Monthly Archives: June 2014

Agents of Change

Forget a Mentor, Find a Sponsor (2013) is an inspiring book by Sylvia Ann Hewlett that offers practical advice to fulfill your professional goals.

Like Donald Asher (author of Who Gets Promoted, Who Doesn’t, and Why), Hewlett informs workers—especially women and visible minorities—how the world of work operates: hard work alone won’t get you where you want to go. You need a powerful person to open doors for you.

Mentorship is a common practice in corporations, but it doesn’t go far enough. A mentor gives guidance and advice, but a sponsor is your advocate with clients. A sponsor believes in you and stakes his or her reputation on you.

Why would someone do this?

Unlike mentorship, sponsorship is a two-way street. As someone being sponsored, it’s your responsibility to deliver performance and loyalty to your sponsor, effectively “burnishing their brand” across the organization. In this way, you provide your sponsor with an ally to accomplish his or her own goals and an ear to the ground in milieus they don’t have access to—like the ground level of the organization.

For freelancers, finding a sponsor means identifying and approaching those with power in client organizations. Focus on people “who could evangelize on your behalf with those people in their network who make the hiring decisions.”

Hewlett makes clear that you don’t need to emulate the leadership style of your sponsor or even like your sponsor—you’re not looking for a friend. What is important is whether the sponsor has the power to help you achieve your goals by getting you your next promotion.

What I’ve found most helpful about Asher’s and Hewlett’s books is the call to action they provide for those trying to navigate a system they don’t innately understand. Asher and Hewlett inspire workers to be agents of change, not busy worker bees waiting for someone to finally notice them.

It Is To Be Hoped the Grammaratti Go Away

Broadcasters and publishers receive a deluge of complaints about grammar and usage. Anna Maria Tremonti, host of CBC Radio’s The Current, dubs these complainers “the grammaratti.” And I’m sure they’ll be expressing displeasure after the grammar discussion on The Current today. Tremonti spoke with Ammon Shea, author of Bad English: A History of Linguistic Aggravation.Continue Reading

Self-Publish at the Toronto Public Library

In a previous post, I suggested that if you commit to writing a mere 500 words per day, you’ll have a book written before the year’s out. And printing that book is easy-peasy. One way to do it is with the Asquith Press at the Toronto Public Library. The press is located at the TorontoContinue Reading

He Got Some ’Splainin’ to Do

Rebecca Solnit’s latest book, Men Explain Things to Me, is a collection of essays that explores the condescending manner in which some men speak to—not with—women. If you’re female, you know exactly what “mansplaining” is, and I’ll bet you’ve experienced it more than once. Solnit coined the term mansplaining in a blog post in whichContinue Reading

Getting Our Act Together

Angela Misri is a Toronto-based author who was recently featured on CBC Radio’s Here and Now. She spoke about her new detective novel, Jewel of the Thames, which features protaganist Portia Adams, a young detective with a Sherlock Holmes connection. Misri tells another story, however, that has captured my attention: her story of writing JewelContinue Reading

Just Do It

The Confidence Code is a new book by Katty Kay and Claire Shipman, who argue that women are left behind in the corporate world in part because they lack the confidence that men have. The authors define confidence as the nitty-gritty stuff that turns our thoughts into actions. For example, a man applies for aContinue Reading