How does someone go from being a lawyer to a top mentoring expert?
Meet Lisa Fain, CEO of the Center for Mentoring Excellence, who shares her unique journey and how she teamed up with her mom, Dr. Lois Zachary, a trailblazer in mentoring. Together, they’re changing what it means to be a mentor by focusing on cultural awareness and the power of mentoring to transform workplaces.
Ever wondered how mentoring is different from coaching or teaching? Lisa breaks it down — real mentoring is about learning together, mutual support, and building strong connections. She clears up some myths and shows how both mentors and mentees learn and grow from the experience.
We also dive into different mentoring programs and why having a clear purpose is key to making them work. Plus, Lisa gets personal, sharing how becoming an empty nester opened up new hobbies and adventures for her.
Join us to discover:
Connect with Lisa and the Center for Mentoring Excellence
Website: https://www.centerformentoring.com/
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/center-for-mentoring-excellence/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/CenterForMentoringExcellence/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lzfain/
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCYwzO0SPx7Si4dH91hTrGKQ/featured
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Lisa, Hello everyone, and welcome to
relationships rule. I have a special guest with me as always,
and I'm excited to introduce you to Lisa Fain. Lisa is coming to
us from Washington, State of Washington area, and she is the
center. She is the CEO of the Center for mentoring excellence
and an expert in the intersection of cultural
competency and mentoring. She has a passion for diversity and
inclusion and work, which fuels her strong conviction that
leveraging differences creates a better workplace and drives
better business results. Now I'm going to start like, first of
all, welcome to the show. Lisa,
thank you, Janice. I'm delighted to be here. Thanks
for having me My
pleasure. So I have, I have a lot of questions.
Some of them may seem pretty basic to you, but I'm not even
going to go there yet. Where I want to start is the whole
factor that, the whole fact that my podcast is all about
relationships. I found it fascinating and very, very warm,
actually, and very, very special that your center for mentally
mentoring excellence started with your mom. It was her
vision, right? And I would love to know about that and how you a
lawyer, a mediator, how you got into this? Because to me, it's
all about the relationships and and that was a special one, I
think.
Yeah, so she was one of the very first people to be
thinking about mentoring in the organizational context, as a
practitioner instead of as an academic. And so in 1992 she
started Leadership Development Services, which became center
for mentoring excellence. And it's interesting, because that
is the year after I graduated from high school, which means
that it wasn't something that it was really in my in my
consciousness as much because I was, I was in college doing my
own thing as she was really developing center for mentoring
excellence. So it wasn't until I was a full blown adult with a
family of my own that I really became aware of the impact that
she had had on the field of mentoring. And
we must say who she is, um Lois Zachary. Was her
name, right? Was she a doctorate or doctor? Lois
Zachary, yeah, she had gone back to get her
doctorate when I was in middle school, and then formed the
center right after I graduated from high school, and I actually
ended up calling her up, because after I had I called her up
professionally. I called her up often to talk, yeah,
professionally. After I practiced law, I went in house
to a legal department, and then I ended up leading Diversity
Equity and Inclusion for that organization. And as part of
that work, our women's group wanted a mentoring program. So I
called her up and said, Mom, what should I do? And she said,
Well, why don't you, you know, bring me in and I'll train your
mentors and mentees. She said she what she had said to me is,
you know, Lisa, the key is really making sure that the
mentors and the mentees have the competency to be effective. And
I hadn't really thought about that. I'd always kind of thought
of mentoring as something that you kind of wing, you know, you
wing it, but yeah,
talk about that. So, yes, back to that. Okay. So
she said,
why don't you bring me in and I'll train your
mentors and your mentees? Well, at the time, I didn't think it
was going to be possible, because I managed a budget, and
I felt very funny about talking to my boss about bringing in my
mother. But it happened anyway. The stars aligned, and she she
was up front, in the front of the room, talking about the
power of the transformational power of mentoring relationship.
And meanwhile, leading Dei, I had really noticed the biggest
change in people's behaviors was not when they went to a training
or they went to a round table. Other those things are powerful
educational tools. The key to action is when you have a
relationship with somebody in the workplace who's different
from you in some meaningful way. So I was just really connected
the dots between what she was saying and what I had been
feeling. And we dipped our she said, you know, as we had
conversations about it after the fact, she said, Well, maybe you
want to come think about, you know, working with me, and I was
a little bit trepidatious about it, so I just dipped my toe in.
