Mentorship Programs For Cultural Fit

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  • View profile for Sumit Sabharwal
    Sumit Sabharwal Sumit Sabharwal is an Influencer

    Head of HR Services, Vodafone Intelligent Solutions | LinkedIn Top Voice | BW Businessworld 40u40 Winner 2021' | Putting 'humane' back in HR | HR Evangelist | ‘HeaRty’ leadership

    48,378 followers

    Sonia Khatri (GenZ; Intern at Fujitsu): Interacts with a thumbs up or a fist bump. Sumit (Millennial): Initiates a handshake. Have you ever responded to a fist-bump with a handshake? If yes, we are in the same boat. I used to get in such awkward situations and wondered - what exactly is happening to this world? How do I keep up? Do I not have any street cred left? Am I not woke enough? Is my awareness low? Am I not cool anymore? Sonia on the other hand must have experienced a similar awkwardness and wondered – does anybody understand me? Am I being too much? Will my actions get me in trouble? Will I get similar culture and bosses in the corporate world? I am sure we have all been in similar instances in the workplace. Such non-verbal cues too are a strong means of indicating #generationaldiversity and it is our task as leaders to make it an enriching experience for all. Organizations that create a culture of openness, self-learning, and allow employees to be truly themselves will be able to champion generational diversity. The #futureofworkplace is expecting their workplace to be non-judgemental, non-biased, and non-labeling while us experienced leaders feel there’s a thin line between being professional and casual even with such non-verbal cues. We must co-exist. And it is only possible with change. Let's face it: we can't rely solely on our past experiences to navigate the ever-evolving landscape of business. We need to #adapt #innovate and #embrace change like never before. To navigate the tricky waters of generational diversity, I found my ace in #reciprocalmentoring - a game-changer for #leadershipdevelopment As leaders, you need to understand that your experience does not always give you a one up. Reciprocal mentoring is a dynamic exchange where both parties learn from each other, regardless of age or experience level. By engaging in reciprocal mentoring, we gain invaluable insights into the challenges, aspirations, and perspectives of the younger workforce. We tap into fresh ideas, innovative approaches, and emerging trends that we might otherwise overlook. It's like having a backstage pass to the future of our industry! The dilemma is - in the next 90 days who do you think will adapt – will Sonia start practicing professional handshakes or will Sumit learn how to respond to a fist bump?   #LearningAndDevelopment

  • View profile for Ami Ved

    Helping you Own Every Room You Walk Into | Public Speaking Coach for Leaders | Executive Communication Coach | LinkedIn Top Voice | SoftSkills Expert| Keynote Speaker | Author of “Public Speaking Essentials”

    8,404 followers

    I've taught Indian culture to Chinese professionals, American culture to Korean students, and trained British teachers on how to teach English in China. What tied it all together? Communication beyond comfort zones. In a world that's more connected than ever, cross-cultural communication isn't optional—it's essential. Whether you're leading a global team, coaching diverse clients, or teaching across borders, this one skill can make or break your impact. Here are 4 tips to master it: 1️⃣ Listen Beyond Words: Culture speaks in tone, silence, and gestures. In China, a nod might not mean agreement—it might mean "I'm listening." 2️⃣ Adapt Your Style: Americans value directness. Koreans respect hierarchy. Indians may prioritize context. Shift your language and tone based on audience. 3️⃣ Use Universal Anchors: Stories, emotions, and metaphors are universal. When I used Bollywood examples in Beijing, it built instant bridges. 4️⃣ Stay Curious, Not Critical: Instead of judging what's "right," ask, "Why is this different?" That mindset opens conversations, not conflicts. 🌍 Communication is not just about speaking a language—it’s about honoring the world that comes with it. Want to build your cultural fluency as a speaker or coach? DM me “Global Communicator” and let’s chat! #CrossCulturalCommunication #PublicSpeaking #CommunicationCoach #SpeakWithAmee #GlobalLeadership #CulturalFluency #SoftSkills #LeadershipDevelopment #crossculturaltraining

