Wednesday, June 10, 2020
Mentorship Programs Gaining Ground Across Top Business Schools
Mentorship Programs Gaining Ground Across Top Business Schools by: Alison Damast on March 28, 2016 | 0 Comments Comments 1,143 Views March 28, 2016Michele Gianforcaro didnââ¬â¢t have an easy task ahead of her when she launched a pilotà mentorship program for female business students at Villanova Universityââ¬â¢s School of Businessà back in January of 2014.Just under 100 female students initially signed up for the pilot the first year, and she spent longà hours over the next few weeks to make sure she and her staff found each student a mentor whoà aligned precisely with the studentsââ¬â¢ career goals, the geographic area where they wanted toà work and other preferences listed in their applications. They used survey tools and databases toà help them manually match the students with the 400 women alums whoââ¬â¢d volunteered, but ità still proved a difficult task to find each student the perfect fit.ââ¬Å"We joked it was Match Madness during March Madness, â⬠says Gianforcaro, assistant directorà of professional development at Villanovaââ¬â¢s Charles and James V. Oââ¬â¢Donnell Center forà Professional Development.PARTNERSHIP WITH MENTORSHIP PLATFORM, CHRONUSThe program grew to 200 students the following year, and when it came time to scale theà program this year so that all of the 400 students in the current sophomore class could be pairedà with a mentor, Gianforcaro knew she needed a way to make the process more efficient. Whileà researching vendors in the marketplace, she learned of Chronus, a company with mentorshipà software that uses a matching algorithm called ââ¬Å"MatchIQâ⬠to automate recommendations forà mentorship matches based on usersââ¬â¢ profiles and interest. Villanova had recently received fundsà from an alum to support the expansion of its mentorship program, and Gianforcaro was eagerà to bring Chronus, dubbed by some as the ââ¬Å"match.comâ⬠of the mentoring world, on boar d.ââ¬Å"It got me out of the matchmaking business and is a saving grace for me with efficiency,â⬠saysà Gianforcaro.While many companies and nonprofits are now using mentorship software programs to helpà them grow their in-house mentorship programs, universities have been an untapped market until recently. Mentorship programs for undergraduate business students are increasingly beingà seen by business schools as a powerful tool to help give students a competitive edge in the jobà market as well as increase alumni engagement, explains Chronus CEO Seena Mortazavi.ââ¬Å"It is becoming an important selling point to attract students to universities,â⬠says Mortazavi.à ââ¬Å"Itââ¬â¢s not just enough to have the best professors or best facilities, but they also want that hands-on mentorship experience and someone who can help guide them through their career.â⬠B-SCHOOLS ARE THE EARLY ADOPTERS ON CAMPUSChronus is moving aggressively into this market, and has be en successful at getting the attentionà of university administrators like Gianforcaro who often struggle with the day-to-day logistics ofà making mentorship matches in a large-scale programs. The company was founded in 2007 byà engineers from Microsoft and Oracle whoââ¬â¢d undergone successful mentorship experiencesà during their careers and wanted to build a platform that could help others easily connect toà mentors. In the last few years, Chronus has made inroads on dozens of university campuses,à with undergraduate business programs paying particular interest, Mortazavi says.ââ¬Å"Undergraduate business programs are often the first to jump on, and then it spreads to otherà schools on campus, and in some cases across the entire undergraduate population,â⬠says Mortazavi.Villanova is using the Chronus software for the first time this year, is also piloting theà mentorship program in the MBA program, says Gianforcaro. They will also eventually use it inà t heir Master of Science in Finance degree program. According to Mortazavi, other undergraduate business programsà using the software include the University of Coloradoââ¬â¢s Leeds School of Business and Universityà of Washingtonââ¬â¢s Foster School of Business.The companyââ¬â¢s software pinpoints five top alum matches for each students, and then theà student is able to select the mentor of their choice and send them an e-mail and personal inviteà to be their mentor. Once the mentor accepts the studentââ¬â¢s invite, the software helps themà develop their relationship by prompting the pair to e-mail each other, organize coffee dates andà set specific goals. Mortazavi says in some cases, the mentors and mentees will even sign contracts agreeing toà commit time to the relationship. Page 1 of 212à »
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