Coaching Approach To Leading People
We live in exciting new times when more and more people work in so called knowledge based economy having jobs that require creativity, knowledge, passion, ownership and that inner feeling of doing something that makes sense and will make a difference. How do you lead people in such environment? Well, the good old carrot and stick don’t work in most situations and you need to resort to more subtle ways of leadership.
One of the approaches you may take is to stop acting as a boss who tells everyone what to do and how to do it, and start acting as a coach. How does a coach look like? Let’s take a look at analogy from sports. He is not the best athlete on the team, he may not be the biggest expert on the game, he is someone who sets a direction and enables his team to mobilize all their skills and tap their abilities to the extreme to win the game.
It works exactly the same way in business setting. You just need to understand the underlying principles that will guide your behavior and make you a successful coaching leader. Let me talk about couple of ones I consider important.
Trust
One of the basic beliefs of coaching is the idea that in heart people work to the best of their abilities and no one does anything bad on purpose. This essentially means that you need to trust your team and you need to show it in the way you behave and react. Even though you may believe that a particular person is not telling the truth or he has some hidden agenda, you need to get rid of these thoughts, as they will inhibit your ability to be a trusting and trustworthy leader. The moment you start questioning honesty of your team it will show, it will reflect in the way you talk, act and at the end you will be seen as having some hidden agenda on your own.
Context
Every behavior is correct or has some value in certain situations so always try to understand the context. Let me use a bit silly example here. You are walking in the hallway and encounter a member of your team who is raising his voice and yelling at a customer. Your first reaction will be anger and thought that this person is a bad at dealing with people and you need to talk to him and correct his behavior. So you come to him and tell him that this was totally unacceptable behavior. He should go and apologize to that customer and if you see him doing it once more you will fire him. As it turns out the person that was "yelled at" is half-deaf and you need to raise your voice when you talk to him.
"Every behavior is correct or has some value in certain situations."
How do you think your team member see you now? You just made a rush conclusion based on what you saw without understanding the context. Based on that conclusion you talked down a person doing just his job. How different would the situation be if you borrowed a page from the book of coaching? "I just saw you yelling at that person and I'm not sure why you did it. Can you help me to understand it?" "Well, the person is deaf". "Interesting, I didn't know that. Thanks for letting me know." And that's it. The message you send by this approach: I'm interested in what you are doing. You told me something interesting I didn't know and I'm grateful for that.
No assumptions
Extension of the previous two points is important aspect of "every behavior has positive motivation". Even if you don't see it now, you should believe that it is the case. For example, you are on a meeting and you have disagreement with your peers or your boss. They disagree with your idea of how something should be done. Your conclusion is that they care only about themselves, hate the idea because you brought it up, they don’t understand what needs to be done. You are bitter and demotivated.
Now, just take a step back and ask yourself, "keeping in mind that every behavior has positive motivation, what their positive motivation might be?" "Well, maybe they try to prevent me doing something stupid that may hurt my career opportunities." You still don't know what really is behind the behavior, but this approach at least opens your mind to possibilities so you stop arguing and start thinking.
And then you simply describe the behavior you see. "Look, I see that you are saying this... and I feel rather demotivated. Do I understand it right or did I misread something?" You are essentially removing any wrong assumptions you may have made in your mind and getting back to the facts.
Resources
Every single person on your team has all the resources he needs to be able to do his job. This is a strong belief that you need to build into your management style. As a leader who is using this approach you just need to "open the gates" so the person understands what resources he has at his disposal. It also means you need to be giving people the right job. Ideally, it is something just a bit above their current “proven” skill level so they are challenged to dig deep into their internal resources and find out something they didn’t know they have. That way they will grow.
"People have all the resources they need."
There might be situations where the person may not have all the resources to finish successfully the job. That most likely means that you are giving him a wrong job. For example, you have a person fresh out of university who got his first job as an associate project manager. He has all the resources he needs for that particular role (helping more senior colleague, managing small project). If you task this person to manage project like "sending man to the moon" no amount of coaching will help this person as he is being tasked by something way above his internal resources and technical / functional knowledge. This person needs years of training and mentoring to be able to do it. So always task people with work that is challenging but they still have a real chance to succeed.
Coaching leadership style has many benefits in terms of helping people improve their performance is the best tool for long-term development of one’s strengths. It builds engagement by connecting the vision of the company to the needs and desires of the person and it helps surfacing and aligning core values of the person and the company. However, it shouldn’t be overused. There are situations when other leadership approaches are required. For example, in emergency situations when you need a fast action or when you are dealing with unskilled people who first and foremost need a hard training. So before you jump into a situation always consider the task at hand and the person performing it, and know that in most normal, everyday situations, with no emergency, a coaching approach to leading people can work miracles.
More on topic for Leadership:
Leaders Need To Be Genuinely Interested In People
Why Leaders Should Stop Obsessing With Happiness
8 Reasons Leadership Means Selling
Be A Leader Not A People Pleaser
The Most Difficult Thing In Management
Why Good Employees Become Bad Managers
You Can’t Lead Without Values And Principles
There are numerous other coaching tools and beliefs that can help you being a coaching leader. What is your favorite one that always worked for you?
Photo: KeithJJ / Pixabay.com
Adapted from an article posted at my blog about management, leadership, communication, coaching, software development and career TheGeekyLeader or follow me on Twitter: @GeekyLeader
Innovatie Manager Eurapco | Service Designer | Achmea Innovation Hub | T500??
6 年Diederik Koopman Jeroen Mulder
High Performance Coach specialising in BD + Leadership for Professionals
6 年Coaching approach looks interesting Tomas, look forward to hearing more about it.