liqiongyu

finding-mentors-sponsors

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# Install this skill:
npx skills add liqiongyu/lenny_skills_plus --skill "finding-mentors-sponsors"

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# Description

Build a Mentor & Sponsor Plan Pack (mentor portfolio, sponsor strategy, target list, outreach scripts, meeting agenda, tracking + cadence). Use for finding a mentor, finding a sponsor, mentorship, sponsorship, career advisor, career coaching, networking outreach. Category: Career.

# SKILL.md


name: "finding-mentors-sponsors"
description: "Build a Mentor & Sponsor Plan Pack (mentor portfolio, sponsor strategy, target list, outreach scripts, meeting agenda, tracking + cadence). Use for finding a mentor, finding a sponsor, mentorship, sponsorship, career advisor, career coaching, networking outreach. Category: Career."


Finding Mentors & Sponsors

Scope

Covers
- Clarifying what you actually need: mentor (advice) vs sponsor (bets political capital)
- Building a portfolio of mentors (not “one perfect oracle”)
- Identifying and prioritizing potential mentors/sponsors (internal + external) with a warm-path plan
- Writing outreach messages that are honest, specific, and easy to say yes/no to
- Running high-signal first conversations (agenda, questions, close, follow-up)
- Turning conversations into an operating system (cadence + value exchange + tracking)
- Optional: evaluating and selecting a career coach (interview multiple; pick for fit)

When to use
- “Help me find a mentor.”
- “I need a sponsor / advocate at work.”
- “Write outreach messages to reach out to potential mentors.”
- “How do I ask for mentorship without being awkward?”
- “I need a system to build relationships and get guidance for my career.”

When NOT to use
- You need therapy/mental-health support (use a licensed professional)
- You’re in an HR/performance escalation (PIP/investigation) where advice could be sensitive — follow the formal process first
- You only want a resume/LinkedIn rewrite (use a resume/job-search workflow)
- You want spammy mass outreach or “growth hacking” people — this pack assumes respectful, relationship-based asks

Inputs

Minimum required
- Your current role/level + domain (e.g., “PM in B2B SaaS, 5 years experience”)
- The outcome you want in the next 3–6 months (promotion readiness, leadership growth, domain mastery, etc.)
- 2–4 skill gaps or problems you want help with
- Your constraints (time per week, confidentiality, internal vs external, comfort with outreach)
- Your current network starting point (at least 5 names or communities, even if weak ties)

Missing-info strategy
- Ask up to 5 questions from references/INTAKE.md (3–5 at a time).
- If the user can’t share names, use anonymized placeholders and focus on targeting criteria + scripts.
- If context is thin, assume: early-to-mid career, seeking both internal and external relationships, and 1–2 hours/week available.

Outputs (deliverables)

Produce a Mentor & Sponsor Plan Pack (Markdown in-chat; or as files if requested) in this order:

1) Mentorship & Sponsorship brief (goals, gaps, definitions, boundaries)
2) Target list + warm-path map (10–25 candidates, prioritized)
3) Outreach pack (mentor ask, sponsor/advocate ask, warm intro request, follow-ups)
4) First-meeting pack (30-min agenda, question bank, close + recap template)
5) Relationship operating system (cadence, value exchange plan, tracking table)
6) Sponsor strategy (how to earn the “bet”, what to ask for, visibility plan)
7) Optional: coach selection scorecard (criteria + interview questions + decision)
8) Risks / Open questions / Next steps (always)

Templates: references/TEMPLATES.md
Expanded guidance: references/WORKFLOW.md

Workflow (8 steps)

1) Intake + goal clarity

  • Inputs: user context; references/INTAKE.md.
  • Actions: Confirm the primary goal (mentor, sponsor, or both). Define success in 3–6 months. Capture constraints and confidentiality boundaries.
  • Outputs: 1-paragraph goal statement + assumptions/unknowns list.
  • Checks: Goal is specific (not “grow my career”); constraints are explicit.

