Tags

    News

    Onboarding Best Practices
    Good Guy = Bad Manager :: Bad Guy = Good Manager. Is it a Myth?
    Five Interview Tips for Winning Your First $100K+ Job
    Base Pay Increases Remain Steady in 2007, Mercer Survey Finds
    Online Overload: The Perfect Candidates Are Out There - If You Can Find Them
    Cartus Global Survey Shows Trend to Shorter-Term International Relocation Assignments
    New Survey Indicates Majority Plan to Postpone Retirement
    What do You Mean My Company’s A Stepping Stone?
    Rewards, Vacation and Perks Are Passé; Canadians Care Most About Cash
    Do’s and Don’ts of Offshoring
     
    Error: No such template "/hrDesign/network_profileHeader"!
    Blogs / Send feedback
    Help us to understand what's happening?
    Tips for when, and how, to use an executive coach
    Joan Lloyd
    When to Use an Executive Coach

    When you have a talented executive/manager who makes a solid contribution to the business but who (examples):
    • Has problems managing people
    • Can’t communicate his/her ideas effectively
    • Has problems making good presentations
    • Is trying to change the culture and is meeting with resistance
    • Has an ineffective personal style
    • Has an image problem
    • Needs feedback on a sensitive personal issue

    When you have a new manager who (examples):
    • Was promoted into a large stretch job
    • Was promoted into a job with high risk/visibility
    • Never managed a large group of people before
    • Never managed multiple departments
    • Never worked outside of his/her technical specialty
    • Has a manager who can’t provide much coaching

    When you have a valuable contributor who the company wants to save from outplacement / termination (examples):
    • The employee hasn’t been told the truth by past managers and the company feels a sense of responsibility for the employee’s predicament
    • There is a political time bomb ticking and the company is trying to avoid a lawsuit
    • The person is connected politically in some way to the owner (friend, family member, protégé, etc.)

    When you have a star employee who (examples):
    • Needs to polish skills in communication to upper management
    • Needs to become more politically astute
    • Has to grow quickly to move into a bigger job fast, due to business changes, sudden death or retirement of key executive, etc.

    Pitfalls to Avoid When Working with an Executive Coach

    Before you hire the coach:
    • Check references—speak to people the person has actually coached, as well as to their managers.
    • Choose people who have executive experience, if he/she will be coaching executives.
    • Choose a coach who has a successful track record of managing people, if he/she will be working with someone on employee issues.
    • Beware of a coach who has had limited personal experience with organizational politics, especially if the issue at hand is political.
    • Coaching certificates, from coaching “universities,” don’t guarantee the person will be a good fit, or have the necessary skills.
    • Ask for all fees upfront, including potential charges for phone calls, in-office research and preparation, instruments, etc.
    • Match the coach to the person. One size doesn’t not fit all.
    • Set clear expectations about marketing other services while working with a client.
    • Beware of the coach who overuses instruments because they lack the experience or skills themselves.
    • Be cautious of a coach who doesn’t have a sense of urgency and professes the need to have a long, expensive relationship.
    • Be careful of the coach who seems to be too eager to take any assignment, without thoroughly probing into the desired outcomes to see if he/she is a fit.
    • Be wary of the person who may be acting as a “coach” between jobs.
    • Be cautious about someone who doesn’t have any past success stories to share
    • Avoid someone who can’t articulate his/her consulting philosophy and principles
    • Others?

    Beware of the coach who doesn’t do the following early in the process:
    • Identify measurable outcomes in a three-way conversation between the manager/coach and person to be coached (and internal HR coach, if applicable)
    • Set agreed upon ways to monitor progress
    • Get agreement from all parties about how to handle confidentiality
    • Set expectations about logistics of where and when.
    • Clarify roles and responsibilities of all parties
    • Establish rapport and trust quickly with the person to be coached
    • Actively involves the person’s manager in the process

    © Joan Lloyd & Associates, Inc. (800) 348-1944 info@joanlloyd.com  www.JoanLloyd.com
    Executive Coaching * Management Consulting * Customized Leadership Training * Team Assessment / Teambuilding / Retreat Facilitation








     
    Copyright © 1999-2025 by HR.com - Maximizing Human Potential. All rights reserved.
    Example Smart Up Your Business