A shortage of mentors is something we often hear about from our readers and the women we coach. Among business and professional women in emerging economies and in developing countries, the issue is even more acute. A recent Gallup Poll indicated that this lack of mentors was one of the key factors hindering women from becoming business owners in the Gulf Cooperation Council Countries* (GCC) of the Middle East.

Here at The Way Women Work, our objective is to share advice and best practices of how successful business and professional women compensate for less than optimal work environments. If you are having a hard time finding a mentor, here are five alternatives that could provide similar insights, advice and support to help you advance in your business and career:

1.Form an informal Business Advisory Board. Identify a small group of people, each of whom have expertise in a topic (s) that will help you to start or grown your business. Ask each individual if they would be willing to serve on team of advisors to you and your business. Convene and meet with this group regularly, and solicit their input and advice.  As you launch and grow your business, these individuals may later become part of a more formal board.

2.Form a Business or Professional Roundtable or Peer Mentoring Group. Identify a group of peers whose expertise and success you admire. The group can be composed of all women or both men and women. The group would meet on a regular basis to mentor each other sharing ideas, best practices, contacts and to hold each other accountable for results. 

3.Participate in e-Mentoring or Remote Mentoring. Research, identify and apply for mentoring programs where women professionals and entrepreneurs are paired with a mentor in another city or location. Two examples of exemplary such programs for women in emerging economies and developing countries are the mentoring programs offered by  The Cherie Blair Foundation and TechWomen.

4.Engage with Thought Partners. Identify individuals similar to those you might engage with in regular, planned way through an advisory board or a business/professional roundtable, but in this case engage with them individually rather than in a group and on an as needed versus a regular basis. See my recent article in Forbes for a more detailed explanation on different types of thought partners. 

5.Hire a business or career coach. If you have the resources to do so, hire a professional business or career coach who has the expertise to help you accomplish your objectives.How have you sought and gained mentoring? We and women like you would appreciate learning from your success in the comment section below or by contacting us here.

Successful business and professional women always look for ways around scarcity of resources or people, like a lack of mentors. They utilize alternatives to get the mentoring they need.

TheWayWomenWork worldwide community was founded by Rania Habiby Anderson as the place for business and professional women from emerging economies to exchange ideas and career advice that would inform, educate, and inspire women to achieve greater business and professional success. Rania grew up in all over the Middle East and in India. She was educated in the United States and has a Masters Degree from Georgetown University. Rania began her career in the financial services industry progressing to a senior management position as the head of HR for the Mid-Atlantic Region at Bank of America. In 1998, she started an Executive Business Coaching and organization consulting business, Meridian Consulting building and successfully growing it for the past 14 years.