I went part time at the company I was working for and part time
with her, and meanwhile, I had also developed coaching
practice. And it worked out well. She was so wonderful to
work with, very respectful of my own expertise in this dei world,
and it really dovetailed really well with what she was doing. So
the rest from that point is history. Janice, as I said,
well, it to
me, it was just like, wow, because that is so
special that doesn't happen very often, and especially with what
you've just explained that you went and did your own thing, and
it brought you around to basically. Working with your
mom, and she'd never pushed you to join in her work, or never
done anything to lure you in before that. Yeah,
for sure. In fact, you know, we were quite
different, and I never would have thought that I would have
worked with her, not because she wasn't wonderful. She was very
wonderful, but she was a big picture thinker, and I tend to
be really logical and just have different interests. And, you
know, you talk about relationships, it was so
redefining to our relationship, to have this professional
relationship, this professional mentoring relationship, which is
simply what it was, and as well as kind of the personal, you
know, mother daughter relationship as well, it was
really redefining and really, really special.
So how much time did you have with her in that
capacity? Capacity?
Well, I started working with her in 2015 part
time, full time. In 2016 she retired in 2018 at the beginning
of 2018 when I took over as CEO. But we wrote a couple books
together. So she passed away in the fall of 2022 So all told
about seven years working together.
Yeah, that's very special. I'm sure she was very
proud of you, too. Thank you. Yeah. Now, okay, I have to ask
one more question. So you have children? How old are they? 20
and
18?
So did they question? Did they ask you? Did
that put any pressure on them? Ask me about what, whether they
the working with going to work with grandma and, you know, you
know?
No, I don't think so. I'm curious to see. It's still
early to know where they will end up. But no, they were always
really curious and supportive about it, but never any
question, never really questioning it. And you know, I
it was important to me that they recognize the impact that she
had on the world. Yes, absolutely, which isn't
something that I fully recognize. Even when I was
working with her, I certainly didn't recognize it before I was
working with her, yeah, I started to recognize it when I
was working with her, and even more so after she passed, like,
so that's really important for me to have shared with them. And
I was really conscious while we were working together, of like,
sharing what a rock star she was in that world, so that they
could really see the impact that they had she had.
Yeah, that's really good. Okay, so I want to
go back to something I said I'll come back to, which is, you know
what my definition and thought of mentoring was all about,
because I've been asked to mentor people over the years
through just the fact that I'm older than everybody else around
there, right? Whatever I was doing and and I love and I'm a
teacher by trade, so for me, it felt like teaching but, but I
think I thought that was about winging it and bringing out what
they what they needed me to help them with, and see if, if and if
I couldn't do it, I would try and find someone who could. But
your definition, what your mom built as the the business, there
is a lot more, and it's a lot more complex, and it seems to me
that, and I want you to talk about it, because it seems to me
that it's not just the mentor, the mentee has a role as well,
and in learning. Both of them have a role in learning. So can
you give me that sort of in a nutshell of of the definition
and the the way it works?
Yeah, for sure. So it's interesting, because
mentoring really is, you know, like, it's, like, the most
promiscuously used word in leadership development. You
know, he asked people like, who's your mentor? And they'll
say things you know, like Oprah or Maya or Gandhi or what have
you. And there were great role models, but unless you have
actually a reciprocal relationship with them, it's not
really mentoring, right? I'm
still glad you said that, because, yeah, I've
heard it for years, people saying that, and it doesn't make
sense to me. It's
just, it's the misuse of the word. So what is
mentoring? I like to say, I think the easiest way to think
about what is mentoring and how it's different than other other
things, like coaching, role model, teaching, what have you,
is that there's three characteristics to mentoring.
There's learning, there's reciprocity and there's co
creation. So let's get go through each of these. Learning
is the purpose, the process and the product of mentoring.
