Mentoring Program
The importance of mentoring at LCA
To achieve success as a professional in public practice, it is important to have a mentor. Successful mentoring relationships can be formal (assignments and evaluation) and also informal (brainstorming, protocol, advice).
Young aspiring accountants must acquire the necessary skills set to succeed in our profession. This means exposing them directly with clients, challenging work and real life experiences. This will allow them to demonstrate responsibility and accountability.
Our goal beyond the working experience
We endeavour to expose our staff to external lectures and presentations and to community events in an effort to help our staff to become aware of the outside world, grow as individuals and gain a place in our greater community.
We embrace the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants’ Goal for “Share, Learn, Grow”, which is reproduced below:
Mentor
Roles & Responsibilities
A mentor motivates his or her protégé to do his or her best work and make decisions that will bring career and personal happiness. In this coach-like role, a mentor asks thought-provoking questions, identifies political relationships, assimilates the protégé into the corporate culture and assists him or her in developing short- and long-term goals.
The mentor benefits from this relationship in the form of personal satisfaction thanks to being able to give back to the organization; a legacy of knowledge, insight and experience; and enhanced visibility and prestige. The mentor also will gain new perspective and insight from the protégé’s viewpoints and experience.
A mentor should have:
- Ability to influence and persuade others in positions of power
- Credibility with and respect from colleagues
- Seniority in relation to the protégé
- Desire to help the protégé as well as the organization
- Ability to help the protégé set and attain goals
A mentor should provide:
- Vision, insight and encouragement
- A safer environment for taking risks
- Insight into corporate culture
- Constructive feedback and critical analysis
- Crisis or failure-control plans
- Regular meetings
Protégé
Roles & Responsibilities
A protégé seeks constructive feedback as well as encouragement, and has a strong commitment to professional growth and the ambition to succeed. In recognition of the time and effort a mentor must put into establishing a relationship and providing support, a protégé is willing to take the initiative to ask questions, seek out learning opportunities and listen to constructive feedback.
The protégé benefits from this relationship via personalized education, training and counsel; increased visibility and opportunities for advancement in the organization; and a greater awareness of career and personal capabilities and possibilities.
A protégé should have:
- Desire to learn, grow and succeed
- Ability to accept risk
- Commitment and loyalty to the organization
- Awareness of personal responsibility and goals
- Ability to listen and follow through with directions
A protégé should be willing to:
- Assess his or her individual needs
- Take initiative in skill and career development
- Participate in the mentoring relationship
- Take advantage of the training and assistance offered
- Develop and utilize the skills of professionalism
Tips for a successful mentoring partnership
- Establish boundaries and maintain professional behavior
- Don’t stereotype, generalize, or assume your mentor or protégé will not understand your perspective
- Maintain records of activities and career growth
- Keep supervisors informed
- Meet regularly, but be flexible