Coaching For High Performance (0761214615)
Coaching For High Performance (0761214615)
Coaching For High Performance (0761214615)
Define coaching.
Each month more than 13 percent of workers in the United States quit
their jobs.
The average time to fill jobs has increased from 41 days to 51 days.
More than half of all U.S. employers report that turnover continues to rise
each year.
Leading edge companiesthose that are doing a good job minimizing
turnover and maximizing retention of key employeesuse coaching to
ensure employees experience a greater sense of satisfaction and fulfillment.
4 COACHING FOR HIGH PERFORMANCE
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Coaching fosters a sense of bonding with an organization and, impor-
tantly, provides a forum for resolving issues that might otherwise cause
employees to leave. Remember that the new generations in the workforce,
Gen X and Gen Y, want a strong coaching relationship with their managers.
In fact, one of the reasons they choose to stay with an organization is because
they feel a partnership with their boss. Coaching creates this bond.
Working in Collaborative Networked Organizations
It is always a challenge getting everybody on the same page on cross-functional
projects. My hope is that we can stop reinventing the wheel. Weve got to
demonstrate that we can really help our clients get their products to the mar-
ketplace fast; Ive got to have the cooperation of my counterparts around the
world.
The demands of leading projects like these are becoming more com-
monplace. Most of the organizations I work with engage in large, cross-func-
tional projects, many of which span the globe. You may wonder, What can
coaching do to face challenges like these? First, coaches clarify the impor-
tance of networking effectively with all stakeholders. As one coach said, I
make sure project leaders know that as soon as issues arise, they must get in
there and resolve them quickly. Project leaders often underestimate the
value of frequent communication on large, cross-functional projects. I share
my experiences with them to illustrate that the only way to keep people
engaged, motivated, and committed is through good communication.
Second, large collaborative projects require sharp skills. Jack, coaching
a major inter-organizational systems integration project said, Large, inter-
organizational projects require superior project management skills. Frankly,
no matter how good you are at leading projects, working on big, global proj-
ects are a whole new ballgame. I coach project leaders on what it means to
take their skills to the next level. For example, it is critical that the team care-
fully track progress and keep on top of everything that is happening in every
part of the organization involved in the project.
Building Personal Capability to
Match Performance Demands
The need for increased competitiveness impacts everyone in the organiza-
tion. As demands for higher performance continue to rise, the gap between
performance expectations and personal capabilities widens. Take a minute
and think about how your work has changed over the past 12 to 18 months:
What challenges are you facing that require you to develop new ways of
doing things?
It takes coaching to fill these performance gaps. Coaches explain not only
what new skills are required but also why they are important. They
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THE IMPORTANCE OF COACHING 5
encourage coachees to stretch beyond perceived personal limits and pro-
vide the guidance and feedback indispensable for skill mastery.
I asked one coach, a manager in a small parts manufacturing company,
what he did to help build personal capabilities. He shared his ideas with me.
I do a couple of things. In our business new technology is available all the
time. Before you know it, youre out-of-date. I use coaching discussions to
understand what type of training people need to master new technologies. I
also talk about what our competitors are doing and discuss best practices.
This is especially important for my first-level supervisors. Sometimes there
is a tendency to get complacent. Talking about best practices highlights areas
where we need to build stronger capabilities for competitiveness.
Reinforcing Business Practices
Organizations today, in light of Sarbanes-Oxley, must exercise a heightened
degree of oversight in the area of ethical compliance. In fact, most of the
companies I work with have put programs in place to reinforce their com-
mitment to business ethics. A first-level manager in an investment firm said,
We used to take it for granted that talking about our business practices dur-
ing new employee orientation was enough. Not any more. I coach my invest-
ment specialists in ethics on a routine basis.
When you think about it, reinforcing business practices is an important
coaching role. Nothing is more essential than making sure coachees under-
stand what is expected in terms of conducting business in ways that are eth-
ical and in keeping with your organizations practices. Ethical issues range
from hiring fairly to dealing with political pressure, questionable accounting
practices, conflicting policies, and others.
Employees sometimes wonder whether the ethics code is just words.
