Four Ways to Find and Work With Great Mentors

This post originally appeared as a guest post on the SDR Huddle via Mike Duchen.

If you are looking to break into tech, launch a startup, or accelerate your sales career, it is essential that you find great mentors that can share direct and actionable feedback to help you grow throughout your career.

Techstars is the perfect example of why mentorship is so important and how it is done the right way. Techstars exemplifies everything that is good about having a strong mentor network. Outside of these strong mentor networks, it can be hard to find good mentors and most don’t realize that Techstars mentors typically work with specific teams and people going through the accelerators.  If you think setting a meeting as an SDR is challenging, imagine starting your own business, finding product market fit, all while trying to raise money so that you can build your team and buy groceries store.

If you are trying figure out how to find a sales mentor, it is important to locate the right person and engage with a mentor with specific goals ie. increase your outbound campaigns or get better cold calling.  My hope in sharing the below is that it will help you to  discover great mentors smoothly and for an ultimately more rewarding career development experience.

 

1) Look for mentors with expertise–not egos

When looking for your first mentor, look first to people that you have worked with in the past or for a referral from a trusted colleague. It can be as simple as having your first mentor be a past colleague that you know and can trust. Do not focus on landing the “biggest name mentor.” Usually the best mentors are the ones who are actually rolling up their sleeves and doing the work, and they aren’t blogging on LI just to get likes and comments. To be frank, the best mentors are people that know their sh*t and are willing to help others in a constructive manner. SDRs constantly make the mistake that they have to be mentored by those who are most active on social. I strongly disagree–your first/next mentor might be sitting across your current office.

 

2)        Participate in your tech community and then ask someone to coffee

Go to sales meetups, events, hackathons, or anything that will give you the opportunity to meet new people in the community. Just like landing the SDR role, it takes effort and is a numbers game for achieving your goals. For example, if you are living Boulder, Colorado and starting as an SDR at  Twitter, make sure to go to events at Galvanize or Boulder Open Coffee. The goal of any event should be to learn something new, but push yourself to approach the speakers, meet someone new, and ask them to coffee with a specific request, e.g. “ Would you be willing to connect for a 30 minute coffee? I am new to Boulder and learning sales. I’d like to pick your brain for how I can improve and am looking for new potential mentors.Would you be open to meeting next week?” Most senior level people want to give back, so don’t be afraid to ask!

 

3) Template For Your First Meeting With a Mentor

When you first meet with a mentor, make sure to set expectations from the start and come prepared to your coffee meeting. Mentors want to help, but they also have limited time, and it is a two-way street for direct communication and expectations on what you are both trying to achieve. It is important to remember that relationships take time to build, i.e. if you are a sales rep, don’t waste the first 15 minutes of a 30 minute coffee complaining about how hard your SDR job is. Instead, try the structure below for your first meeting:

5 min: Give your quick personal intro and ask them for their background

5 mins: Set  expectations for what you would like out of this meeting and future meetings

10 mins: Ask various prepared questions that you want direct feedback on

5 mins: Dig deeper into 1-2 questions that need additional time

4 mins: Talk about how you’d like to establish the relationship moving forward, and ask if they are open to mentoring you (and their availability)

1 mins: Always ask if you can help then in any way

After the meeting: Send a thank you email and set next meeting. We tell all of our students in our free online Sales Bootcamp the importance of follow up after any coffee or interview.  

 

4) Ask For Brutal Honesty

A mentor’s primary objective is to help you succeed, so unlike your friends and family members, they should not dust things under the rug just to spare your feelings. This may not be easy for your ego, but ultimately, you will learn the importance of having direct advice from someone that you can trust to help answer the tough questions or sales situations. Brutal honestly always isn’t fun, but it is key when engaging with your mentors. If you are meeting with mentors just to pump up your ego, then I’d suggest you re-evaluate why you want a mentor in the first place. In sales, a mentor isn’t a cheerleader; they are someone that can help solve problems, overcome challenges, and help you reach your goals.

 

Finding a great mentor is key to accelerating your sales career. Most importantly, remember to thank your mentors for their time. Mentors are people too, so treat them like it. As you grow and advance with your own career, start to look for ways you can help mentor other new SDRs and give back by taking the time to help them and share the knowledge that your mentors have instilled in you to make your career more successful.

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