What an Executive Coach Can Do for You?
Do you need an executive coach? Do your managers? Here is a useful framework for thinking about the role of coaching, from Harvard Management Update.
Is executive coaching at
It
might seem that way at some organizations, at least to the untrained
eye. IBM has more than sixty certified coaches among its ranks. Scores
of other major companies have made coaching a core part of executive
development. The belief is that, under the right circumstances,
one-on-one interaction with an objective third party can provide a
focus that other forms of organizational support simply cannot.
And
whereas coaching was once viewed by many as a tool to help correct
underperformance, today it is becoming much more widely used in
supporting top producers. In fact, in a 2004 survey by Right Management
Consultants (
"Coaching has evolved into the mainstream fast," says Michael Goldberg, president of Building Blocks Consulting (
At
an even more basic level, many executives simply benefit from receiving
any feedback at all. "As individuals advance to the executive level,
development feedback becomes increasingly important, more infrequent,
and more unreliable," notes Anna Maravelas, a St. Paul, Minnesota-based
executive coach and founder of TheraRising. As a result, she says,
"Many executives plateau in critical interpersonal and leadership
skills."
So, should you have a coach? And which
managers in your sphere of responsibility might benefit from working
with an outsider to help sharpen skills and overcome hurdles to better
performance?
The right approach to answering these
questions still varies a great deal depending on whom you ask, but
input from several dozen coaches, and executives who have undergone
coaching, does provide a useful framework for how to think about the
role of coaching.
The road to coaching runs two ways
Although
both the organization and the executive must be committed to coaching
for it to be successful, the idea to engage a coach can originate from
either HR and leadership development professionals or from executives
themselves. In the past, it has more often sprung from the
organizational side. But given the growing track record of coaching as
a tool for fast movers, "We see more executives choosing coaching as a
proactive component of their professional life," says Cheryl Leitschuh,
a leadership development consultant with RSM McGladrey (
Executive coaching is not an end in itself
In
spite of its apparently robust potential, the very act of taking on a
coach will not help advance your career. In other words, don't seek
coaching just because other fast movers in the firm seem to be
benefiting from it.
Coaching is effective for
executives who can say, "I want to get over there, but I'm not sure how
to do it," says James Hunt, an associate professor of management at
Babson College and coauthor of The Coaching Manager (Sage
Publications, 2002). "Coaching works best when you know what you want
to get done." Perhaps, in spite of your outstanding track record, you
haven't yet gained the full interpersonal dexterity required of senior
managers—for example, you're not yet a black belt in the art of
influence, which is so important in the modern networked organization.
Honing such a skill might be an appropriate goal for a coaching
assignment.
But simply having
a clear purpose won't guarantee coaching value, says Michael Goldberg.
"You have to be open to feedback and willing to create positive change.
If not, coaching may not be the answer."
There are
certain times when executives are most likely to benefit from coaching.
Executives should seek coaching "when they feel that a change in
behavior—either for themselves or their team members—can make a
significant difference in the long-term success of the organization,"
says Marshall Goldsmith, a high-profile executive coach and author of
eighteen books, including The Leader of the Future (Jossey-Bass, 1996).
More
specifically, the experts say, coaching can be particularly effective
in times of change for an executive. That includes promotions, stretch
assignments, and other new challenges. While you may be confident in
your abilities to take on new tasks, you may feel that an independent
sounding board would be beneficial in helping you achieve a new level
of performance, especially if close confidants are now reporting to
you. More so, you may recognize that succeeding in a new role requires
skills that you have not needed to rely on in the past; a coach may
help sharpen those skills, particularly when you need to do so on the
fly.
But coaching is not just for tackling new
assignments. It can also play an invigorating role. Coaches can help
executives "develop new ways to attack old problems," says Vicky
Gordon, CEO of the Gordon Group coaching practice in
One
increasingly common use of coaching for senior executives focuses on
the challenges of managing younger workers, and on helping executives
better understand and lead a new generation of employees whose work
ethics and values are different, says Stephen Fairley, president of
Chicago-based Today's Leadership Coaching and coauthor of Getting Started in Personal and Executive Coaching (Wiley, 2003).
Coaching engagements should be part of a larger initiative
"Coaching
works when it's systematic," says Babson's Hunt, and many organizations
use coaching as an integrated part of a larger leadership development
program. Increasingly, firms incorporate "360-degree" feedback, using
the results to indicate areas in which an executive might benefit from
working with a coach. Has your feedback revealed an area in which you
would like to improve? Is it a skill you need to refine in order to
advance through the organization? Would you benefit from an outside
perspective? The answers to these questions help gauge the potential
value of coaching.
Coaching can provide benefits not available elsewhere
"One
of the big benefits of a coach is that they aren't tied to the
organization, your friends, or anyone else," says Washington,
D.C.-based executive coach Linda Finkle. "They are tied to you only, so
they support what you want and where you want to go.
"Even
our families, who want the best for us, can't be unbiased or totally
objective. What you do or do not do impacts them, whether it's positive
or negative. A coach is not impacted by your decisions, your wins or
losses, or anything else."
As Finkle notes, this
doesn't mean that company goals aren't supported by coaching—indeed,
the coach was most likely hired by the company to support the
executive's efforts to achieve those goals. Even so, the role of the
coach is not to represent specific company needs or interests. "The
perspectives they provide, the alternatives discussed, and everything
else has no agenda except to support the coachee," she says.
For better or worse, many executives can't find this type of conversation partner—what ![]()
Harvard Management Update
Are There Organizational Risks to Coaching?
Ideally
coaching is a three-way partnership between the executive, the coach,
and the organization, in which all involved agree on specific goals and
parameters. Even so, no one can really control coaching's outcomes.
So
should companies worry that the coaching experience will reveal to
valued executives a motivation that leads them astray from the intended
organization path—or away from the firm altogether?
Here's one way to look at it. If an experience—through coaching or anything else—reveals an interest that leads an executive away from the firm, everyone stands to gain. The executive finds a better fit and, ideally, a space in the firm becomes available to someone who is motivated by the challenges at hand. It's much the same thinking that companies have gone through regarding leadership-development programs at large. The occasional departure of a manager in whom the firm has invested a great deal is offset many times over by the increased value of those who remain.
Source: http://hbswk.hbs.edu/archive/4853.html dated 6/13/2005
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