With constant attention to ethical decision making, companies avoid legal
crises and other problems. As a coach you make knowledgeable suggestions
about how to handle ethical dilemmas and reinforce the need for compli-
ance. Coaching makes it easy for employees to overcome their reluctance to
talk about troubling workplace issues. As one coach shared with me, Advice
from someone who has been there is vital. There is increasing scrutiny from
everyone about how we do business. Also, you have to face the risk of per-
sonal liability. Thats a lot of pressure. Some aspects of compliance are
clearothers are less so. I get coaching from my boss when I sense a gray
area. Her insights and advice are invaluable.
Empowering Breakthrough Results
Most organizations have lived through various rounds of cost cutting,
reengineering, and similar measures designed to survive, trim expenses, and
improve processes. What has become clear is that the leadership skills
required for these organizational improvements are very different from lead-
ing for breakthroughs. Breakthroughs mean achieving heights the organization
has never reachedin products or services offered in the marketplace. It
means engaging the hearts, minds, and talents of everyone to create innova-
tive customer solutions.
6 COACHING FOR HIGH PERFORMANCE
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Effective coaches encourage new approaches and challenge old assump-
tions, as well as facilitate creative thinking. As head of a major Boston distri-
bution center said, In coaching conversations, both one-on-one and with
teams, I help people understand that they can accomplish things they think
are impossible. Theres an assumption that special people with unique tal-
ents achieve breakthroughs. But in reality, most of the important innova-
tions weve seen over the last several years were done by people who had a
vision of whats possible and made it happen. Invariably, you find out that the
person or team responsible for the breakthrough was the recipient of strong
coaching.
Certainly organizations seeking to create a powerful future understand
that wherever high performance is required, coaching is essential. Take a
moment and think about how coaching has personally benefited you.
Exercise 11: Your Best Coach
Instructions: Your best coach may be someone in your business or personal
life. It may be someone you encountered while in school, in sports, or some
other activity. Answer the following questions and describe how this persons
coaching benefited you.
1. Who was this coach? What role did this person play in your life?
2. What did this person enable you to do that you could have not done with-
out his or her coaching?
3. What did this person say or do to coach you? Think about what he or she
said, or the behaviors he or she exhibited that made the person a good
coach.
Exercise 11 highlights how much value a good coach provides. Now
lets take it a step further and describe the attributes of a good coach.
Wanting me to be successful.
xhibit 22
Style Descriptions
Straightforward Style
What does this coach do in a coaching situation?
Takes a direct approach to coaching.
Speaks frankly and with candor.
Focuses on the end result.
How does this coach relate to his or her coachee?
Provides specific advice and feedback.
Challenges coachee to do his/her best.
Takes charge of the coaching discussion.
Gets into the coaching discussion immediately.
Confronts poor performance.
Motivational Style
What does this coach do in a coaching situation?
Talks about possibilities and coachee potential.
Inspires coachee to take performance to the next level.
Is spontaneous and creative.
How does this coach relate to his or her coachee?
Describes how she/he is a resource for coachee.
Seeks to influence and persuade to action.
Shares personal examples and illustrations.
Uses a lot of encouragement.
Engages in brainstorming to explore options.
Affiliative Style
What does this coach do in a coaching situation?
Makes the coachee feel comfortable.
Builds strong rapport and understanding.
Takes a slow and patient approach.
How does this coach relate to his or her coachee?
Seeks to build a strong partnership.
Uses an empathetic approach.
Seeks to understand where the coach is coming from.
Listens for feelings as well as content.
Creates a comfortable environment.
Exhibit continued on next page
E
Sometimes you need to adjust your coaching style (see Exhibit 23).
There is a close relationship between coaching style and interpersonal
style. For example, individuals who have a Straightforward Style interper-
sonally usually respond best to a coach who takes a direct, candid, and
results-oriented approach. Coachees who like to brainstorm, respond to
encouragement, and like to see the long-term benefits of coaching respond
well to Motivational Style coaching. Some individuals want a lot of support
from the coach. These individuals respond to the Affiliative Style.
Employees who are analytical and respond to logic and reason get the most
from a coach who takes a Methodical Style approach. Finally, the
Facilitative Style is most effective with coachees who like self-reflection.
These individuals respond best to questioning techniques that encourage
them to find their own answers. Now select someone you need to coach.
First, decide which coaching style is most like his or her interpersonal style.
Try to select someone whose style is different from yours. There is a close
relationship between coaching style and interpersonal style. Then complete
Exercise 27.
