As I posted yesterday and have mentioned in various posts in the past, my coaching and work careers have run parallel paths for pretty much the entirety of my adult years. I was put in a supervisory role within 3 years of starting my work career and since, coaching and managing have been intertwined. The experiences I would face in one domain would often help me deal with situations in the other.
Leadership is leadership, whether you are leading a team of athletes to reach competitive goals, or managing a staff in the workplace looking to accomplish business objectives. Many of the skills of coaching are applicable to managing in a work environment. Coaching, in the context of performance management, means bringing the right people onto your staff and developing them continually so that they do their jobs well all the time. Think in terms of baseball, football, or volleyball coaches. They first recruit the right people, assess training and development needs, and work to improve the skills of all. You’re a coach in just the same way. As a coach, for instance, one of your jobs is to hire top staff. Then, if at any point your employees lack the skills they need to do their jobs well, your job is to train them. Analyzing training needs is, in fact, an ongoing responsibility, since skill needs change as the demands of the workplace change. Besides making sure your employees have the skills they need, as coach you need to ensure they understand your organization’s values and mission. Otherwise, your employees may create problems for themselves or for you. There is a belief that is critical to coaching that employees like to do a good job, and they want to get positive feedback and encouragement. Sitting down with a worker to discuss his or her recent efforts won’t be demoralizing. If it is done tactfully, you can move the individual to a point where they can do a good job and where, consequently, they’ll get the positive feedback and encouragement they want. To make this happen, you have to tell an employee exactly what you want and why. Present the big picture and his or her role in it. For example: “I will get calls from customers when they don’t hear from us about the status of their orders. Keeping them abreast of the status of their orders is a promise we make to our customers. Your responsibility is to process this information and send e-mail updates to them. Since I got a few calls this morning, I am assuming that you haven’t sent out all the letters yet. Is that so?” If the employee says yes, then the manager might explore the reasons why there have been delays. More important, together with the employee, the manager would come up with a plan to address any obstacles in completing the work on schedule. In the meantime, he might suggest, “Make print copies of the information. If a customer calls, I’ll be able to answer his or her questions. Given our plan, I should be able to assure the client that in the future he or she won’t have to call.” If the employee needs to learn a new skill, you might want to both tell and show the person what to do. Finally, you sit with the individual as he or she does the job. As the employee is learning, you should be there as his or her personal cheerleader. That assumes that you believe the individual can handle the job. If you have some doubts, go back and offer further training. Effective coaches don’t leave their employees to sink or swim. They recognize that there is a learning curve and they make a point to help their employees who are on it. Interestingly, as a coach, you need to accept that your employees will make mistakes and—most important—that they can learn much through the process of getting it wrong and then finding out how to put it right. Your role is t be there and congratulate them when they get it right. Coaching is something you begin from the first day an employee arrives on the job, when you discuss the individual’s responsibilities, your expectations, the unit’s role in the bigger corporate picture, and the company’s mission and strategy. Thereafter, schedule to meet with the employee one-on-one at least once a month. Many managers argue that they don’t have the time to coach each and every one of their employees on a regular basis. However, ask yourself, “What will it cost in time or money if my employees don’t have a clear view of operating priorities or plans, or lack of critical skills, or are encountering problems that impede progress?” The cost in time and money will be considerably more than the time you’d spend in coaching. In other words, coaching is preventative maintenance. While coaching mostly involves one-on-one meetings, bear in mind that it can also take the form of group sessions. The intent of these meetings is the same as one-on-one sessions—to better prepare employees to do their jobs. Group sessions can thus provide information on action plans, focus on skill-building activities, or remedy small group performance difficulties before they grow beyond control. Question employees about work in progress. Give feedback. There is no such thing as too much feedback about job performance. Praise for a job well done reinforces that behavior and increases the likelihood of its continuation. Suggestions for improvement tell employees you think they are capable of doing better. Should you see any problems, ask open-ended questions, for example, “What’s keeping you from doing an even better job than you are now?” or, “Is there anything we need to talk about?” and, most important, “How can I help you?” Once you have developed the knack of asking such questions in a non-threatening way, you should be able to uncover problems that may not otherwise come to light. You might identify a skill deficiency. Sometimes, too, you may discover more about an employee’s interests and aspirations. This may suggest ways to redesign the job and thereby stimulate above-standard performance. Besides being a skilled listener, you should be alert to what’s happening on the plant, service, or office floor. Practice management by walking around, and then discuss what you observed with the employee. Jot down casual comments or follow-up thoughts you can discuss during one-on-one meetings you hold with staff members each month. I won't comment about the perception of being a good coach, or a good manager. Like any role in leadership, over time you come to realize that it is rare and often impossible to please anyone. As my work mentor once said " if every one of your employees says that you are a nice guy, it means you are not being a good manager because sooner or later you will be in a position to tell some NO and it will upset someone at some point ". There is a lot of truth to that statement. I have experienced myself both in coaching and managing. All I can suggest is that as a leader, be consistent, being transparent and be fair. If your decisions are based on what is best for the group and based in facts, you may not always be liked, but more often than not, you will be respected.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorAfter many years of coaching at various levels and with different teams, I thought I would share some of my experiences and thoughts about coaching. Archives
January 2023
Categories
All
|