Coach as a leader?
Damian K. ten Bohmer, SCPC, PCC Leadership Coach

Coach as a leader?

  • Coach as a leader, or leader as a Coach?
  • It’s like, what came first, the chicken or the egg?
  • Are Coach and Leader mutually exclusive?

Many a great mind has coined a question such as this, and the latest was my goto thought guru, Simon Sinek, who asked only last week:

“which came first, the individual or the group”

It is a modern-day paradox, or so you might think.

I'm musing here about leadership styles and leaders. We humans are a strange sort of mammal. We can have kids, but not everybody should be a parent. We can assume a leadership role, but not everybody should lead.

However, given all the above, the best type of leader, in my opinion and experience, is a Coach.

The Oxford dictionary defines leadership as ‘the action of leading a group of people or organisation’, ‘ the state or position of being a leader’ with examples of ‘the leaders of an organisation or country’ etc…

This very accurately sums up the ‘what’ a leader does, but don’t you think that in 2020, we deserve better?

I like the way Forbes Magzine describes leadership; they say things like

‘Leadership is a process of social influence, which maximise the efforts of others, towards the achievement of a goal’. Forbes goes even further to say that ‘leadership stems from social influence, not the authority of power and that leadership requires others, and that implies they don’t need to be direct reports’.

With so many years working in the corporate world, I have seen a fair share of great and not-so-great leaders. I recall one on the Gold Coast, working with Pan Pacific Hotel Broadbeach, many years ago, when a new banqueting manager took over my role when I transferred to another in the same hotel. This chap had his first all-hands meeting with the team; the first thing he said, after good morning, was that ‘I demand respect from you all if you are going to work for me, then you must respect what I have to say’. My heart sank, and as you could guess, this new chap did not last long in the role.

Sure, he had a job to do, a team to lead, responsibility, and a budget to reach, but who does not have all of this when they look after more than themselves? This chap failed to grasp the big picture: people only follow people they trust, and you can’t demand anything from another when you don’t truly trust them. It’s not about what you do; it’s about how and why you do what you do, which matters the most.

There have been so many more examples over the years, which we can add to down the track, but back to my main point: Coach as a leader makes better sense.

I have always been one for looking up to and following robust, inspirational and authentic leaders. Still, it was not until maybe seven years ago that I saw the correlation of a Coach as the best type of leader; I don’t think I realised the impact and importance of that realisation until after some time.

We had a new Vice President for the Commercial function of our regional unit; this person was well-known to the broader business and well-respected as a leader. It was their first time working and living in the Middle East, so we thought we had some training to do with them so they would understand the local nuances.

When any new VP comes to town, any of the direct reports will consider two trains of thought: the first is, ‘Will my role change?’ and the second is, ‘What value will they bring to the table?’ I never thought a third option could exist, but I was off the mark.

A coach is a person who is skilled in conversation, not making the conversations but keeping things going with thought-provoking and insightful questions to uncover and enable you to reach your potential.

A coach as a leader does all of the above to feel like a flowing conversation between colleagues, not specifically a coaching engagement and, for sure, not uni-directional instructions from the boss.

A coach as a leader can be stated in one sentence as a leadership style that involves and facilitates people's engagement and draws out, understands, and empathises with their specific and individual motivations.

Whilst in the Middle East, we all had tough days. Things that could go wrong did go wrong. We had everything from flash floods, car bombs, countrywide riots, raging virus infections, vague government directions, changes of workweeks, and many, many more challenges—far too many to list here. Watch out for those in another post.

The wonderful thing about having a Coach as a leader is that unless the building is on fire, they will enable you to decide what the best way forward is, and in time, you come to them with not one, but many options to a challenge solution.

A coaching style of leadership is characterized by partnership and collaboration. When leaders behave like coaches, any hierarchy and command control yield to collaboration, creativity, and trust. The regular blame game falls away and becomes feedback and learning; outside motivators are replaced by self-motivation. Boundaries fall, teams build, and change is no longer feared but embraced. The short-term fire-fighting response is replaced by longer-term strategic thinking for the whole, not just the individual.

Instead of one head directing the show, Coaching leadership unites the minds and, in most cases, the hearts of the entire team and trusts in them to deliver exceptional performance.

In the continuing uncertain days of regional conflicts, 24-hour bombardment of social media, always connected, countries heading into recession, another USA election circus, lost industries, divided people, suspicion of our neighbours, distrust in politicians, lack of empathy for those in power, and disdain for the greed that has come to define the corporate world, wouldn’t you instead work with a Coach as a leader?

Coach, as a leader, is THE FUTURE of collaborative, decentralised value creation (work); given what we see ahead of us as the human race, the leaders of tomorrow will be coaches first.

Thank you for reading, and I hope you enjoyed this post. I am really trying to get more active online. While I make no promise of writing frequency, one thing I will promise you is that it will always be an authentic, real-me post.

Updated Friday, 12 April 2024: NO AI was used in this #HumanGenerated article.
Priya Mishra

Management Consulting firm | Growth Hacking | Global B2B Conference | Brand Architecture | Business Experience |Business Process Automation | Software Solutions

2 年

Damian, thanks for sharing!

Martha Travis

Human Resources Consultant | Director | People Connector | ELMO Software Translator | Employment Hero Enabler | HR Mentor & Speaker

4 年

Thanks Damian, and during these times of increased remote team leadership, the coaching style is imperative for team engagement and productivity. Command and control simply doesn’t work.

Matt Alderton CEO of the No. 1 Business Networking Bx - Growing Business xPONENTIALLY

CEO & Founder of Bx Networking The Fastest Growing Business Networking Across the Globe | Business Growth Expert | Professional Speaker | Multiple #1 Best Selling Author | Elite Business Coach

4 年

Great article Damian. Thanks for the share.

Bruce Mullan

IT Program Director | Program Manager | IT Consultant | Digital Transformation Lead

4 年

Coaching is part of a leader’s toolkit. There are situations where coaching is not appropriate and direction is needed. Some people, sadly, are uncoachable. A good read Damian - you covered the coaching part really well. ??

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