  • View profile for Brendan Wallace
    Brendan Wallace Brendan Wallace is an Influencer

    CEO & CIO at Fifth Wall

    80,467 followers

    Mentorship has been a cornerstone of my career, but my approach to building a network of mentors has evolved over time. Early on, I thought the best mentors were those who mirrored my role—essentially a more successful, more experienced version of myself. But I’ve since realized that this myopic approach often misses the mark. Some of the most valuable mentors I’ve had weren’t in venture capital at all. They came from adjacent industries like asset management, tackling challenges that are analogous to mine but offering perspectives I couldn’t see from within my own field. Here’s why this works: 1. Outside perspectives reveal blind spots: Mentors outside your industry can identify dynamics in your business that might be invisible to you because you're too close to them. These insights are invaluable for seeing the bigger picture. 2. Diverse thinking adds depth: A broader, more diverse network of mentors exposes you to new ways of solving problems, offering frameworks and strategies you might not encounter within your immediate circle. Building a mentor base is critical, but diversity is key. Don’t just look for people who are “you in 20 years” with more success. Instead, seek mentors with fresh perspectives and different lenses. That’s where the real value lies.

  • View profile for Lakshmi Devan

    Marketing | Aviation| Web 3.0 | AI | SaaS | Tech | Health

    33,921 followers

    Despite the cultural and language barrier — with 90% of the team primarily speaking Russian — last year, I tested a 'reverse mentoring' program within our organization. I recognized the invaluable insights and digital fluency of our younger members and facilitated structured sessions where they mentored senior executives. It started with informal coffee meetings and progressed to virtual sessions where ideas flowed freely over collaborative digital platforms. The results were remarkable: our senior leaders gained technical knowledge and a fresh perspective on innovation and market dynamics. Simultaneously, our junior colleagues felt empowered and appreciated, their confidence growing with each session. This initiative not only boosted team morale but also fostered a more inclusive workplace culture where creativity and mutual respect flourished naturally. My recommendation? GO FOR IT! Cognitive biases like the Dunning-Kruger effect, for example, really can hinder organisational success by limiting openness to new ideas and technological advancements. Yes, it affects the bottomline big-time. As industries evolve rapidly, fostering this sort of exchange of knowledge becomes essential for maintaining agility and staying ahead in competitive markets.

  • View profile for Lindsey Pollak

    Multigenerational Work Expert | Visiting Fellow at NYU Stern Initiative on Purpose + Flourishing | NYTimes Bestselling Author | Keynote Speaker | Executive Coach

    38,505 followers

    In a multigenerational workplace, we need to define “mentoring” as broadly as possible. Yes, mentoring can involve an older, wiser, Yoda-like person giving wisdom to someone younger, but rarely is one single person a perfect mentoring fit. I have found that mentoring can flow from all types of people─from junior to senior, senior to junior, peer to peer and any other combination you can think of. I talked in an earlier post about micro-mentoring and wanted to expand on the many mentoring options that exist. I believe mentoring should come from many people. We need to shift our perspective of mentoring from getting coffee with one single person who will give you life-changing career advice every month to simply listening and soliciting advice from a wider variety of people of all generations. Like a company has a board of directors and not one single advisor, I believe individuals can benefit from having our own “personal advisory board” of many diverse people.  Next time you face a career challenge or decision, consider tapping many people for insight and see what ideas your “board” comes up with. This can provide you with a wider variety of perspectives, way more than one mentor or advisor could offer. – Interested in more advice on thriving in a multigenerational workplace? Join other leaders who read my monthly insights here: https://lnkd.in/e-ij66vi

  • View profile for Vineet Tandon
    Vineet Tandon Vineet Tandon is an Influencer

    Global Marketing Leader | Brand, Growth & Relevance at Scale | Author & Musical Motivational Speaker | LinkedIn Top Voice

