coachAs a leader/manager/supervisor in an organization, part of your responsibility, obligation and an implied (if not stated) expectation is to be a coach.

Recently I was asked a very valuable question about that role, and the reality that many leaders live in.

Here is the question, verbatim:

I manage a small IT group. I haven’t done coaching, and want to, but after 6 years in this position, how do I start subtly?

The person asking this question has learned that my opening statement is true. They want and need to coach. Yet time, habit and perhaps other things are hindering the “getting started.”

So, how would I answer this question?

The Importance of Starting

The person asking anonymously has figured out that they want to coach, so they see some importance, but to answer the question more broadly and completely, thinking about why starting matters is important.

If there are ongoing performance challenges, in order for the organization to be as successful as it could be, the performance changes need to take place. In order for that to happen, coaching will be required.

If there are performance challenges for some that aren’t being addressed, you are effectively lowering the performance bar for everyone – it will get increasingly harder to hold even some people to a higher standard, and so growth and improvement are very unlikely.

If you want to be promoted yourself, you must leave the group better than you found it, and so your own promote-ability may well rest on your ability to effectively coach your team.

In short, deciding to coach has positive benefits for the team, the organization and yourself.

So, you want to start, but it is hard (or you would have already done it). What are the barriers that get in the way of starting?

The Barriers to Starting

There could be as many barriers as there are people in this situation, but I believe there are some that are common and tough to overcome. The toughest one of all is to see the need for coaching – in our case, that need is already identified.

  • Time. “I’m already busy and I don’t know when I will have time to do coaching. I know I need to but I don’t know when I will get to it.”
  • Habit. “It’s hard to break a habit. I mean, I know I need to coach, but I am pretty comfortable with the way I do my work.”
  • Fear. “I’m not sure how good of a coach I would be. I know it is important, but I’m afraid I will screw it up.”
  • Relationships. “What will people think about me if I start coaching them on stuff that they have been doing for a long time?”

How to Start

Now we can get to the heart of the question . . . how to coach, after not coaching for so long . . .

The question closes with the word subtly – “how do I start subtly?”

The Chinese parable says there are two best times to plant a tree, 50 years ago and today. That is the situation we find ourselves in now – maybe we “should have” started coaching six years ago, and since we didn’t, we should start today.

I suggest you be supportive, caring and clear, but I don’t think you need to be subtle, covert or cautious.

The way to start coaching, is to start coaching. (Tweet That).

And you start coaching by making the expectations clear – about what your role and goals are, and what the coaching is going to be about.

It should be done in a conversation so people can better understand your motives and goals, and you can surface and understand their concerns, questions and resistance. Once that stage is set, begin the process of helping people grow and improve – in other words, start coaching.

If you have several people that you want/need to coach, you might have part of the conversation with the entire group or team, and save the specifics for meetings with each person; but the goal here is to let people know that you want to help them improve, that you see that now as an important part of your job, and that you plan to take action on that role moving forward.

The barriers and concerns about starting coaching when you haven’t been doing it are real, and while I don’t mean to discount them, in the end you start coaching by . . .

  1. Deciding to do it.
  2. Making your purpose clear to those you will coach.
  3. Setting (new) clear expectations.
  4. Starting coaching in a supportive and helpful way.

The best leaders are coaches too – and there is no time like today to start coaching more frequently, and more effectively.

Learn more about our Coaching with Confidence workshop here!

 

Want more articles like this?

Subscribe to any of our e-newsletters to get them delivered directly to your inbox.

Kevin Eikenberry is a recognized world expert on leadership development and learning and is the Chief Potential Officer of The Kevin Eikenberry Group. He has spent over 30 years helping organizations across North America, and leaders from around the world, on leadership, learning, teams and teamwork, communication and more.

Twice he has been named by Inc.com as one of the Top 100 Leadership and Management Experts in the World and 100 Great Leadership Speakers for Your Next Conference. The American Management Association named him a “Leaders to Watch” and he has been twice named as one of the World's Top 30 Leadership Professionals by Global Gurus. Top Sales World has named him a Top Sales & Marketing Influencer several times, and his blog has been named on many “best of” lists. LeadersHum has named him one of the 200 Biggest Voices in Leadership in 2023.

Share your thoughts

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked

  1. I agree, you have to start somewhere. Creating coaching agreements helps clarify the goals of coaching, the roles of those involved, and the rules of the road or how will we work together on this. Time is the biggest factor I see, but you pay now or you pay later!

  2. Thanks for the article! first of all.
    “Subtly” may sound a bit tricky and still could get us think in a “low profile lime-lapsed” but finally formal process. Sometimes starting just with some technics used in a coaching porcess, as a natural way of communicating with your people is a small step before the big walk. I’m not sure (actually I doubt) that a fully effective coaching process could be run by the direct boss of the coachee.
    And if the natural (yet professional) communication with our team is part of the fear… well, perhaps it’s a good oportunity to ask for help…

{"email":"Email address invalid","url":"Website address invalid","required":"Required field missing"}