TY - JOUR AB - Purpose– The purpose of this paper is to compare women's mentoring experience in nine countries within the Americas, and to explore linkages between personal characteristics, mentoring practices, mentoring functions, and consequences of being mentee.Design/methodology/approach– A total of 1,146 successful women are questioned about their mentoring experiences as a mentee: 105 from Argentina, 210 from Brazil, 199 from Canada, 84 from Chile, 232 from Mexico, 126 from the USA, and 190 from three countries in the West Indies (Barbados, Jamaica, and St Vincent).Findings– Most of the women have more than one mentor. Across all countries mentoring practices are more strongly linked to career mentoring function while the age and gender of the mentor are more strongly linked to psychosocial mentoring. Mentoring from the perspective of mentee has the same directional relationship with situational and individual variables, but the significance of those relationships vary by country. A possible cultural difference is detected between Spanish and non‐Spanish speaking countries on the issue of mentoring practice.Research limitations/implications– The fact that the paper focuses only on successful women in this paper means the findings are not necessarily generalizable to other groups of women or men. The paper is also limited because mentoring functions are constrained to two: psychosocial and career. There may be more functions that mentoring could fulfill for the mentee.Practical implications– Companies' interest in fostering mentoring among their members, particularly women, should be aware that different mentoring functions are influenced by different factors. For example, formal mentoring programs appear to have a greater impact on career mentoring functions than on psychosocial mentoring functions. To support women in their careers, companies should institute formal mentoring programs; this is especially important in South American countries. Moreover, mentoring programs must be designed to be adaptive since the analyses indicated that there are significant differences by country in terms of many mentoring issues.Originality/value– In the literature review, the paper finds linkages between culture, mentoring practices, characteristics of mentors and mentees, and mentoring functions, but no evidence that these linkages have been studied with a group of professionally successful women from different American countries, particularly non‐English speaking American countries. VL - 24 IS - 6 SN - 1754-2413 DO - 10.1108/17542410910980414 UR - https://doi.org/10.1108/17542410910980414 AU - Inés Monserrat Silvia AU - Duffy Jo Ann AU - Olivas‐Luján Miguel R. AU - Miller John M. AU - Gregory Ann AU - Fox Suzy AU - Lituchy Terri R. AU - Punnett Betty Jane AU - María Bastos F. Santos Neusa PY - 2009 Y1 - 2009/01/01 TI - Mentoring experiences of successful women across the Americas T2 - Gender in Management: An International Journal PB - Emerald Group Publishing Limited SP - 455 EP - 476 Y2 - 2024/04/16 ER -