2) Convert needs into a “help map” (portfolio > single mentor)

  • Inputs: skill gaps; target role/trajectory.
  • Actions: Build a “mentor portfolio” map: which gaps need (a) advice, (b) feedback/coaching, (c) introductions, (d) advocacy. Decide where sponsorship is needed.
  • Outputs: Mentor portfolio map + sponsor hypothesis (who could credibly advocate and why).
  • Checks: Each need has a concrete ask and a target profile.

3) Build a target list + warm-path plan

  • Inputs: network starting point; desired mentor/sponsor profiles.
  • Actions: Generate 10–25 candidates across 3 pools: (1) inside the company, (2) adjacent network (2nd-degree), (3) external experts/peers. For each, identify a warm path (mutuals, communities, shared work) and a first-step.
  • Outputs: Prioritized target list + warm-path map table.
  • Checks: List is diversified; at least 50% have a plausible warm path; top 5 are high-fit and reachable.

4) Draft outreach that’s honest + specific (make it easy to say yes/no)

  • Inputs: top candidates; ask types (mentor, sponsor, intro).
  • Actions: Write 2–3 outreach variants that: (a) name the specific gap, (b) show humility (“I don’t know X yet”), (c) propose a small ask (15–30 min), (d) offer an easy decline.
  • Outputs: Outreach pack (messages + subject lines + follow-up sequence).
  • Checks: Messages are personalized; no guilt pressure; clear next action.

5) Run first conversations (agenda, questions, close)

  • Inputs: scheduled chats; references/TEMPLATES.md agendas.
  • Actions: Prepare a 30-minute agenda, ask high-signal questions, and close with a clear next step (one concrete action + permission to follow up). Send a recap within 24 hours.
  • Outputs: First-meeting pack + recap notes template.
  • Checks: Each meeting ends with an explicit next step (or a respectful “no”).

6) Install the relationship operating system (cadence + value exchange)

  • Inputs: initial meetings; user capacity.
  • Actions: Define a sustainable cadence (monthly/quarterly). Set expectations: what you’ll bring (updates, artifacts, drafts), how you’ll respect time, and how you’ll give back (help, info, introductions).
  • Outputs: Relationship OS + tracking table with next actions.
  • Checks: Cadence is realistic; every relationship has a next touchpoint and a value exchange note.

7) Sponsor strategy (earn the bet, then make the ask)

  • Inputs: sponsor candidates; current work context.
  • Actions: Define “bet-worthy” outcomes you can deliver, then plan visibility: pre-wires, demos, written updates. Draft sponsor asks that are concrete: “introduce me to X”, “staff me on Y”, “say my name in Z room”, “back my promotion case”.
  • Outputs: Sponsor strategy (earn → signal → ask) with scripts.
  • Checks: Asks are specific and timely; you’re not asking for vague favoritism.

8) Quality gate + finalize

  • Inputs: full draft pack.
  • Actions: Run references/CHECKLISTS.md and score with references/RUBRIC.md. Tighten weak sections. Add Risks / Open questions / Next steps.
  • Outputs: Final Mentor & Sponsor Plan Pack.
  • Checks: The plan is actionable this week; scripts are copy/paste ready; risks are explicit.

Quality gate (required)

Examples

Example 1 (typical): “I’m a mid-level PM. I want a mentor for leadership growth and a sponsor to help me get staffed on higher-visibility work. Build a target list and write outreach messages. Ask me only 5 questions first.”
Expected: A prioritized list (internal + external), warm paths, and 3 message templates.

Example 2 (no strong network): “I moved industries and don’t know many people. Help me find mentors outside my company and build a system to reach out without feeling spammy.”
Expected: Targeting criteria + community sourcing plan + outreach and follow-up sequence + tracking.

Boundary example: “I want you to message 500 people on LinkedIn with the same pitch until someone replies.”
Response: decline; offer a smaller, personalized approach with ethics/safety constraints and warm-path prioritization.

# Supported AI Coding Agents

This skill is compatible with the SKILL.md standard and works with all major AI coding agents:

Learn more about the SKILL.md standard and how to use these skills with your preferred AI coding agent.