It’s more challenging than ever with layoffs gutting teams, knowledge being lost and developers looking for work or knee-deep in their own projects with minimal spare time. The traditional ‘we’ll catch up once a week and discuss your career’ mentor mindset is really hard for most people to manage and commit to at even the best of times.

A lot of people focus on the how of finding a mentor, but often what causes struggles with mentoring is people reaching out without a plan. Mentorship can take a huge number of forms. If you’re after a mentor, there’s a few questions I’d ask yourself first:

The biggest question you need to ask yourself is:

Once you know the answer (or most of them) to the above, you’re ready to find a mentor. The answers above will whittle down who is a reasonable mentor for you, and you can use it as a guidepost (not unlike design pillars) for who you need. You could put the call out for what you’re after in the digest, post on social media, but you’re always going to get the best response from going directly. From there, it’s about reaching out to people politely and asking for what you need. Everyone is different in what they prefer, but reaching out via LinkedIn is fine, email is fine, even DM’s are mostly okay. Be polite if you can be clear about the what, how, when of what you need, you’re likely to get a lot further. Most seniors want to help, so the worst they can say is no. Accept if you don’t get a response - it is likely not personal!

I recommend having a suite of mentors that you can go to for different things, at different times, and mixing up whether that mentorship is in person or on calls where you can. With MIGW/SXSW coming up, now is a great time to reach out to meet up with people you admire and try to get an hour of their time with a coffee - but come prepared with questions and thoughts you want their take on.