    8,099 followers

    It's been almost three weeks since I started a mentoring circle as part of the #MentorMe initiative at HCLTech. This program brings passionate mentors and mentees together, creating an incredible platform for growth and development. Let me explain why. 1) Widen Your Circle of Influence: The platform connects like-minded individuals, encouraging bonds beyond work areas. This mutual learning environment fosters a growth spiral that enhances your professional journey. 2) Celebrate Diversity: Our small but diverse group includes: ☑ A member returning after a career break who loves planning ☑ A senior HR leader who champions all things HR and diversity ☑ A Customer Service Professional eager to grow in value creation ☑ A senior management trainee on her first job, passionate about travel, marketing, and CSR ☑ A Service Delivery professional focused on Personal Finance and wanting to focus on building a personal brand ☑ A sales leader and a project management specialist 3) Structured Learning Process: Initially unsure how to proceed, I soon realized the importance of preparation. Each session now includes well-structured thoughts, presentations, reference materials, and everything needed to maximize participant benefit. 4) Beyond Self-Paced Learning: While self-learning is valuable, the #MentorMe program taught me the power of invested learning. Tailored sessions cater to our group’s diversity, offering a personalized, coaching-like experience that surpasses one-size-fits-all learning. 5) Commitment Required: Despite professional obligations, our group remains dedicated to learning and growth. This commitment highlights the program's impact and potential to make a significant difference. Have you been a mentor or a mentee? Share your experience from mentoring in the comments below 👇 --------------- 👉 Hi there, I'm Vineet, a passionate marketer at HCLTech and India's First and Only Musical Motivational Speaker🎸. 💡 I'm here on LinkedIn to build a community that creates hope, ignites purpose, and rekindles the belief that a better world is possible. 🔔 Follow me ➡️Vineet Tandon⬅️for posts that help you find your spark and supercharge your potential! 

  • View profile for Joey Aviles
    Joey Aviles Joey Aviles is an Influencer

    Author of Choose to Live | Keynote Speaker on leadership, human activation, and performance in complex environments

    13,812 followers

    Is cultural competence really enough? It can be powerful when you're working with specific community segments. For instance, if you've gathered data revealing the top Hispanic communities you serve—like Guatemalans, Nicaraguans, and Salvadorians—cultural competence becomes a strategic asset in connecting meaningfully with those groups. But with the Hispanic community in the U.S. representing more than 24 different countries, a one-size-fits-all approach simply doesn’t work. That’s where Cultural Intelligence (CQ) comes in—a skill that’s not just about understanding customs but about thriving in various cultural contexts. Cultural Intelligence is about more than checking off a box; it’s about truly connecting with people from different backgrounds and creating an environment where everyone can contribute and succeed. Here’s what makes Cultural Intelligence crucial: 👉🏽 It drives team performance. Multicultural teams with high CQ don’t just coexist—they excel. It’s not enough to have diversity on paper; you have to leverage it to achieve real results. 👉🏽 It’s the mark of a dynamic leader. Leaders with high CQ don’t just manage—they adapt. They engage with different perspectives and navigate cultural nuances to bring out the best in their teams. 👉🏽 It fuels organizational growth. Cultural Intelligence is more than a buzzword—it’s a strategic advantage that can propel innovation and success in today’s global market. To start embracing Cultural Intelligence in your organization, consider these actionable steps: ⭐ Invest in Continuous Learning: Provide ongoing training for leaders and teams to deepen their understanding of different cultures and how to interact effectively. ⭐ Encourage Cross-Cultural Mentorship: Create opportunities for employees from diverse backgrounds to mentor and learn from each other, nurturing mutual respect and understanding. ⭐ Develop Inclusive Communication Strategies: Ensure all internal and external communication reflects cultural sensitivity and inclusivity. ⭐ Measure and Monitor Progress: Regularly assess your organization’s cultural intelligence and inclusivity initiatives, and be willing to make adjustments as needed. As we approach Hispanic Heritage Month, let’s reflect on how we can go beyond cultural competence and embrace true Cultural Intelligence. It’s time to elevate our leadership and make our workplaces more inclusive and dynamic.🙌🏽

