Manasa S Ayyala1, Kimberly Skarupski, Joann N Bodurtha, Marlís González-Fernández, Lisa E Ishii, Barbara Fivush, Rachel B Levine. 1. M.S. Ayyala is assistant professor, Department of Medicine, Rutgers New Jersey Medical School, Newark, New Jersey. K. Skarupski is associate professor, Department of Medicine, and associate dean for faculty development, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland. J.N. Bodurtha is professor, McKusick-Nathans Institute of Genetic Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland. M. González-Fernández is associate professor and vice chair for clinical affairs, Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland. L.E. Ishii is professor, Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, chief quality officer for clinical best practices, and senior medical director for clinical integration, Johns Hopkins Health System and Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland. B. Fivush is professor, Department of Pediatrics, and senior associate dean for women, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland. R.B. Levine is associate professor and associate vice chair for women's academic careers, Department of Medicine, and associate dean for faculty educational development, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland; ORCID: http://orcid.org/0000-0002-1138-1289.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To explore how sponsorship functions as a professional relationship in academic medicine. METHOD: The authors conducted semistructured interviews with Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine faculty in 2016: department chairs (sponsors) and faculty participants of an executive leadership development program (protégés). Using editing analysis style, the authors coded interview transcripts for thematic content; a coding framework and themes were derived using an iterative process. RESULTS: Five themes were identified from 23 faculty interviews (12 sponsors, 11 protégés): (1) Mentorship is different: Sponsorship is episodic and focused on specific opportunities; (2) Effective sponsors are career-established and well-connected talent scouts; (3) Effective protégés rise to the task and remain loyal; (4) Trust, respect, and weighing risks are key to successful sponsorship relationships; (5) Sponsorship is critical to career advancement. Sponsorship is distinct from mentorship, though mentors can be sponsors if highly placed and well connected. Effective sponsors have access to networks and provide unequivocal support when promoting protégés. Effective protégés demonstrate potential and make the most of career-advancing opportunities. Successful sponsorship relationships are based on trust, respect, mutual benefits, and understanding potential risks. Sponsorship is critical to advance to high-level leadership roles. Women are perceived as being less likely to seek sponsorship but as needing the extra support sponsorship provides to be successful. CONCLUSIONS: Sponsorship, in addition to mentorship, is critical for successful career advancement. Understanding sponsorship as a distinct professional relationship may help faculty and academic leaders make more informed decisions about using sponsorship as a deliberate career-advancement strategy.
PURPOSE: To explore how sponsorship functions as a professional relationship in academic medicine. METHOD: The authors conducted semistructured interviews with Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine faculty in 2016: department chairs (sponsors) and faculty participants of an executive leadership development program (protégés). Using editing analysis style, the authors coded interview transcripts for thematic content; a coding framework and themes were derived using an iterative process. RESULTS: Five themes were identified from 23 faculty interviews (12 sponsors, 11 protégés): (1) Mentorship is different: Sponsorship is episodic and focused on specific opportunities; (2) Effective sponsors are career-established and well-connected talent scouts; (3) Effective protégés rise to the task and remain loyal; (4) Trust, respect, and weighing risks are key to successful sponsorship relationships; (5) Sponsorship is critical to career advancement. Sponsorship is distinct from mentorship, though mentors can be sponsors if highly placed and well connected. Effective sponsors have access to networks and provide unequivocal support when promoting protégés. Effective protégés demonstrate potential and make the most of career-advancing opportunities. Successful sponsorship relationships are based on trust, respect, mutual benefits, and understanding potential risks. Sponsorship is critical to advance to high-level leadership roles. Women are perceived as being less likely to seek sponsorship but as needing the extra support sponsorship provides to be successful. CONCLUSIONS: Sponsorship, in addition to mentorship, is critical for successful career advancement. Understanding sponsorship as a distinct professional relationship may help faculty and academic leaders make more informed decisions about using sponsorship as a deliberate career-advancement strategy.
Authors: Ava E Pierce; Lisa Moreno-Walton; Dowin Boatright; Joel L Moll; Marquita N Hicks; Jeffrey Druck; Bernard L Lopez; Evrim Oral; Sheryl L Heron Journal: AEM Educ Train Date: 2019-12-31
Authors: Rachel B Levine; Manasa S Ayyala; Kimberly A Skarupski; Joann N Bodurtha; Marlis González Fernández; Lisa E Ishii; Barbara Fivush Journal: J Gen Intern Med Date: 2020-06-29 Impact factor: 5.128