What's most interesting to you these days?
From Carol Kauffman, PhD, Director of the Institute of Coaching
For me it's high-stakes coaching. When you and your client are on the firing line, the consequences are large, sometimes affecting hundreds of thousands of employees or millions of customers. It's daunting! Our work is also pivotal if one person's career or health is at stake.
What IS most effective at these times?
In my coaching and supervision practice I'm seeing that, yes, we need to know what we "do" best and pull on all we know, including translating the latest research into good practice. But to coach at the top or with high-stakes challenges we need to cultivate who we are -- our "being" skills.
Under pressure, we need to be able to hold and emanate opposite qualities. What can be demanded of us is to be highly determined and also not attached to our interventions. We must have clear presence, confidence while simultaneously being ego-free. While we know the ropes and structures, at the same time we need to dance in the emergent process. Last, our "confidence" need not be in ourselves, but to be confident in the processes and power of coaching.
What qualities do you want to cultivate this year? I'm working on calm in the face of frenzy. My success is, well, mixed.
Monday, January 14, 2013
Friday, January 4, 2013
Research Review: An HR perspective on executive coaching for organizational learning”
International
Journal of Evidence Based Coaching and Mentoring, 9, 67-79. 2011
Special thanks to Brodie Gregory, PhD for preparing this article
In Alison Walker-Fraser's 2011 article, “An HR perspective on executive
coaching for organizational learning,” Alison Walker-Fraser calls for an
evidence-based approach to executive coaching, noting a need to demonstrate
“how or why organizations perceive coaching to be a contributor to
organizational and leadership performance” (p.67). In short, coaches,
researchers, and practitioners need to get serious about producing clear
evidence that coaching contributes to both individual and organizational
performance.
Walker-Fraser’s study set out to explore the strategic use
of coaching as a form of organizational learning, to examine HR perceptions
regarding the purpose of executive coaching, to investigate the factors that inform
the use of executive coaching in organizations, and to understand the role of
HR in demonstrating the ROI of coaching.
Data were collected through interviews with 17 HR
professionals. Walker-Fraser found that the use of executive coaching can
largely be classified as strategic – aligned to business goals and targeted at
senior leaders and high-potential candidates for senior leadership roles – or
“ad hoc” – used reactively to address challenges as they arise. Factors that
contribute to the strategic v. ad hoc use of executive coaching included
organizational culture and HR perceptions regarding the benefits of executive
coaching.
Participants also indicated that HR should be responsible
for evaluating the outcomes and/or ROI of coaching. Additionally, 41% of
participants specifically identified matching individuals with appropriate
coaches and having a clearly defined set of goals for the coaching engagement
as essential to the success of coaching. Interestingly, however, results
indicated no universally accepted criteria for assessing the success and/or impact
of coaching. Further, one third of participants reported that their
organizations did not engage in any formal process of evaluation for coaching.
One essential takeaway from Walker-Fraser’s study is that
the success of executive coaching is largely contingent on strategic
connections between coaching and organizations systems and/or strategic HR.
Specifically, Walker-Fraser comments that, “effective
organizational learning and development requires an integrated approach, in
which coaching and or mentoring are situated in the context and culture of the
organization, and the internal and external resources that a coach or mentor
brings, enabling learning to occur” (p. 73).
So – what does this mean for
coaches or HR practitioners?
1) First and foremost,
coaching must be linked to strategic HR processes and business goals in order
to be maximally effective and also continue to be perceived as a valuable
development tool.
2)Organizations must identify a set of relevant
criteria, based on their needs and expectations, for evaluating the impact,
effectiveness, and ROI of coaching.
Walker-Fraser’s article makes a strong
contribution to the coaching literature by providing concrete evidence of the
importance of connecting coaching with strategic HR and business goals.
How can
you incorporate these findings into your own practice?
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