34 COACHING FOR HIGH PERFORMANCE
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Exhibit 22 continued from previous page
Methodical Style
What does this coach do in a coaching situation?
Carefully plans the coaching discussion.
Gives explicit direction about what to do.
Pays attention to details and facts.
How does this coach relate to his or her coachee?
Models logical thinking and a step-by-step approach.
Displays little emotion during coaching discussion.
Asks questions to elicit specific information.
Provides a lot of data to support opinions or advice.
Works to make sure coaching session runs smoothly
Facilitative Style
What does this coach do in a coaching situation?
Encourages a lot of self-reflection.
Works in a collaborative manner.
Lets the coachee set the agenda
How does this coach relate to his or her coachee?
Uses lots of open-ended questions.
Uses lots of assessment to encourage self-reflection.
Listens much more than he/she talks.
Encourages self-discovery and learning.
Wants the coachee to feel empowered
Exercise 27: Assessing Your Coachees Style
Instructions: Using the style descriptions in Exhibit 22, complete the follow-
ing questions about the person you selected as someone you need to coach.
1. Which style best describes this individual?
2. List two reasons why you chose this style.
3. Select one or two suggestions from Exhibit 23 that will help you coach
this person, and record them below.
4. Now refer again to Exhibit 23 and identify one or two things you need
to avoid doing during a coaching session.
Congratulations! You have just worked through five key things you need
to do to get ready to coach: clarifying your mission, understanding your role,
building strong rapport with coachees, investing in coaching relationships,
and understanding your coaching style. In the next two chapters you learn
the seven-step coaching process. Before you continue, take a moment and
reflect on everything you have learned in this chapter by answering the fol-
lowing questions.
1. What are your major learnings about yourself as a coach?
Answers to Exercise 44
Situation One
The purpose of this coaching conversation is Performance Improvement. In
this situation, you need to help the aspiring supervisor change the way she is
supervising others. You want her to understand that micromanaging others
is not what you are looking for in a supervisor.
Thus, you want to have a Correcting Conversation with her. Some of
the questions you might ask are:
THE COACHING PROCESS, STEPS FIVE TO SEVEN 69
What assumptions are you making about what makes an effective supervisor?
Have you thought about the downside of micromanaging employees?
Think about what the people you manage need most from a supervisor.How
do those qualities match what youre doing?
Situation Two
The purpose of the coaching conversation is Developing Talents. Your high
performer must decide what she is prepared to take on in terms of greater
responsibilities. This requires an Assessment Conversation. You want the
coachee to consider what she can realistically do, how soon, and when. This
will tell you how to handle the responsibility transfer, and after assuming
new duties, what type of coaching the person will need. Questions you might
ask are:
What do you think are your greatest strengths in taking on new duties?
What obstacles do you foresee in moving to a new level of responsibility?
What can I do to support you in making this change?
Situation Three
The purpose of this coaching conversation is Problem Solving. This is a dif-
ficult coaching situation that involves dealing with an attitude problem.
Situations like this require a combination of Teaching and Probing
Conversations. First, you need to describe what impact a negative attitude is
having on job performance. This aspect of teaching allows you to explain
what acceptable behavior looks like. Next, you want to engage the coachee
in an open discussion. Probe the individual and find out the reasons for the
negativity. Its important to combine these two types of conversations. Some
of the things you might say during the discussion are:
When you deal with customers, this is the attitude you need to adopt . . .
You usually expect the worse when dealing with customers. Why is that?
Tell me what youre going to do to work better with customers?
Planning Your Coaching Conversation
You now have an opportunity to design a coaching conversation. Remember
that many times you will conduct more than one type of conversation dur-
ing a single coaching discussion. For example, you might begin a discussion
and engage the individual in an appraisal conversation. As you understand
the coachees self-perception, it becomes clear you need to shift to a probing
conversation or a commitment conversation. Exercise 43 instructs you to
select a couple of people you want to coach and plan the type of conversa-
tion you want to conduct. You may want to refer back to Exercise 32 and
choose from those people whose competence and motivation level you have
already assessed.
70 COACHING FOR HIGH PERFORMANCE
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Exercise 45: Planning the Coaching Conversation
Instructions: Select one or two people you need to coach and answer the fol-
lowing questions.
