Readings:
Anonymous. 2003, Nondirective coaching: A no-fault model to help people change, IOMA’s Pay for Performance Report, Vol. 03, Iss. 6, pp. 2-4. NOTE: Pay to view but... free trial if you're interested. I wouldn't, they ask for too much info up front. Short and sweet, best bit for me was this handy table:
What 'coachees' prefer
What coaches deliver
Coleman, D. 2002. A Coach's Lessons Learned: Principles and Guidelines for Practitioners. In C. Fitzgerald, & J. Garvey Berger (Eds.), Executive Coaching: Practices & Perspectives: 3-25. Palo Alto, California: Davies-Black. NOTE: link to book if you were to buy it, not article. This was pretty comprehensive and worth reading.
Seminar 8
I missed the 8th seminar on account of being sneezy and braindead which is a shame because it sounded very cool.
Practising Difficult Conversations
Seminar 9
Mental clearing exercise
Leadership is a Contact Sport - The Follow Up Factor in Management Development.
Study of people doing 360 feedback process - debrief process improved experience
Which of these have you experienced?
What is Coaching? Coaching is a process focussed on enhancing the performance, learning and ability of another person. An effective coach:
Break! In which I found my team of four for assignment #3. We have to 'coach' each other and write about it.
Coaching conversation demonstration on a student volunteer and subsequent discussion.
Single-loop Learning (control mindset): Actions -> Mismatch or Errors -> back to Actions
Double-loop Learning (creative mindset): Governing Values -> Mismatch or Errors -> back to Governing Values
Back to the Ladder of Inference - start with Data!
Action Philosophy Core-Beliefs
Control Mindset versus Creative Mindset
Indicators of a Control Mindset...
Coaching as Deep Listening
Attitude of Mind
Discussion of final assignment - interviews and write-ups. One final collective report. Reflect and link back to material.
Anonymous. 2003, Nondirective coaching: A no-fault model to help people change, IOMA’s Pay for Performance Report, Vol. 03, Iss. 6, pp. 2-4. NOTE: Pay to view but... free trial if you're interested. I wouldn't, they ask for too much info up front. Short and sweet, best bit for me was this handy table:
What 'coachees' prefer
Nondirective coaching. The coach acts as a guide, posing questions to facilitate self discovery. | 61% |
Programmatic coaching | 78% |
Holistic coaching | 85% |
What coaches deliver
Directive coaching. The coach explains what needs to be done and how to do it. | 51% |
Circumstantial coaching | 49% |
Specific coaching | 44% |
Coleman, D. 2002. A Coach's Lessons Learned: Principles and Guidelines for Practitioners. In C. Fitzgerald, & J. Garvey Berger (Eds.), Executive Coaching: Practices & Perspectives: 3-25. Palo Alto, California: Davies-Black. NOTE: link to book if you were to buy it, not article. This was pretty comprehensive and worth reading.
- General Principles for Thinking about a Client's Issues
- Some Weaknesses Are Strengths Overdone
- Persistent Behaviors Most Likely Have Positive Purposes
- Assuming Similarities When They Do Not Exist Can Lead to Unrealistic Expectations and Conflict
- An Outdated View of the Self Can Lead to Behaviors That Are Disproportionate to Current Reality
- Being Differentiated and Connected is Essential for Effective Leadership
- The Ability to See One's Responsibility in Each Situation and the Willingness to Take Calculated Risks Are Key to Making Progress
- General Principles to guide taking action with a client
- Listen, Listen, Listen
- Observe how the client manages you
- Begin where the client is
- Use and build on the client's ideas
- Act as a bridge to what's missing
- Formulate changes as hypotheses that must be tested empirically
- If stuck, move to immediacy
- Five paradoxical guidelines for engaging in the coaching conversation
- Lead with warmth as well as professional distance
- Balance challenge with support
- Link hard with soft, and soft with hard
- Focus on yourself to clarify client issues
- Listen well but do not automatically accept the client's framing of the issues
- Practical suggestions that are specifically related to beginning coaches
- Taking on the Wrong Pole of an Internalised Conflict by Showing Enthusiasm Too Early
- Taking Debate Personally
- Sharing Opinions Too Early
- Avoid: being maneuvered into delivering the performance improvement message; get the manager to deliver that :p
- Avoid: Offering advice outside your competence
- Avoid: Confusing their issues with your issues
- Step 1: Create a Rich Picture - the Manager works to understand where a problem employee is coming from. Drivers / blocks / impediments.
- Step 2: Reframe Your Goals - put together a menu of possible outcomes (this is not 'anything goes,' you have a bottom line)
- Step 3: Stage the Encounter - I have no good concise summary this!
Seminar 8
I missed the 8th seminar on account of being sneezy and braindead which is a shame because it sounded very cool.
Practising Difficult Conversations
- Practise having difficult conversations
- Bring your own ‘case study’
- Reflect on your strengths and development needs
Seminar 9
Mental clearing exercise
- Awareness of the breath: breathing in focus on the breath, breathing out focus on the count... Up to ten and then back down to one.
- Focus awareness on muscle tension and release: moving progressively up the body on both sides
- Awareness of the five senses: touch, taste, sight, smell and hearing
- Focus on one word: a positive or neutral word
- Walking meditation: focus on the placement of each foot, taking in what is in front of you, when the mind wanders, come back to your feet!
- One point attention: focus on a candle, a tree, a body of water.
Leadership is a Contact Sport - The Follow Up Factor in Management Development.
Study of people doing 360 feedback process - debrief process improved experience
Which of these have you experienced?
- An External coach - a consultant who comes in to coach an individual (costly, mid to senior managers), benefits of no preconceptions, neutrality, no corporate agenda
- An Internal coach - someone, possibly from HR who has coaching skills, advantage of depth of knowledge, availability, lower cost
- A Manager as coach -
- A Culture of coaching
What is Coaching? Coaching is a process focussed on enhancing the performance, learning and ability of another person. An effective coach:
- Provides feedback
- Uses honesty, praise and effective questioning
- Helps the person to help themselves
- Creates in the other person a possibility of change
- Explores various alternatives
- Assists in creating an action plan to accomplish the changes
- Establish trust and partnership
- Creating awareness of possibility for and benefits of change
- Establishing a GAP analysis (what's needed versus what is)
- Choose a specific area for attention
- Develop an action plan
- Supporting and enable persistence
- Measure and track progress
- Catch them doing it right
- Create a learning environment
- Issues: what are we here to talk about?
- Goals: what do you/I want to achieve? Talk about and describe what it would look like.
- Reality: what is really happening right now?
- Options: explore! Ask questions, don't give answers!
- Wrap up: summarise where you've been - ask them to do it, then establish action and the next contact point
Break! In which I found my team of four for assignment #3. We have to 'coach' each other and write about it.
Coaching conversation demonstration on a student volunteer and subsequent discussion.
Single-loop Learning (control mindset): Actions -> Mismatch or Errors -> back to Actions
Double-loop Learning (creative mindset): Governing Values -> Mismatch or Errors -> back to Governing Values
Back to the Ladder of Inference - start with Data!
- Become more aware of your own thinking and reasoning (reflections)
- Making your own reasoning more visible to others (advocating)
- Inquiring into other's thinking and reasoning (inquiry)
- When you... (describe a specific example) eg: come in at 8:30 when I expected you to be here at 8:00
- I interpreted that as...
- Because I...
Action Philosophy Core-Beliefs
Control Mindset versus Creative Mindset
Indicators of a Control Mindset...
Coaching as Deep Listening
Attitude of Mind
- You want to deeply and fully understand this person
- You give them your full attention
- You turn off your own internal self talk
- You respect the person's experience and ability to find their own solution to their problems
- You do not try and 'fix them up' or to give them advice
- Absorbing the pattern of talk
Discussion of final assignment - interviews and write-ups. One final collective report. Reflect and link back to material.