Business Case 02

Corporate HR needs mentoring that reduces talent risk and builds measurable development capacity.

GMI gives HR leaders a standards-based mentoring infrastructure for retention, engagement, leadership pipelines, internal mobility, onboarding, and skills transformation.

External Research Base

Statistics that make the adoption decision concrete.

31%Gallup reports U.S. employee engagement averaged 31% in 2025.Source: Gallup Employee Engagement, 2025
51%Gallup reports half of U.S. employees are watching or actively seeking a new job.Source: Gallup Workplace Research
42%Gallup reports 42% of voluntary leavers say their employer could have prevented their exit.Source: Gallup Turnover Research
40/80/200%Gallup estimates replacement costs at 40% of salary for frontline roles, 80% for technical professionals, and 200% for leaders.Source: Gallup Turnover Research
49%LinkedIn reports 49% of L&D professionals say executives worry employees lack skills needed for strategy execution.Source: LinkedIn Workplace Learning Report, 2025
63%WEF reports skill gaps are the biggest barrier to business transformation for surveyed employers.Source: World Economic Forum Future of Jobs, 2025

Problem

The operating gap

Organizations are trying to retain talent, accelerate leadership readiness, improve engagement, and reskill employees while managers are stretched and internal mobility remains uneven. Informal mentoring is usually too inconsistent to serve as a serious retention or workforce strategy.

GMI Standard

Why GMI is the adoption standard

GMI provides HR with a standard for mentor capability, ethical boundaries, role clarity, structured conversations, assessment-informed support, and outcome reporting. IMPACT turns the standard into an operating layer for matching, check-ins, escalation signals, supervisor visibility, and analytics tied to retention and mobility goals.

Business Case

How the adoption case becomes practical

Adopting GMI gives HR a credible talent-development standard that can support early-career employees, frontline supervisors, high-potential talent, veteran hires, succession pools, and underrepresented employees. The business case is strongest where mentoring is tied to retention risk, skills gaps, promotion readiness, and internal movement.

Implementation Path

Adoption starts with a governed pilot, then scales through evidence.

The standard is designed for controlled implementation: define the population, prepare mentors, run a measurable pilot, and expand only when evidence and governance are ready.

Talent-Risk Mapping

Identify populations where turnover, low engagement, weak mobility, or leadership readiness create measurable business risk.

Program Design

Define mentor roles, supervisor expectations, ethics, matching logic, reporting measures, and participant support.

Pilot and Compare

Run a cohort against baseline retention, engagement, mobility, and development indicators.

Enterprise Scale

Integrate the standard into onboarding, leadership development, talent review, ERGs, veteran hiring, and internal mobility.

Common Concern

We already have mentoring, buddy programs, ERGs, or leadership development.

GMI turns those efforts into a governed talent-development system with consistent roles, mentor preparation, outcome measures, and reporting tied to retention, mobility, readiness, and skills confidence.

First 90 Days

Make adoption concrete before scaling.

Days 1-15

Identify the employee populations where retention, engagement, mobility, or leadership readiness create the clearest business risk.

Days 16-45

Define mentor roles, manager visibility, matching logic, support rules, and baseline talent metrics for a focused cohort.

Days 46-75

Launch the pilot with structured check-ins, development milestones, and early risk or support signals.

Days 76-90

Review retention, engagement, mobility, and participant feedback to decide whether to expand across HR programs.

Measurement Model

What leaders should measure.

GMI adoption should be evaluated by outcomes and learning signals, not just participation. These metrics create a baseline for the pilot and a dashboard for scale.

RetentionEngagementInternal mobilityPromotion readinessManager connectionTime to productivitySkills confidenceLeadership pipeline depthParticipation equityTurnover risk

Next Step

Adopt a mentoring standard before scaling mentoring activity.

GMI helps institutions design a credible pilot, define governance, prepare mentors, connect IMPACT workflows, and report outcomes stakeholders can evaluate.