Person #1: Name
1. Describe the purpose of the discussion.
2. What type of conversation(s) will you have with this person?
3. What type of questions will you ask or what statements will you make to
generate discussion?
Person #2: Name
1. Describe the purpose of the discussion.
2. What type of conversation(s) will you have with this person?
3. What type of questions will you ask or what statements will you make to
generate discussion?
Remember that a key to both Step Six and Step Seven is good follow through.
Make sure you set up the next coaching conversation at the end of each ses-
sion. This communicates that you are going to stay on top of whats happen-
ing. The idea is not to create an endless series of coaching meetings. But you
want to communicate that coaching for results requires accountabilityfor
example, keeping the action plan from getting lost in day-to-day tasks or the
crisis of the moment. Accountability means that you too will be working col-
laboratively to get things done. It encourages the coachee to come to you with
problems or questions.
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THE COACHING PROCESS, STEPS FIVE TO SEVEN 75
Key aspects of effective listening in a coaching situation
include staying focused, understanding the message, and
respecting the coachee. The steps in the listening process that
lay the foundation for trust in the coaching relationship are:
listening, where the coach seeks to understand; digesting,
where the coach processes the information; exploring, where
the coach and coachee openly discuss ideas; and committing,
where they decide on next steps. Successful coaches demon-
strate their listening skills by exhibiting several characteristics: they are
aware of how well they listen, they make sure they are not interrupted dur-
ing a coaching session, they listen to make sure the coachee is not just saying
what he or she thinks the coach wants to hear, and they occasionally para-
phrase what the coachee has said for confirmation.
One of the most powerful things a coach can do is ask good questions.
Effective coaches know that good questions elicit useful information.
Effective questions are brief, clear and understandable, relevant, open-
ended, and they invite an open and honest response.
Similarly, coaching conversations are special discussions. Every time
you talk with a coachee you have the possibility of revealing opportunities
or solving problems, encouraging change, and other things. Coaching con-
versations are designed to appraise, encourage, teach, probe, correct, or
secure commitment.
Effective coaching sessions conclude with agreement on a plan of
action. Brainstorm what to do with the coachee and then evaluate possible
courses of action. You also need to make sure the coachee is committed to
actually do what you have agreed on. Use commitment questions to confirm
agreement to move forward and take action. A coaching action plan specifies
the following: the action to be taken, the expected results, a completion date,
the resources available, coaching support, and the date of a status review.
The final step in the coaching process is designed to monitor what is
happening with the coachee and learn what you need to focus on in subse-
quent coaching conversations. There are several things to pay attention to
between coaching sessions, including monitoring changes in behavior,
checking to see if there are roadblocks, and observing the extent to which the
coachee seizes opportunities.
76 COACHING FOR HIGH PERFORMANCE
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Review Questions
1. Effective questions are brief and enable the coachee to: 1. (a)
(a) quickly understand what youre asking.
(b) focus on several things at once.
(c) avoid having to give a yes-or-no response.
(d) give answers that are relevant.
2. Encouragement conversations are essential because: 2. (b)
(a) the coach needs to give the coachee advice in a diplomatic
manner.
(b) the coach needs to help the coachee focus on future
possibilities.
(c) the coach needs to encourage the coachee to think more
deeply.
(d) the coachee has misconceptions or is making poor decision.
3. In order to make sure the coachee is committed to 3. (c)
actually doing what you have agreed on, ask a commitment
question, such as:
(a) Is this coaching plan too complicated?
(b) What have you learned from our coaching sessions?
(c) When will you get started working on this?
(d) Did we brainstorm enough alternatives?
4. One of the things a coach monitors between coaching 4. (b)
sessions is:
(a) with whom the coachee is meeting.
(b) whether the coachee is showing evidence of mastering
new skills.
(c) how much energy the coachee is exhibiting.
(d) whether the coachee has an action plan.
5. Coaches make sure they understand what the coachee 5. (c)
is saying by:
(a) keeping an open mind.
(b) respecting the coachee.
(c) listening to what the coachee is saying.
(d) overlooking discouragement or negativity.
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THE COACHING PROCESS, STEPS FIVE TO SEVEN 77
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Delivering Coaching Feedback
Learning Objectives
By the end of this chapter, you should be
able to: