ABSTRACT

Investing in your returning talent

Becoming a parent is life-changing. Our experience as employers, practitioners, researchers and working parents tells us this is a critical time for offering support to new parents as they navigate the transition, plan for their return and re-engage with work and career. At an organisational level, there are huge costs associated with losing experienced and talented employees when they start a family and, in the interest of building a more diverse and balanced workforce, organisations need their people to return engaged and motivated to progress their career.

Written in partnership by two established coaching and mentoring professionals, Mentoring New Parents at Work makes the case for dedicated mentoring programmes in the workplace as a sustainable way of supporting new parents and improving talent retention for employers. The authors offer timely, practical guidance for each stage of the mentoring journey, from building the business case through to ideas for mentoring workshops. The book is grounded in theory and practice, and provides tools, techniques and real life case studies from a range of countries and organisations to illustrate good practice.

Mentoring New Parents at Work will be invaluable to all HR practitioners and line managers who want to retain and support new parents, helping to pave the way for gender diversity at all levels of their organisations. Its themes and insights will also be of interest to students and researchers of HRM, diversity management, and coaching and mentoring.

chapter |3 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|4 pages

One maternity leave – two perspectives

chapter 2|10 pages

An international perspective

chapter 3|9 pages

The business case for mentoring maternity

chapter 7|4 pages

Mentoring roles in this context

chapter 9|2 pages

Being an effective maternity mentee

chapter 10|5 pages

Being an effective maternity mentor

chapter 12|14 pages

Getting started

chapter 13|14 pages

Preparing mentors and mentees

chapter 14|9 pages

Preparing your line managers

chapter 15|5 pages

Ending well

chapter 16|14 pages

Supervision

chapter 17|13 pages

Evaluating parental mentoring

chapter 18|32 pages

A mentor's toolkit

chapter |1 pages

In conclusion