Learning is the purpose, the process and the product of
mentoring, meaning that if it's not a learning relationship, it
may just be a great relationship, but it's not
mentoring, it can might be excellent lunches, it might be
scintillating conversations. It might be something, you know,
that's that's a great way to spend time and build
relationships. But it's not learning unless, excuse me, it's
not mentoring unless there's a learning presence. So that's the
first thing. The second is reciprocity, and this is why
your relationship with Oprah. Or is not mentoring unless you
really know her well, which is entirely possible. But is is
this idea of reciprocity, mentors give and mentors get,
mentees give and mentees get. And people often think about
what mentees are gaining, but the truth is that mentors gain
as much or more from the relationship as mentees do, and
the data really supports that they become better leaders. They
gain more cultural competency, they have more career
satisfaction. And this goes on and on and on and on. And
similarly, mentees give and mentees get, right. So there's
there is that reciprocity, that's the second thing. And the
third thing is co creation, which is that the mentor, let's
assume for a second a one on one mentoring relationship with one
mentor, one mentee. It's like it's the funny math of one plus
one equals three. In in a mentoring relationship, there's
the mentor, there's the mentee, and then there's the mentoring
relationship that they co create together. So they're both diving
in and determining the the parameters of that mentoring
relationship. So that's really unique, right? Because there's
not very many other relationships in the work, in
your professional lives, even in your personal life, where you
can have that kind of co creation
in the same Yeah. Okay, so that's really
developmental learning, reciprocity and CO creating. So
those are the three parts to mentoring. So would you say,
then that that's just so different from, say, teaching,
because teaching, it's more one way.
Well, in teaching you, you as the teacher, are
driving the learning, right, right? Not the student, yeah,
and it's not that as a teacher, you don't get some sense of
self, of satisfaction and teaching. I mean, great teachers
gain a lot from it, but the purpose of that relationship is
not for you as a teacher to be gaining. It's the purposes for
the student to be learning, right? And you and in most
teaching relationships, you know, particularly, you know,
let's think about it. Student in school, they aren't co creating
the terms of the relationship. They're showing up, yeah. And
their behavior may dictate the way you teach, but you as a
teacher, are setting the rules of the
classroom. So that's teaching, and then
there's coaching, yeah?
So that's what gets that's the, probably the most
common question that I get is like, what's the difference
between coaching and mentoring? And I have sort of two answers
for that. So the first answer is, all great mentors or
coaches. But not all great coaches are mentors. So coaching
is a skill that great mentors use. You can be a great coach
without using mentoring as a skill. That's that's number one.
Number two is that the reciprocity isn't there in the
same way. Again, it's not that coaches don't gain something
from it, but it's not designed in the same way. Coaches also
bring the tools mentors there. I've seen some amazing mentoring
relationships where the mentor has zero familiarity with the
context in which the mentee works, but really it's a
successful mentoring relationship because they're
learning together. They have a great level of curiosity, which
will I know, we'll talk about it a little bit, and you know, they
really can ask the right questions and help help the
mentee define when they need more tools. So they're
definitely interrelated. That's the answer number one. Answer
number two is, we may get too hung up on what the difference
between coaching is, because the skills are very similar, not
identical, but the skills are very similar. So
I'm just trying to think, you know, if, if in
situations where I've been a quote mentor, whether I've
messed somebody up or not, you know, like I'm thinking, you
know, I mean, because you I know that I always learn from the the
people that I'm mentoring when I've done that, but hopefully
they do too, and and and more so. So I know that you look at
this holistically, and what does that mean to you? Because I know
it's, I think it's very important to the work that
you're doing, right?
Yeah. I mean, look, I think you we need mentors at all
stages of our lives. We need many mentors throughout our
nightlife, not just this kind of one. Mentor myth is something
that's really outdated so and mentoring is really context
specific. So a lot of times, organizations will come to us
and say, like, just tell me what it is we need to do in order to,
you know, get a great mentoring program. And I say, I can't do
that until I know more about what's the context in which
you're operating. What are the outcomes that you're looking to
achieve? What are some of the constraints that you're seeing
as an organization and so forth? So mentoring, you know, you can
have a mentor. You can have a personal mentor. You can have a
professional mentor. You can have, you know, I'm a small
business owner. I'm also, you know, a thought leader. Or
whatever that means, you know, I have a mentor in that realm. I
have a mentor in my business sense, I have a mentor, a
personal mentor who is, you know, helps me think through
parenting issues and all these things or did when my kids were
younger, anyway. And so if you think about the all of the areas
of your life, learning is critical in all of the different
areas your life, and so it's really important to think about
this holistically. It's so
interesting. You say I have a mentor for this and
a mentor for that. I always hear people say they have a coach for
this and a coach for that. So in your case, now do I mean this is
a business, I have a coach. Oh, okay, so you see them
differently, and mentors are they typically paid or typically
not paid? So you
and I are operating in North America, right here in
Canada, and I'm here in the US, and my answer is different here
than it is in Europe. So in Europe, there is much more of a
burgeoning industry of individual paid mentors. My
mentors here are unpaid. They're, they come to me from
very, you know, maybe met them at a networking event. Maybe
they're a friend of the family. Maybe, you know, they're and
they're, some of them are mentoring moments, you know, as
opposed to kind of like retracted mentoring
relationships. But so typically in the States and in Canada,
what we're talking about when we talk about mentors are unpaid,
although there are some people who you know are paid for their
mentorship, I would argue, in those instances,
it changes the relationship, doesn't it changes
the relationship. And it's not that it's a bad thing.
