Sooner or later, most finance professionals find themselves in a mentoring role. And the key question is not how to explain things, but how to develop independence.
Here are approaches that truly work 👇
🔹 Don’t give ready-made solutions too quickly
Ask questions instead: What do you think? What options do you see? Where are the risks?
Learning starts when a person thinks — not when they repeat instructions.
🔹 Explain the logic, not just the rules
Regulations change. Logic doesn’t.
When juniors understand why something is done a certain way, they adapt faster to new cases and regulatory changes.
🔹 Delegate responsibility gradually, but consistently
Small independent tasks → review → feedback.
Without real responsibility, professional growth doesn’t happen.
🔹 Discuss mistakes without fear
Mistakes are learning material, not a reason for punishment.
The fastest growth happens in environments where people are allowed to make mistakes and openly discuss them.
🔹 Teach them to ask the right questions — to the client and to themselves.
A finance professional matures when they start seeing not only numbers, but the broader business context.
🔹 Provide regular and specific feedback
Not “good job” or “bad,” but:
— what was done well
— what needs improvement
— how to do it better next time
Strong teams are not built through constant control.
They grow through trust, structured learning, and the right questions.
If you’re in a leadership role, your most significant achievement is not your own expertise — but the professionals who grow alongside you.