Print This Article Post Comment Add To Favorites Email to Friends Ezine Ready

Turning Managers Into Coaches - The Challenges!

By: Home | Business


As a trainer, turning managers into coaches is a real challenge. We'd probably all like to think that all managers can become coaches - but can they?

There are perhaps three reasons why it is extremely difficult for managers to become coaches:

- Managers are time bound. Results have to be achieved to a certain standard within a certain time. Coaching takes time.

- Managers are performance oriented. They have been charged with getting results. Often the employee's potential problem to be addressed through coaching, may not seem to relate to improved results.

- Managers often have a personal style that is more directive than consultative. It is thus hard to switch gears from telling and selling to listening and supporting.

1. Manager are time bound.

After training managers with effective coaching skills, I often get the comment "Gee, that takes time. Wouldn't it be easier to just give them a suggestion of what they should do?".

Managers need to experience "being coached" and solving a real problem of their own, to be sold on the benefits of spending time coaching. Only training that provides an opportunity for managers to personally experience the benefits of coaching, can sell them on the need to spend time coaching.

2. Managers are performance oriented.

Andrew Mayo's excellent recent article "Everybody wants to be a coach" addressed the need to link coaching to performance and the organisation's strategic intent, very well. Andrew made the point that if coaching is to be successful (and linked to achieving performance goals as well as personal development), then it is essential to ensure the manager passes authority for solving the issue to the direct report. Managers can see the logic in this, but can they change their natural behaviour?

Having worked with managers for a number of years who are well intentioned to coach their people, they still find this a difficult concept to grasp in practice. So much so, that often the coaching session becomes a performance counseling session and therefore does not always gain the commitment of the direct report. The payoff however in mastering this challenge, is to see the direct report take real ownership for their development knowing that the manager was the catalyst. It is only when managers grasp this (or they experience it as a direct report themselves), do they see the relevance and importance of such a time consuming activity as coaching.

Of course, there is a related issue here ' does the direct report trust the manager as "coach"? If the manager has not previously built a culture of trust within his/ her team, then it becomes increasingly difficult to be seen as a non-biased coach.

3. Personal style.

Does a manager have it? Can it be developed? The final and often most difficult challenge for the manager as coach, is to remain non-directive - merely asking questions, summarising, listening and only giving advice when it is asked for and then only at the appropriate times. For many managers, this is a major challenge as their normal directive style is the polar opposite.

On one leadership development programme I am involved with, I have the opportunity to ask managers to rank their natural style used when problem solving (or handling performance issues) with their people on a continuum ranging from "tell exactly what to do and how to do it" through to "ask questions, listen and paraphrase". 80% of manager rank themselves toward the directive end of the continuum. This is then confirmed in practice coaching sessions.

I used to run training sessions where the participants did a theory plus self report exercise to discover their style as a coach. Often the understanding of coaching and the application, were quite different. One HR person, who had studied coaching for 12 months, scored fantastically well on the coaching inventory and knew all the theory. However, when it came to practise sessions, her style was directly the opposite. This was not uncommon.

I now have the luxury of working with managers on a two week residential programme where they can see coaching being modelled, understand the theory, experience being coached (on real issues) and practise coaching others. As trainers, we need to look for a variety of learning methods that include modelling, understanding, experience and practice.

Improved performance through effective coaching should be the goal for managers as it does have a real payoff for both the manager and the organisation. At a more basic level, the challenge for us as trainers, is to provide the learning stimulus for the normal manager to change his or her spots.


Copyright (c) 2008 Bob Selden - Author, What To Do When You Become The Boss



Article Source: http://www.eArticlesOnline.com

About the Author:
Bob Selden is the author of the newly published "What To Do When You Become The Boss" - a self help book for new managers. He also coaches at the International Institute for Management Development in Lausanne, Switzerland and the Australian Graduate School of Management, Sydney. You can contact Bob via http://www.whenyoubecometheboss.com/

Tags: , , , ,

Please Rate this Article

 

Not yet Rated

Click the XML Icon Above to Receive Business Articles Via RSS!

Recent Related Articles From Business

  • Coaching Skills Training: Communication & Coaching 3
    By: Matt Somers | May 18th 2008
    How does coaching fit with the standard, traditional styles of management communication? Read

  • Coaching Institute For Aieee, Coaching Institute For Iit-jee, Coaching For Aipmt
    By: Ashutosh Modi | Mar 11th 2011
    GyanKutir is a coaching institute for AIEEE, IIT-JEE, AIPMT and CA entrance tests in India offering coaching in AIEEE, coaching in IIT-JEE, coaching in AIPMT, coaching for CA entrance tests, best coaching for IIT, crash course in IIT-JEE, IIT-JEE exam preparation, coaching for competitive exams in Sikar, Jhunjhunu, Rajastha ... Read

  • Coaching At Work: Coaching And Motivation: The Hawthorne Experiments, Elton Mayo (1880 - 1949)
    By: Matt Somers | Apr 15th 2009
    Motivation and coaching are inextricably linked. Unless there is a desire for change, coaching will not work. Coaching managers need an understanding of the main thinkers on motivation and this article summarises the work of Elton Mayo and his now famous Hawthorne experiments Read

  • Coaching Skills Training: Dealing With Performance Gaps
    By: Matt Somers | Jun 20th 2008
    Effective coaching managers deploy all of their attitude, skills and knowledge to work on the same aspects in the people whom they coach. This srticle considers coaching around performance gaps in each of these areas. Read

  • Coaching Yourself For A Brighter Future
    By: Trafficwala | Feb 12th 2010
    As the word coaching comes up I wonder what it really means when I look up my dictionary it says in bold words that it is the method of instructing, training, directing a person or a group of persons to achieve a single goal or to help them develop some special skill. It may refer to personal development or human resource d ... Read

  • Explaining The Grow Model.
    By: Ronnie Slade | Dec 15th 2008
    There are three core values of coaching.rnrnYou will often hear these repeated and referred to, both explicitly and implicitly,rnrnCoaching is non-critical. Coaching is non-judgmental. Coaching is confidential. Read

  • Coaching Skills Training: Counselling & Coaching
    By: Matt Somers | Nov 20th 2008
    "Coach me? If I wanted counselling I'd ask for it thank you!" This article examines the confusion between coaching and counselling and how we can make our intentions clear to avoid statements like this. Read

  • Coaching Skills Training: What Are The Benefits For The Coachee?
    By: Matt Somers | Jan 24th 2009
    Much has been written on the benefits of coaching from the organisation's viewpoint, but this article examines the specific benefits for those on the receiving end of coaching. Read

  • Key Knowledge On Motivation: Frederick W. Taylor (1856-1915) Scientific Management
    By: Matt Somers | Mar 26th 2009
    Motivation and coaching are inextricably linked. Unless there is a desire for change, coaching will not work. Coaching managers need an understanding of the main thinkers on motivation and this article summarises the work of Frederick Taylor the so called father of scientific management. Read

  • Coaching For Performance: Coach Now And Be Able To Do More With Less
    By: Matt Somers | Apr 14th 2009
    The credit crunch is causing job losses and reorganisations everywhere and we all seem to be left with more to do then there is time in which to do it. This article explains how coaching can be part of the antidote to all this. Read


Copyright © 2005-2011 eArticlesOnline, LLC - All Rights Reserved
Terms of Service | Privacy Policy