| |
|
"The Top 10 Reasons Why
An Executive Hires A Coach"
Executives hire a coach for many reasons, but there are ten
overriding ones that are particularly important in light of
today's fast-changing workplace.
-
To improve the existing culture of the company.
Company cultures need to change from autocratic, rigid,
fear-oriented to decentralized, entrepreneurial, cooperative
enterprises. Often, the executive who's leading the company
is a product of the "old" culture and can benefit
from a reorienteering that an Executive Coach facilitates.
The Executive Coach works with the executive to design
an optimum operating culture for the firm, and to devise
a plan to integrate all players into this enhanced culture.
-
To increase the executive's ability to leverage
his/her time.
The role of and leadership methods used by the executive
must continually upgrade in order to stay ahead of an
increasingly fickle customer base and less-loyal workforce.
The Executive Coach works to double (at a minimum) the
executive's leverage and effectiveness.
-
To improve the way the executive comes across.
Character, communication skills, and listening ability
are more vital today to the executive as the customer
base and employees expect more polish, sophistication
and subtlety. This, plus the increased use of virtual
communication methods requires that the personal side/real-person
side of the executive comes through in order to maintain
leadership-by-attraction vs. leadership-by-control.
-
To have fostering discussions of the executive's
ideas that are still in the inkling stage.
Often, the next generation or evolution of a company
is conceived during an open discussion of ideas. Most
executives don't take enough time for this type of creativity,
nor do they have the right "listening partner".
The Executive Coach provides the environment in which
the executive's inklings, ideas, and concerns are respected
and expanded.
-
To get an outsider's opinion from someone (the
coach) who has no vested interest in the outcome of the
situation.
Everyone the executive works with, including the spouse,
has a need to either maintain the staus quo or to make
changes that benefit themselves/their turf. This self-interest
is normal, but may lead to a lack of objectivity and encourages
a "not invented here" culture. The Executive
Coach is usually the only person in an executive's Rolodex
whose only priority is the executive's interests.
-
To expand upon, clarify, and clearly language
the executive's vision for the company.
A huge simple vision naturally keeps customers and employees
focused, reducing the need for management and constant
motivation. For example, Microsoft's vision: "a computer
on every desk and in every home, all running on Microsoft
software." Apple's vision? (Good question) The Executive
Coach is an expert at languaging concepts, goals and visions,
and assists the executive to properly language the vision
for the company.
-
To have a secure, safe, and confidential outlet
to to vent, when necessary.
Pent up frustrations, anger, and disappointments impair
good judgment. Every executive needs a special person
to complain to, vent, and with whom to talk things out.
-
To point out what the executive can't, won't,
or doesn't see.
Smart business people understand that they have blind
spots and most authorize an insider, outsider, or a team
with the permission and mandate to speak frankly and illuminate
the executive's blind spots. However, politics being as
they are, most individuals aren't empowered to speak their
minds. The Executive Coach has an ethical obligation to
point out what he/she sees.
-
To find a better way to reduce stress, increase
effectiveness, and still have a great life.
The days of the passive/suffering executive spouse are
coming to an end, as is the work-is-all-that-matters obsession.
Leadership today requires a clear-thinking individual
who is in touch with the many parts of life, not just
running a company. Executives are expected to have a real
life. The Executive Coach works with the executive to
design a balanced and sustainable personal and professional
life.
-
To widen the executive's "pipe" in
order to handle a faster flow of information.
The ability to assimilate and analyze huge amounts of
data--reports, facts, trends, subtle changes in the shifts,
needs of the company, status of projects and emerging
markets--is enhanced when the executive has a faster mental
modem, Pentium chip, RAM, and hard drive space. The Executive
Coach helps the executive to notice, feel, sense, see,
measure and process more data without taxing his/her personal
CPU.
Authored by Thomas J. Leonard, Copyright 1996 by Coach U,
Inc. All rights reserved.

|
| EnhancedLife Coaching, LLC provides executive
coaching and is proudly affiliated with The Ken Blanchard
Companies®, a global leader in workplace learning,
employee productivity, leadership, and team effectiveness.
Blanchard Coaching Services powerfully transform organizations,
one life at a time. Our clients include individuals, small
businesses, Fortune 500 companies, professional associations,
non-profit organizations, and governmental agencies across the globe.
For further information contact Barbara or call 719-475-7524.
©Copyright 1997-2007 EnhancedLife Coaching LLC All Rights Reserved
|
|