It's just that the way it's done is not really traditional
mentoring, and the way that I tend to think about mentoring,
yeah, right. So yeah, it changes the
relationship, and tends to be more of that coaching, I would
think relationship instead, yeah,
it often veers in that and that's, you know,
that's where it's like, okay, is it a distinction without a
difference? I'm not sure, but I do know that it changes the
dynamic a little bit, yeah.
So you and your mom wrote a couple of books,
bridging difference for better mentoring, bridging difference
for better mentoring, and a new version, you have a new edition
of the mentor's guide. Can you tell me about the bridging
difference for better mentoring? Is that to do with the DEI
piece?
Yeah. I mean, it's really, you know, we wrote
bridging differences for better mentoring, because one of the
things that we were finding is, you know, we keep talking about
the importance of inclusive of mentoring as a tool for
inclusion, and the importance of having inclusive conversations.
But people were really curious about, how, how do you, how do
you, how do you create authentic conversations? How do you hold
space for authentic sharing? And it really is designed to help
mentors and mentees create that space. It's built on the same
basic learning centered model of mentoring, which is a four stage
model of mentoring that we talk about in the mentors guide, but
it's really focused on differences. One of the things I
love about that book is we came up with three composite case
studies based on the people that we'd work with. And they, first
of all, they were great fun to put together, but they have
really helped kind of relate the principles that we talk about in
the book to particular situations and and it's really
designed to be to be applied. And then the mentors guide, you
know, I only had the privilege of doing the third edition.
First and Second were written by my mom, Lois Zachary, and they
it. It really is one of the best selling mentoring books of all
time. It's out there all over the world. It's been translated
into several different languages, and we hear over and
over again that it's like a Bible for people who are
mentors, there's lots of great tools in there. They can take
some of the worksheets and use them in their mentoring
relationship. So our version added dei component. It talked
about hybrid and remote work relationships, which wasn't
really contemplated when the second edition was written
incorporates the global code of ethics for mentoring and a few
other topics that weren't in the second edition, but we're really
proud of that book.
That's great. Sounds okay, so now you work
with people all over the world. Are you setting up programs for
them in their organizations to mentor people within their
company? Do you also do like one? Do you? Are you teaching
like entrepreneurs to be mentors and things like that? Like, is
it or is it mostly corporate?
Um, it's corporates associations, NGOs. Those
government organizations, universities, but it happens in
most of what we do is in the organizational context. We're
actually, we get requests all the time to do kind of public
train, the trainers, and we're actually working on that
offering now, but yeah, or we are hired mostly by
organizations who are looking to, you know, create mentoring
initiatives so we help them kind of soup to nuts.
Awesome. Okay, so you alluded to the curiosity
question, so I'm going to throw it in right now, because if
you've read that that I it's my favorite word, and I'm always
curious to know what other people think so. Do you think
that curiosity is innate or learned? And part two would be,
what are you most curious about today?
I love that question. I do think we have an innate
curiosity. I mean, you think about children who are always
asking questions. I think we're all born with a curiosity, and I
think we are taught, probably implicitly, to stifle that
curiosity, not be nosy. Curiosity killed the cat, right?
All those expressions. And I also think curiosity can be
learned. So I think I The answer is Option C, is it a and eight?
Is it B, learned C, both of the above. You know, I think you can
stoke your curiosity. I think you can practice asking
questions. I think you can practice finding something you
want to learn about more and more, and I think it's an
essential skill. I mean, you probably just because I know how
much you care about curiosity. You've, you know, probably seen
the research that says it's like the biggest predictor of
excellence in leadership is curiosity. It's just, it's
really, really fascinating.
