Coaching an Easy Way to Make Things Happen
Print this Article

Why Coaching is the Way to Go in Team Management. When you
hear the word “coach”, what comes first into your mind? Do you
picture a basketball team with a man/woman shouting out
directions? Or perhaps a football team with a man/woman pacing
to and fro and calling out the names of the players?
History: Article | SEPT 30/05
Edited: Lonnie A | MAR 30/09
Coaching is no longer reserved to sports teams; it is now
one of the key concepts in leadership and management. Why is
coaching popular?
Coaching levels the playing field.
Coaching is one of the six emotional leadership styles
proposed by Daniel Goleman. Moreover, it is a behavior or role
that leaders enforce in the context of situational leadership.
As a leadership style, coaching is used when the members of a
group or team are competent and motivated, but do not have an
idea of the long-term goals of an organization.
This involves two levels of coaching: team and individual.
Team coaching makes members work together. In a group of
individuals, not everyone may have nor share the same level of
competence and commitment to a goal. A group may be a mix of
highly competent and moderately competent members with varying
levels of commitment.
These differences can cause friction among the members. The
coaching leader helps the members level their expectations.
Also, the coaching leader manages differing perspectives so
that the common goal succeeds over personal goals and
interests. In a big organization, leaders need to align the
staffs’ personal values and goals with that of the organization
so that long-term directions can be pursued.
Coaching builds up confidence and competence.
Individual coaching is an example of situational leadership
at work. It aims to mentor one-on-one building up the
confidence of members by affirming good performance during
regular feedbacks; and increase competence by helping the
member assess his/her strengths and weaknesses towards career
planning and professional development.
Depending on the individual’s level of competence and
commitment, a leader may exercise more coaching behavior for
the less-experienced members. Usually, this happens in the case
of new staffs. The direct supervisor gives more defined tasks
and holds regular feedbacks for the new staff, and gradually
lessens the amount of coaching, directing, and supporting roles
to favor delegating as competence and confidence increase.
Coaching promotes individual and team excellence.
Excellence is a product of habitual good practice. The
regularity of meetings and constructive feedback is important
in establishing habits. Members catch the habit of constantly
assessing themselves for their strengths and areas for
improvement that they themselves perceive what knowledge,
skills, and attitudes they need to acquire to attain team
goals.
In the process, they attain individually excellence as well.
An example is in the case of a musical orchestra: each member
plays a different instrument. In order to achieve harmony of
music from the different instrument, members will polish their
part in the piece, aside from practicing as an ensemble.
Consequently, they improve individually as an instrument
player.
Coaching develops high commitment to common goals.
A coaching leader balances the attainment of immediate
targets with long-term goals towards the vision of an
organization. As mentioned earlier, with the alignment of
personal goals with organizational or team goals, personal
interests are kept in check.
By constantly communicating the vision through formal and
informal conversations, the members are inspired and motivated.
Setting short-term team goals aligned with organizational
goals; and making an action plan to attain these goals can help
sustain the increased motivation and commitment to common goals
of the members.
Coaching produces valuable leaders.
Leadership by example is important in coaching. A coaching
leader loses credibility when he/she cannot practice what
he/she preaches. This means that a coaching leader should be
well organized, highly competent is his/her field, communicates
openly and encourages feedback, and has a clear idea of the
organization’s vision-mission-goals.
By vicarious and purposive learning, members catch the same
good practices and attitudes from the coaching leader, turning
them into coaching leaders themselves. If a member experiences
good coaching, he/she is most likely to do the same things when
entrusted with formal leadership roles.
Some words of caution though: coaching is just one of the
styles of leadership. It can be done in combination with the
other five emotional leadership styles depending on the profile
of the emerging team. Moreover, coaching as a leadership style
requires that you are physically, emotionally, and mentally fit
most of the time since it involves two levels of coaching:
individual and team.
Your members expect you to be the last one to give up or
bail out in any situation especially during times of crises. A
coaching leader must be conscious that coaching entails
investing time on each individual, and on the whole team.
Moreover, that the responsibilities are greater since while you
are coaching members, you are also developing future coaches as
well.
==========================
Success unPlugged - unRestricted
unCencored Internet Marketing Tips
For Newbies and Advanced Marketers
http://SuccessUnPlugged.com
==========================
Continue -> develop your
intuition
Social Bookmarking Sites
Site created using
XSitePro
|