  • View profile for 🌎 Luiza Dreasher, Ph.D.
    🌎 Luiza Dreasher, Ph.D. 🌎 Luiza Dreasher, Ph.D. is an Influencer

    Empowering Organizations To Create Inclusive, High-Performing Teams That Thrive Across Differences | ✅ Global Diversity ✅ DEI+

    2,705 followers

    🔥 “I Did Everything Right… So Why Is My Global Team Struggling?” You shared the project plan. Everyone speaks fluent English. The timeline’s clear. But your team still feels…off. Deadlines are slipping. Feedback feels flat. You’re rethinking every message, every meeting. 🧠 Here’s the truth: Miscommunication isn't always about language—it's about meaning. And global leaders who miss that… lose trust, time, and talent. To lead across cultures with clarity, you must understand the following: 1️⃣ Cultural Competence Is a Core Leadership Skill It’s not “extra.” It’s essential. Leading across cultures demands more than project plans—it requires the ability to understand what motivates, offends, or connects with people from different backgrounds. 📌 Start treating cultural competence like emotional intelligence: build it, practice it, and lead with it. 2️⃣ Miscommunication Is About Meaning, Not Fluency It’s not just what you say—it’s how it’s heard. Someone nodding may not mean agreement. Delays in follow-up may not be a sign of laziness—but rather a symptom of confusion or a cultural hierarchy. 📌 Create space for clarification. Normalize asking, “What does this mean in your context?” or “What’s the usual way this is handled where you are?” 3️⃣ Good Intentions ≠ Inclusive Impact 🧠 Caring is not enough. You may value inclusion—but without tools to spot blind spots, your team may still feel left out or misunderstood. 📌 Invest in reflection, feedback, and ongoing learning. Inclusion is a practice, not a personality trait. 💡 When you shift your mindset, you shift your results. 👉 Ready to Go Deeper? If this resonates with you and you're ready to lead your global team with more clarity and less miscommunication, I'd love to chat. Book your FREE Cultural Clarity Call — a short, no-pressure conversation to uncover the hidden cultural dynamics quietly limiting your team's performance. #MasteringCulturalDifferences #GlobalLeadership #CulturalCompetence #InterculturalCommunication #LeadershipDevelopment 

  • View profile for Josianne Robb (ICF PCC, EMCC EIA and ITCA)

    Helping Asia based execs in regional roles lead with impact and thrive | Ex-Asia Regional Chief Digital Officer | 1,500+ hours of 1:1 coaching

    6,247 followers

    𝗜𝘁’𝘀 𝗻𝗼𝘁 ��𝗺𝗽𝗼𝘀𝘁𝗲𝗿 𝘀𝘆𝗻𝗱𝗿𝗼𝗺𝗲. 𝗜𝘁’𝘀 𝗰𝘂𝗹𝘁𝘂𝗿𝗮𝗹 𝗱𝗶𝘀𝘀𝗼𝗻𝗮𝗻𝗰𝗲. Western leaders misdiagnose what many Asian leaders actually experience. A senior executive I coached in Hong Kong had built a remarkable career across continents. British and American elite education. A global leadership role in a top firm. Respected. Accomplished. Admired. Yet privately, he felt inauthentic, as if he didn’t fully belong in either culture. His story reveals a deeper truth: In Hong Kong, feelings of “not enough” don’t always stem from self-doubt… They often come from clashing values. 1️⃣𝗣𝗲𝗿𝘀𝗼𝗻𝗮𝗹 𝗿𝗲𝗰𝗼𝗴𝗻𝗶𝘁𝗶𝗼𝗻 𝘃𝘀. 𝗴𝗿𝗼𝘂𝗽 𝗵𝗮𝗿𝗺𝗼𝗻𝘆 His global HQ celebrated individual stars. His local team and family honoured collective success. 🛠 His shift: → Framed achievements as team outcomes → Credited predecessors before claiming innovation ✅ Result: Engagement soared. His team felt seen. 2️⃣𝗗𝗲𝗰𝗶𝘀𝗶𝘃𝗲 𝗮𝗰𝘁𝗶𝗼𝗻 𝘃𝘀. 𝗿𝗲𝗹𝗮𝘁𝗶𝗼𝗻𝘀𝗵𝗶𝗽 𝘁𝗿𝘂𝘀𝘁 His Western training prized speed. His Hong Kong roots valued trust before action. 🛠 His shift: → Built strong relationships before key decisions → Created safe spaces for unspoken concerns ✅ Result: Faster implementation, less resistance His breakthrough wasn’t in choosing one style over the other. It came when he stopped seeing the tension as a problem and started treating it as a leadership asset. Western leaders in Hong Kong often feel their instincts don’t land. Hong Kong leaders in global firms feel fake when forced to self-promote. The solution isn’t assimilation. It’s 𝗮𝗱𝗮𝗽𝘁𝗶𝘃𝗲 𝗶𝗻𝘁𝗲𝗹𝗹𝗶𝗴𝗲𝗻𝗰𝗲: the capacity to hold both truths at once. 👉 Could your quiet discomfort be a sign of deeper cross-cultural fluency? ------------------------------------- This post is part of an ongoing effort to bring more culturally complex leadership stories into the spotlight, especially those that challenge dominant narratives. ♻️ Share this with a leader navigating global complexity. 👉 I'm Josianne Robb (ICF PCC), coaching APAC leaders navigating complexity, culture, and change.