Well, you know what you just said? I think
that, yes, you can practice asking questions, and you can
try, if that's such a thing, to be more curious. But I think the
key that you just said, also, and I've seen it in in somebody
I know, is that they have to have some kind of passion for
it, or they're never they don't care. And that's what I see. If
someone is naturally curious, they know that it's easy for
them to ask questions about anything but the person who
isn't naturally curious, but gets to use your word stoked by
something that that lights them up, that that's a different
being, different animal, totally. And you know what
strikes me as you're talking Janice is like, I know
you talk a lot about relationships, right? Like the
more you establish relationships in connection with somebody, the
more curious you're going to be, because you care and you want to
know, right? And it's about kind of creating the safe space like
this. The more psychologically safe you feel, the more curious
you can become, and the more open to somebody else's
curiosity and receptive their curiosity you're going to be. So
there's really this nice interplay with how important
relationships and connections are, well, and
it was just interesting. When I was
preparing for our interview, I was I was reading the material
that I had, and I was looking at your website, and I was
listening to you on podcast, but what kept coming to me first was
the relationship with your mom, because that's just, that's my
curiosity, and that's where I had to start. It's just, I don't
care if it's not about your business, but that to me, I
mean, it was in your case, but that's just where I go, because
I can't help myself. So okay, so what are you most curious about
today? Um,
oh my gosh, I have so many things that I'm curious
about is I am, in about a month and a half, I'm going to be an
empty nester, and so I'm curious about all sorts of new hobbies,
like I What's it going to be for me? I'm not, I'm still just, I'm
still curious about that, but maybe I'll join a master's
rowing team. Maybe Maybe I'll brush up on my Spanish. You
know, curious
to that is, do you really is your is your child
that's going away to school, I'm assuming, going away, away
away, 3000 miles away.
Oh, where are they going?
Actually, 2000 miles away to University of Wisconsin
at Madison, Seattle, Washington. So,
okay, so, so you will have more time.
I will have more time. Yeah, and, right, you
still have one at home. She's my youngest.
I have an older one who's already in Washington, DC.
Oh, got it. And then my youngest is going away to University of
Wisconsin really so we'll have a lot of, you know, yeah, thank
you. And you know, I, I'm also really curious about what you
know, it's something we've been spending a lot of time thinking
about at Center for mentoring excellence is, you know, what is
i. First of all, what's AI going to mean in terms of mentoring?
Really curious about the impact of artificial intelligence, and
I'm also really curious about, how are organizations going to
accept this reality that we're in a hybrid workforce, and use
mentoring as a tool for that, like right now, you know,
there's all sorts of return to Office mandates and things like
that, and I think that they're going to be relatively short
lived. So how are organizations going to change their leadership
behavior to embrace this hybrid workforce? And are they open to
using mentoring as a tool to do that? I don't know. Yeah,
that's interesting. Like, first of all,
are they open to it would make me think it depends on the
actual organization, whether they're forward thinking with
everything else or not, right? And and also the that probably
feeds into the age level of the management, you
know? Yeah, sure, for sure, it's, you know, I honestly
think that the requirement to come back to work of certain
amount of time is a shortcut to, you know, our tradition, the way
that we, we at the who we, who are, who we, who are, of the age
of leaders, of leadership and organizations, learned how to
lead in person. And I think you can learn to lead in a hybrid
work environment, but it requires new skills. It requires
learning how to embrace communication. It requires
learning how to engage people authentically. It requires
learning how to create space in a virtual world and all the
things. And so that's an up leveling of skills that has to
happen. And I don't know necessarily that we have to be,
look, I love being in person. I love getting energy from people
in the same room and not suggesting that you we replace
that. But do we have to mandate that? I don't know.
Well, that's that makes me think of those. I'm
thinking of my daughters. I have two daughters. They both work
from home, corporations. One can handle it because she is out.
She's in sales, and she's out and about with people part of
the time, the and she's out, going to boot. The other one is
the introvert, and feel, I think it's, I don't think it's, it's
helping her move ahead and learn in because she's alone all the
time, and I just, I don't see it like she probably needs a mentor
outside of the boss that she's not real happy with, so to
speak, who's somewhere far away, But they're always on, you know,
team calls or whatever, but I think it's so different. They're
very isol. She's very isolated and and though she likes that,
in one sense, she can sort of manage her own time, I think
it's a detriment to her work.
