IMPACT

Turn Mentoring Standards Into Governed Programs

IMPACT helps institutions apply GMI standards, MBOK® methodology, assessment insight, and implementation support inside real mentoring programs, then turns delivery activity into evidence for improvement.

Applied Operating Model

How IMPACT Turns Standards Into Delivery

The model connects standards, implementation, measurement, technology, and learning feedback so mentoring programs can be governed, supported, and improved.

MBOK® Standard

Shared reference model for practice, ethics, competencies, and quality.

IMPACT Methodology

Structured lifecycle for mentoring engagement and implementation discipline.

Program Implementation

Institution-ready models for cohorts, partners, and sector pathways.

Assessment Inputs

Readiness, engagement, and support insight to guide decisions.

Operating Layer

Workflow and evidence support for matching, tracking, reporting, and administration.

Evidence Feedback

Pilot learning and partner feedback to refine standards and guidance.

Methodology

The IMPACT Lifecycle for Structured Mentoring

The IMPACT methodology gives mentoring engagements a shared developmental arc while leaving room for human judgment, context, and relationship quality.

Initiate

Purpose, expectations, boundaries, and safety.

Map

Context, strengths, goals, readiness, and needs.

Plan

Development priorities, milestones, and support.

Action

Practice, reflection, feedback, and applied learning.

Coordinate

Stakeholders, resources, systems, and support pathways.

Transition

Closure, progress review, and captured learning.

Relationship setup Goal structure Support cadence Stakeholder coordination Closure and learning

Institutional Deliverables

What Institutions Receive

IMPACT gives partners practical implementation infrastructure, not only conceptual methodology.

Program design support

Structure cohorts, roles, milestones, and implementation conditions.

Mentor and mentee preparation

Prepare participants with common language, expectations, and boundaries.

Matching and lifecycle guidance

Support pair formation, cadence, escalation, and relationship progression.

Assessment-informed support

Use readiness and engagement insight to guide participant support.

Reporting and implementation insight

Give partners visibility into activity, progress, and operational needs.

Continuous improvement feedback

Use learning loops to strengthen program guidance and future standards.

Program Applications

Where IMPACT Can Be Applied

IMPACT programs are built for accountable implementation, participant preparation, ethical boundaries, assessment-informed support, and partner reporting.

Audience
Use Case
Implementation Focus
Evidence / Reporting Value
University Mentoring

Student success, career readiness, alumni mentoring, and employer engagement.

Cohort design, mentor preparation, student goals, and career support pathways.

Progress visibility, confidence indicators, engagement patterns, and partner reporting.

Corporate HR Mentoring

Onboarding, leadership pipelines, internal mobility, and retention.

Role clarity, development goals, manager alignment, and talent-system integration.

Participation, development progress, retention signals, and leadership pipeline insight.

Veteran Transition Mentoring

Military-to-civilian transition, career translation, employer navigation, and long-term support.

Transition goals, employer readiness, resource coordination, and confidence building.

Transition milestones, support needs, employer engagement, and partner-visible outcomes.

Platform Relationship

IMPACT is the applied program arm. The platform is the operating and evidence layer.

Software supports delivery, but it does not replace methodology, governance, partner expectations, or evidence review.

Assessment intake

Collect readiness, engagement, and support inputs for implementation decisions.

Matching support

Use structured information to support mentoring pair and cohort decisions.

Lifecycle tracking

Track progress across the IMPACT lifecycle and identify support needs.

Evidence reporting

Summarize implementation activity, program insight, partner value, and improvement opportunities.

Evidence and Governance Loop

How Program Learning Feeds Back Into GMI

IMPACT programs create learning loops that inform MBOK®, assessment practice, implementation guidance, and future partner requirements.

Pilot delivery Participant data Partner feedback Assessment validation Standards refinement

Current Stage / Partner Pathway

Current-stage transparency for applied program development.

Current Stage
Program and pilot development
Active Work
Partner discussions and implementation design
Prototype Layer
Operating workflows and evidence reporting
Future-Facing
Credential and REP alignment

Build With IMPACT

Explore applied mentoring programs for your institution.

Start with a program briefing or pilot discussion to determine audience, scope, support needs, and reporting expectations.