Internal, Coach-Like Managers as the Drivers of Change?
?? Michael Bungay Stanier
Author of *The Coaching Habit* (1 million+ sold), *How to Work with (Almost) Anyone* & more ? I help people unlock greatness: theirs and others' ? #1 thought leader on coaching ?Top rated keynote speaker ? Rhodes Scholar
Do you remember work in the year 2000? Email was still a blessing, and we hadn’t yet become attached to smartphones. We were connected, but not hyperconnected. We were busy, but not roll-out-of-bed-and-read-your-emails-while-brushing-your-teeth kind of busy.
Today’s managers are stretched as thin as can be. They are overwhelmed and overcommitted, and they are constantly fighting against the clock.
Organizations are now, more than ever, under pressure to be more agile, to make faster decisions and seize opportunities before they pass them by.
What’s the best way to approach this challenge?
How to Get with It — and Fast
These days, companies need to be nimble on their feet. To do so, leaders and their teams must be self-reliant and able to have in impact in the great work that makes a difference to their company, their place in the market and their future.
Often to help with this human capital vision, external coaches are brought in to coach executives. Although this has its benefits, executive coaching is costly, impacts only a handful of people and cannot be scaled. Seeing as they are external, these coaches are outside the company’s culture and therefore not fully aligned.
Still, coaching is the answer here — just not that kind of coaching.
Training Managers to Be More Coach-Like
Training managers and leaders to be more coach-like is a much more scalable, sustainable and robust approach to driving change and improving performance.
Why? For starters, they know their organization well — the employees, the culture, the good and the bad. Managers are with their employees on a daily basis. And, ultimately, what it takes to become more coach-like is asking a few more questions and offering a little less advice.
In 2000, Daniel Goleman, the psychologist and journalist who made the concept of emotional intelligence popular, wrote an article titled “Leadership That Gets Results” for Harvard Business Review. In it, Goleman outlines six key leadership styles. Coaching was one of them, and it was shown to have a “markedly positive” impact on performance, climate (culture) and the bottom line.
Great start there — but it turned out that it was the least-used leadership approach.
Coaching Is All about Conversations
“Many leaders told us they don’t have the time in this high-pressure economy for the slow and tedious work of teaching people and helping them grow,” Goleman wrote.
Things have changed since 2000. And yet here we are, having the same conversation about lack of time.
The term “coaching” has become more commonplace, but coaching is still not happening all that often. Why not? Likely because managers don’t realize it doesn’t need to be its own formal event and take up time — that it can be as easy as having a daily conversation.
Coaching doesn’t need to be an additional task. You can have a coaching conversation in 10 minutes or less. All you need is a good set of questions to get you started and to learn to tame your inner advice monster, which wants to fix every problem (even if it’s the wrong problem).
When managers and leaders make coaching part of their everyday work, they help their employees learn and develop, and they increase focus, resilience and impact. They also minimize their own workload because, as their employees learn, those employees will become better at their jobs and less dependent on their managers.
Who wouldn’t want that?
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About Michael Bungay Stanier
Michael is the Senior Partner at Box of Crayons, a company that teaches 10-minute coaching so that busy managers can build stronger teams and get better results. His most recent book, The Coaching Habit, has sold a quarter of a million copies. Along with David Creelman and Anna Tavis, Michael recently conducted and released a new piece of research, The Truth & Lies of Performance Management. Michael is a Rhodes Scholar and was recently recognized as the #3 Global Guru in coaching. Visit BoxofCrayons.com and https://boxofcrayons.com/pmresearch/ for more information.
Customer Success Lead, Modern Work, ASEAN, Microsoft
6 年Just read The Coaching Habit, cover to cover...awesome book, great practice tool! Universally applicable.
AVP, Risk Control | CPCU Mid-Atlantic Governor | NAAIA Metro DC Board | DEI Advocate | Fire Protection Engineer | President, Community Non-Profit
6 年Just finished your Book, The Coaching Habit.? Great read!?
From someone who's been there: Concise, clear, & correct proposals, articles, books, theses, & other nonfiction.
6 年You've nailed it. And these lessons/insights can be applied to people who are in business by themselves--the lonely solopreneur can get on a treadmill and not be able to see how to stop the madness. That's why I think that mentors need to have solid coaching skills as well as mentoring skills so they can do a 10-minute coaching session when a teachable moment presents in the relationship.
Human Resources Director at Premier Restaurants (McDonald's Licencee)
6 年I also think it’s a great solution, what troubles me is that few organizations choose to adopt a coaching culture since it’s really a transformational change with emphasis on people and which may last more than two years. Are we chasing fast results and easy solutions?
IT Specialist - Projects - Finance industry
6 年Here’s Pat Flynn’s review of The Coaching Habit. He’s now using the questions from the book in his podcast interviews. https://youtu.be/aRrHd26Q69k