I've been experimenting with a leadership style I call "reverse mentoring by default," where I, as a manager, automatically pair with the newest junior hire on the team for a weekly sync. The goal is to force myself to explain fundamentals and hear fresh perspectives, which has uncovered surprising process flaws. Has anyone else intentionally structured their role to have consistent, formal exposure to the most inexperienced team members, and what was the impact on decision-making and culture?
Interesting approach It swaps power dynamics for learning and can improve leadership skills and culture I would keep it light and consistent so it does not feel like a lecture
I have seen this kind of reverse mentoring by default work well when it is framed as a regular practice not a one off Because it invites junior voices into decision making while you model listening and clear explanation It can boost leadership development and trust but you need clear boundaries and time box
Ground realities matter If the team is risk averse or if the manager uses the practice to hide actual issues it could backfire The key is to pair it with visible changes and concrete learning outcomes in leadership training
Try a simple pilot with a fixed cadence a short agenda and a concrete deliverable Each session should end with one action the team member will own and one change you will make in response This keeps empathy and accountability in balance and supports leadership skills
In a team I joined a manager did something similar and we saw faster onboarding stronger inclusion and better cross role understanding The junior members got more confidence and the seniors learned to explain concepts clearly It felt like a genuine shift in culture and leadership practice