3 DISTINCT WAYS A COACHING CULTURE DELIVERS BUSINESS SUCCESS
Michael Grubich, MBA
President l Author l Human Capital Strategist I Executive Coach I Culture Architect I Consultant I Talent Management I Business Partner I michaelgrubich.com
Well-known author and Professor of Leadership, Peter Hawkins, in his book?Creating a Coaching Culture, provides an aspirational definition of coaching culture. “A coaching culture exists in an organization when a coaching approach is a key aspect of how the leaders, managers, and staff engage and develop all their people and engage their stakeholders, in ways that create increased individual, team and organizational performance and shared value for all stakeholders.” To us, that definition captures the full potential value of coaching at an organizational level.
A coaching culture?works on an individual level by recognizing people as complex humans with a variety of hopes, dreams, struggles, and successes. As employees, people bring their talents, energy, ideas and passion to our organizations. Our job as leaders is to create a work environment that can fully draw out the best in every person to create maximum satisfaction and engagement for the employee while creating exceptional value for the organization and its customers.
1. Employee Engagement
Gallup’s State of the American Workplace?report ?found that engaged employees are more likely to stay with their organization and feel a stronger bond to their organization’s mission and purpose. Another report found that?about?70 percent ?of companies are reporting talent shortages and?81 percent ?of businesses said turnover is a costly problem. With the struggle to acquire and keep talent so high, the cost of failing to engage workers becomes clear.?Employee engagement also affects a host of business goals, including:
So, how can organizations get these amazing benefits of an engaged workforce? According to recent research from the International?Coaching?Federation,?60 percent ?of employees working in an organization where they experience a coaching culture rated themselves as highly engaged. As stated above in Hawkins’ definition, a culture of?coaching?is one where workers engage with one another using a coaching approach in discussions, problem solving, conflict and more. By embracing this approach, employees find lots of opportunities to develop new skills and even use this new way of thinking to solve future challenges. In addition to improving self-awareness and openness to feedback, they learn how to succeed in different roles, produce results that are valued by their managers and the organization and have the chance to pursue personal career goals, not just organizational objectives. In other words, people tend to work harder, pay closer attention to the details and genuinely care about bringing positive results for their employers when they feel like those efforts are appreciated and respected. A coaching culture becomes the way work gets done in an organization.??Executed well, a true coaching culture is never even discussed as a coaching culture; it is merely THE culture of the organization.
2. Stronger Relationships
The idea of bad managers who micromanage projects, aren’t responsive to requests and questions, enjoy special privileges and take credit for all the good work while avoiding responsibility for missteps might be ripe for comedians, but they are misery for workers and for the bottom line of any organization. Implementing a culture of?coaching?can radically improve critical relationships within the organization to bolster the strength of your teams while creating more positive results across the board. Failure to develop these relationships can have drastic consequences:
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When managers are given the tools to interact with their people as coaches rather than taskmasters, their direct reports will begin to feel as if their ideas and efforts matter and that their individual well-being is prioritized along with that of the company and its customers. Workers will be encouraged and empowered to use their strengths, talents, and skills daily, and as Gallup found, workers in these conditions are?six times ?more likely to be engaged. And we already know the benefits of an engaged workforce.
Transforming management styles to embrace the concepts of?coaching?isn’t always going to be easy, and only?36 percent ?of companies are offering?coaching-specific training to new leaders. However, becoming part of that percentile has clear benefits, along with an opportunity to edge out the 64 percent of companies that are not teaching their managers to utilize a coaching approach.
3. Increased Business Performance
There are a few straight lines that can be drawn directly to an organization’s bottom line. Implementing a?coaching?culture?improves working conditions for employees in all the categories that matter to them. By doing so, companies can enjoy the benefits that come with a happy, satisfied, engaged, energized and empowered crew, including:
Plus, when employees are given ample opportunity for growth and development, and when they are empowered to make decisions and solve problems on their own, the natural result is a?robust leadership pipeline, something that?77 percent ?of organizations are struggling to create.?
Human Resources
People are the most valuable resource in any company. Without people, very few business goals could be achieved. Employees have the power to make or break the success of a business. When they are treated like the talented, complex human resources that they are, their employers will enjoy everything from a more positive and inclusive workplace to stronger profits year over year. Striving to have a coaching culture within the organization is one way to appreciate others, as well as build stronger organizational performance outcomes.