Blog Post

Why I mentor: from human rights to business growth 

Association of Business Mentors (ABM)

My journey to why I mentor and why I joined the Association of Business Mentors (ABM) is rooted in the same principles that guide my company – Start Easy: a focus on human rights and sustainable development. 

For years, my work in NGOs and corporate social responsibility taught me that true, lasting change requires a strong, ethical foundation. When I transitioned to business mentoring, I saw it as the most direct way to help people develop their ideas and build resilient companies that are driven by purpose, not just profit. 

I didn’t just want to help businesses get bigger; I wanted to help them get better. That is the core value of ABM mentoring. 

The value of business mentoring: a case study in transformation 

The value of business mentoring is not measured in hours, but in the shifts—the moments when a founder moves from a crisis mindset to a strategic one. My work with one of my recent mentees is a perfect example of this deep, transformative value: 

  • From exit strategy to growth strategy: at a crossroads, struggling with burnout and considering selling the business despite three acquisition offers on the table. Through business mentoring, I helped the mentee move from an “exit strategy” to a focused “growth and scaling strategy.” Decided to build value and protect her core values rather than sell out. 

    Value point:
     Mentoring provides the clarity and strategic framework to evaluate high-stakes decisions and choose the path most aligned with the founder’s mission. 

    • Defining and protecting core values: Our sessions were crucial in helping finalise Mission, Vision, and Values and communicate them to her web team. This defined narrative is now a source of competitive advantage in a market dominated by “profit-only” corporate groups. 

      Value point:
       Business mentoring helps codify a business’s intangible value, its ethics, culture, and unique story, turning it into a strategic asset. 

      • Solving burnout through systemic change: The greatest threat to the business was burnout. Mentoring provided the framework to address this not as a personal failure, but as a systemic weakness.

        This led to three key actions: 
      1. Implementing a new practice manager and delegating tasks. 
      2. Exploring and adapting formal HR policies and appraisal forms. 
      3. Piloting new team communication structures to improve operational efficiency and reduce her burden. 

        Value Point: Mentoring focuses on systemic change that reduces the founder’s workload and ensures the business can thrive without them, supporting the goal to reduce her work schedule to four days a week. 


            Ultimately, I joined the ABM because I believe in equipping ethical founders with the tools to succeed. Business mentoring allows me to use my background to reinforce that a business can, and should, grow profitably while remaining true to its soul. 

            Ilaria Esposito

            For more information on the benefits of being a member of the ABM read more here

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