January 14, 2025

Questions Clients Ask Before Starting

An honest look at the doubts that arise before committing to an executive mentoring process.

When a financial sector executive considers an executive mentoring program, they usually have very specific questions. It is not about superficial curiosity, but about decisions that affect their time, their team, and their institutional reputation. These are some of the questions we hear most often at GlennKostur before starting a mentoring engagement.

Is this only for CEOs or also for middle managers?

The short answer: it depends on the objective. Our programs are designed for executives with responsibility for teams, budgets, or strategic decisions. We have worked with division managers, compliance directors, and board members. What matters is not the title, but the scope of the decisions you make daily.

How much time do you really need to dedicate?

Each program is structured in biweekly 90-minute sessions, plus asynchronous work. Most participants report that the time invested is recovered in strategic clarity and a reduction of unproductive meetings. It is not a weekend course; it is a process that requires reflection and constant application.

How is the return on mentoring measured?

There is no single metric, but we observe indicators such as the reduction of internal conflicts, speed in decision-making, and coherence of institutional discourse. Some clients report improvements in key talent retention or in the external perception of their leadership. We prefer to talk about sustained qualitative results rather than numerical promises.

What if there is no chemistry with the mentor?

It is a real possibility. That is why the first session is exploratory and without commitment. We evaluate together whether the approach, pace, and communication style fit what you need. If not, we suggest another profile within our network or simply do not continue. There is no point in forcing a relationship that does not generate trust.

These questions are not obstacles; they are signs that the executive is taking the decision seriously. Answering them transparently is part of the value we offer before writing any work plan.

Questions Clients Ask Before Starting

A grounded blog post that adds a different angle without repeating the others.

When a senior executive considers a mentorship program or a governance review, the first conversation rarely starts with the service itself. It starts with doubts, comparisons, and a need to understand what the process actually looks like. Over the years, I have noticed that the same questions surface again and again, regardless of the institution or the market.

One of the most common is: “How do I know this will apply to my specific situation?” The concern is legitimate. Many programs feel generic, built for a hypothetical executive rather than for someone managing a real portfolio or a board with competing interests. The answer lies in the initial diagnosis. Before any plan is drafted, we spend time mapping the actual governance structure, the communication gaps, and the leadership dynamics that exist. Without that step, the advice would be hollow.

Another frequent question is about time commitment. Executives in the financial sector operate under tight schedules. A typical query sounds like: “Can this be done without pulling me away from my responsibilities?” The format adapts to the client. Some prefer a series of focused two-hour sessions spread over a quarter. Others opt for a more intensive two-day workshop followed by monthly check-ins. The structure is not fixed; it is negotiated based on the calendar and the urgency of the issues at hand.

A third question touches on confidentiality. In private banking and corporate governance, discretion is not optional. Clients want to know how their information is handled, who else is involved, and whether the process leaves a paper trail that could be scrutinized. The protocol is clear: all engagements are covered by a standard non-disclosure agreement, and deliverables are tailored to avoid exposing sensitive internal data. No case studies are published without explicit written consent.

Finally, there is the question of measurable outcomes. “What changes can I expect to see, and in what timeframe?” The answer depends on the scope. A communication plan for a board can show results within a quarter, reflected in clearer minutes, faster decision-making, and fewer misunderstandings. A reputation strategy may take longer, as it involves shifting external perception. The key is to set realistic milestones from the start, so that progress is visible and the investment feels justified.

These questions are not obstacles. They are signs that the client is thinking seriously about the decision. Addressing them directly, with concrete examples and honest timelines, builds the trust that makes the rest of the work possible.

About the Author

Glenn Kostur

Executive Brand and Corporate Governance Consultant

Over fifteen years advising executives in the financial sector on institutional communication strategies, organizational leadership, and optimization of private investment portfolios.

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