Coach
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Why coach? Out of selfishness as much as philanthropy.
- Investing ten minutes in coaching will save an hour.
- A coach is responsible for identifying and inducing productive discomfort
A coach aims to:
- enhance the performance and learning ability of others;
- help people to help themselves;
- build trust in the coaching relationship—a powerful way to do this is to disclose something of your own strengths, weaknesses and experiences;
- give feedback;
- include techniques such as motivation and effective questioning;
- recognize the coachee’s readiness to undertake a particular task, in terms of their location in the skill will matrix for a leader coach.
As a great coach, you:
- create more time for yourself and others—working the skill will matrix with your people, you will in the position to delegate more;
- enjoy the fun of working with a band of colleagues who actually relish working with you;
- achieve better results with your stable team more quickly;
- build your interpersonal skills more broadly—which often means you interact and relate better with those around you: family, friends, customers, vendors; and
- ‘groove’ coaching skills and habits into your daily lives.
Are you a great coach? Assess yourself using the coaching self-assessment.
Also see mentor.
Facts:
- the number of enlightened leaders seems to be much greater than people normally think;
- many people have found these techniques also help them talk better with their customers—not just with their own teams; and
- the coaching tool kit seems to be relevant well beyond the mere corporate world.
A coaching leader takes coaching a step further.
Person being coached by a coach. Closely related to mentor.
Kanban Coach
David Anderson expects every kanban coach to be able to answer these questions or you’d better get a better #kanban advisor.
- If someone says, "We are doing #kanban", try asking them why a kanban system with deferred commitment was appropriate for their circumstances?
- When would you choose a kanban system for scheduling work as opposed to some other scheduling system? What is your current system in use?
- What other elements do you need to add to kanban to create an adequate scheduling system for your context? What risks are you mitigating?
Sources
- The Tao of Coaching by Max Landsberg
- University of Tasmania » Coaching conversations for change (part 1)
- HBR » Jack Zenger, Joseph Folkman » Finding the Balance Between Coaching and Managing
- HBR » Joseph R. Weintraub, James M. Hunt » 4 Reasons Managers Should Spend More Time on Coaching