Yeah, yeah, experience, yeah.
So I don't know. I think, like for me, I it. I'm
not in a situation where I need to ever worry about that
anymore. I'm not, I'm I'm past it. I think there was so much to
be said for being in the group environment and watching other
people's play, and, you know how, how the different levels
worked in the company, the hierarchy, all of that stuff.
You could see it in action. You can't now, yeah,
yeah, it's really, it's, it's really, really,
really, really fascinating. We're just talking with a
colleague this morning about, you know, the Surgeon General of
the US had a report on this epidemic of loneliness, right
that there? You know, I think it came out at the beginning of
last year. So we're in 2024 as we'll record this in 2023 maybe
it was 2022 a report on the epidemic of loneliness and how,
you know, mentoring is really extra important in this epidemic
of loneliness and and that the epidemic of loneliness is only
heightened by virtual Yes. So how do we create that
connection? I think mentoring is a great way to do that. I think
up leveling leadership skills for this hybrid world. Also like
the term hybrid really means mix, right? So, how can you
create without mandating two days a week in the office? How
can you create these hybrid experiences? Maybe the team gets
together every quarter. Maybe you have open office hours where
you can't talk about business, but you have to talk about, you
know, what? You have a question that you put down. You know,
I saw when, when covid was rampant. I saw a
situation where one of my girls was a different job. She had a
different company, different type of flavor altogether. But
it was everyone worked from home, and they were global, all
around the world, and it was like a 24/7 operation. Depending
is like customer support all around the world, and they had,
I don't know if it was weekly or bi weekly, activity sessions on
Zoom. And it was not work related, it was fun related, and
it helped build a culture that I hadn't seen in that kind of, you
know, because everybody's separate, nobody's goes to an
office together. And it was really good. They would send
things to the house, like to my daughter's house, that to have,
like it might have been felt, pens and a book to create
something for the event. Or, you know, whatever they, they they
did. They went all out and they, I think somebody probably
created this business right for this time in the world when it
was like that. But I think those kinds of things are so important
to build that camaraderie, to build the the team, and so
different from the company my daughter's in now. It's like
night and day. There's none of that. Yeah. Yeah. So yeah.
Again, I
mean, it's a skill, right? And you have to have the
intentionality to
create that. Yeah? You totally do. So I think
mentoring is such a a hopeful word, like, I love that. You
know, you can help somebody by mentoring them. You can learn
from them when you're mentoring them. I love that. And I think
whether you're mentoring or coaching or teaching, though
they all have the same satisfaction that can come if
you do it well, because people appreciate it. So it is
excellence in that sense, right? Yeah, for sure. Okay, this has
been really fun, so I I want to give you the opportunity to
perhaps give my audience, sort of your best or most favorite
piece of business advice based on from your perspective. Oh,
I know. It's great. It's a great question. So, you
know, I think this is the same answer to the question of that I
thought about it just in thinking about this
conversation, which is, you know, what's your favorite
quote, right? So, you know, I My favorite quote is a quote that
my sister in law said the night before my wedding, at the
rehearsal dinner. And it's great advice for marriage, and it's
great advice for business. And the advice is that the main
thing is to keep the main thing the main thing, you know. And
you know, obviously in marriage, it means one thing in business,
like, why are you doing what you're doing? What is the
purpose? What is what drives you each day? What's the impact that
you want to make? Keeping that focus and having intentionality
around it will make such a difference, and it's really
quite related to mentoring, right? What is it that you want
to be learning? How is it that you want to be developing what
is it that you want to be giving of yourself to others and really
keeping that front and center is is the best piece of advice? I
think that I ever got
nicely done. That's great. That's great. So
thank you for being here. Thank you for your wisdom. And the the
great explanations about mentoring and mentoring
excellence. I I feel like that's clarified it more for me as
well, because I was curious about that. I i hope that my
audience, I hope that speaking now to my audience, I hope that
you appreciate as well. And if you are interested in finding
out more about mentoring, I will put the link on the website to
the Center for mentoring excellence. There's some good
information on there from Lisa and her team, and remember to
stay connected and be remembered. You.
Here are some great episodes to start with.