evolved.
It was
wonderful
how
forthcoming
other
planners
were
with
ideas
and
recommendations.
Sometimes
I would
dare to
correspond
directly
with a
poster
to thank
them for
an
answer
and
request
additional
information.
Eventually,
as I
gained
experience
and
expertise
in my
field,
the
roles
began to
reverse.
Today, I
moderate
the
“Getting
Started/Career
Development”
discussion
boards,
and find
myself
more and
more the
mentor.
One day
I
realized
many of
the same
questions
were
being
posted
again
and
again by
people
new to
the
boards.
I knew a
great
deal
about
getting
started
in
financial
planning,
and it
became
obvious
to me
that I
should
collect
the
answers
into a
book.
But I’m
a
financial
planner,
not an
author.
What did
I know
about
publishing
a book?
Nothing.
Time to
grab a
mentor!
After
whipping
out my
checklists,
it was a
short
path to
Bob
Veres.
In the
financial
planning
industry,
he is
considered
by many
to be a
visionary.
He
writes
for many
related
publications
and
seems to
have his
finger
on
cutting
edge
trends.
He
obviously
knows
how to
write,
gets
published
all over
the
place,
is
respected
in the
business,
and
appears
to know
everyone!
Oh,
sure.
Like I
could
just
pick up
the
phone
and give
him a
call.
He
probably
doesn’t
have
anything
better
to do
than
talk to
me.
LOL!
So I
chickened
out and
e-mailed
him.
That way
he could
respond
in his
own time
– if he
wanted
to
respond
at all.
There
was no
way for
him to
know
that he
had
already
been my
mentor
for
years.
I was
flabbergasted
when he
responded
in
hours.
Not only
did he
respond,
but
actually
encouraged
me; told
me my
book was
long
overdue,
and
asked
for a
copy of
my
premise.
Before
long,
names of
possible
publishers
showed
up in my
e-mail.
He
volunteered
(I
didn’t
even
have to
ask!) to
edit the
first
chapter
I wrote,
and
returned
it to me
with
invaluable
notations.
He
suggested
I talk
with
this guy
and that
gal, and
include
a
chapter
on thus
and so.
When I
was
bogged
down and
discouraged
because
I didn’t
have a
committed
publisher
after a
few
months,
he gave
me a
swift
kick and
told me
to keep
writing.
Soon
after, I
discovered
the
world of
e-Publishing,
and it
was
obvious
that my
book
must be
an
e-Book!
Changes
are
rampant
in the
financial
planning
industry,
and if I
were to
publish
the
traditional
way, my
book
would be
outdated
before
it ever
hit the
street!
WHAT IS
COACHING | MENTORING
CHECKLIST
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