Itâs wonderful to have someone else committed to your success as a leaderâgiving you developmental feedback and holding you accountable in ways that foster your growth. And while itâs often hard to find this kind of support in the normal course of working your way up the ranks, you may be able to get it from a coach. In a recent conversation, Scott Osman and Jacquelyn Lane, co-authors with leading business educator and coach Marshall Goldsmith of Becoming Coachable and founder/CEO and president, respectively, of 100 Coaches Agency, explain how coaching can change and improve the work of both individual leaders and the entire organization.
Why Coaching Matters
A coaching stance is very different from the typical assignment and delegation in which leaders might ordinarily engage, so it triggers a different response. Even good leaders may inadvertently limit what employees can contribute and how much they can grow. âIf you tell them what to do as a leader, their only choice is to follow what you say or not follow what you say,â Osman notes. The third choiceââWell, hereâs what I thinkâ is removed from the equation. You want to create that space for your followers to grow in the role and you want to be supportive of their growthâand the coach can really help with that.â
Coaching is especially valuable in todayâs knowledge economy; it will grow even more crucial as AI-assisted work becomes more prevalent, because todayâs work no longer requires the top-down correction that used to be the norm. âA lot of the language and systems that we created during the industrial revolution have not changed as the workplace has changed,â Lane explains.
Broader skills of understanding and conceptualization also come into play. âPeople used to be like dexterous âhands,â basically a machine. But weâve now transferred into this work of the mind. Weâre mind workers, but we still refer to ourselves as labor.â Lane sees the future of work and workplaces as being âthe work of the heart, and you canât direct people into the work of the heartâyou can only encourage them.â
But the focus of executive coaching is not primarily self-improvement or managing feelings. âThe whole purpose of coaching is to get better, whether thatâs better business results or better collaboration on your team,â says Lane. âBut even just to set out on that process of betterment requires us to be open to doing some things differently. So you have to be open to change. If youâre not open to change, donât waste your money and donât waste your companyâs money. Change is an inevitable part of the process; you will be trying some new things.â
How To Decide Who Gets Coached
When you treat coaching as a business investment and a development tool, determining who should be coached is imperative. Rather than starting with individuals, Osman recommends identifying an organizationâs value-creating roles to ensure that coaching will provide sufficient business impact. Only after that should a senior leader assess potential development candidates. âAre they open to coaching? Are they open to feedback? Are they open to taking action? Are they open to accountability?â Osman asks. âBecause if youâre going to invest in coaching and they arenât willing to do those four things, then itâs going to be a wasted investmentâtheyâre not going to change.â
In high-value roles, notes Osman, âYou want to have someone who loves that job, who thinks the job is the right job for them. They wake up in the morning and think, âI want to do this job; I want to do it better; I canât wait to get to work! Iâm going to keep my life in balance, but Iâm gonna bring everything when I get there!ââ
Warning: Not Everyone Is A Good Coaching Candidate
Irrespective of their roles, not everybody benefits from coaching. Some people donât care enough about the organization; others feel coaching will challenge the ways they believe things should be done. None of us can see ourselves, Lane says. So one of the most significant functions of coaching is to gain self-awareness, which requires being willing to hear feedback from your coach. Osman suggests that many people need to reach an âinflection pointâ before they become interested in coaching. âTheyâve reached the end of their rope, and they realize the way theyâve been doing things will not work anymore, and if they donât make a change, theyâre out; theyâre done,â he says. âAnd the other inflection point is people who are doing really well, but they realize that thereâs a way to do exponentially betterâand they want exponentially better.â
Coachingâs greatest benefit comes with the recognition that âWe think we have to be top of the class and perfectâand then all of a sudden we learn that you donât have to hang on to that,â says Osman. âWeâre going to be leading people; weâre going to be achieving together. Weâre going to be celebrating the amazingness of the people on our team before we even think about ourselves. Itâs liberatingâand so is change.â
Weâre In This Together
Senior leaders can help employees see how valuable coaching by taking advantage of it themselves and letting people know that coaching is meant to support rather than to perfect. âAs a leader, youâre setting an example,â says Osman, âand if you can show people that change is something to be proud of, that itâs not shameful, then the people who are currently hiding their problemsâbecause theyâre afraid theyâll be shamed if theyâre outedâstop hiding their problems. Then you can address those problems and the entire business can flourish.â
There is nothing more inspiring for employees,â says Lane, âthan someone who has the intellectual humility to say, âI need help. I donât have all the answers. I would like to enlist your support.â And also the confidence to say, âI can make a changeâI can do better.â This is a journey that people can go on together. When people can say, âI donât have to carry this alone, we are doing this togetherâ and really tap into the power of the collective, how much further they and their organizations can go!â
Leaders who accept coaching themselves are much happier and more fulfilled, notes Osman, and they tend to share whatâs made them more successful. âAsking for help is incredibly liberating,â he says. âFor however long, youâve thought that, as a leader, you have to have all the answers. You have to be there for everybody. You have to be strong. And then, all of a sudden, one day you wake up and you realize that âI donât,ââand itâs at that point when the leader becomes accepting of support that the entire organization can flourish.