  • View profile for Dustin Norwood, SPHR

    Vice President Learning and Organizational Development | Vice President People Strategy and Operations | Strategic Talent Architect | Builder of Best-in-Class Multi-Cultural Workplaces

    5,319 followers

    Today we're tackling the million dollar question. We all know that developing our cultural intelligence (CQ) is important. In my earlier posts I established that CQ is linked the success of orgs and individuals, which begs the question: How do we integrate CQ into our programs and culture for the most impact? Here's the bullet point answer: ✅ Embed CQ in leadership training – Move beyond “check-the-box” cultural awareness modules. Tie CQ to decision-making, conflict resolution, and performance management so leaders model it daily. ✅ Design experiential learning – Role plays, case studies, and simulations help employees practice CQ skills instead of just hearing about them. ✅ Measure what matters – Track CQ through engagement surveys, peer feedback, and retention data across diverse groups. Then connect the dots between higher CQ and business outcomes. ✅ Link to career paths – Make CQ competency part of promotion criteria and succession planning. If it influences advancement, people will prioritize it. ✅ Close the loop – Celebrate wins and share stories where CQ improved collaboration, innovation, or client relationships. Nothing reinforces learning like real-world proof. What does it look like in practice? Unilever has woven Cultural Intelligence into its global leadership fabric through programs that anchor CQ within onboarding, leadership training, and talent progression. Early-career participants in initiatives like the Unilever Future Leaders Programme (UFLP) gain exposure to diverse markets and cultures through rotational assignments and mentorship with an emphasis on developing empathy, global perspective, and inclusive leadership skills. For leadership, their workshops, called “Unleash," focus on cultural dimensions such as individualism vs. collectivism and power distance. These sessions are designed to deepen leaders' awareness and to enhance collaborative behaviors. 85% of participants report increases in creativity and cross-team collaboration thanks to these immersive CQ experiences! Unilever’s CQ integration also includes formal governance and accountability structures. Its Inclusive Leaders Programme equips managers with tools to champion equity, psychological safety, and anti-bias behaviors across teams, while a Global Diversity Board steers progress and reviews inclusion metrics quarterly. These programs and other internal initiatives show how Unilever embeds CQ into both the development and the strategic infrastructure that sustains inclusive, high-performance leadership. So what to do? Start small. Pick a goal to start and keep building. Soon you'll see the benefits of a workforce with great CQ. A strength that Unilever states helps them “understand and meet the needs of consumers, identify new commercial opportunities for growth and innovation, and attract, retain and develop the very best global talent.” #CulturalIntelligence #DiversityEquityInclusion #GlobalLeadership #TalentStrategy #OrganizationalCulture

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