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What
is coaching?
Coaching is a new profession.
Coaches:
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Help people set better goals and then
reach those goals.
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Ask their clients to do more than they
would have done on their own.
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Focus their clients better to more
quickly produce results.
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Provide the tools, support and structure
to accomplish more.
"My clients get focused and producing
faster because they have a coach."
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How
is coaching different from consulting? Therapy? Sports coaching? A best
friend?
Consulting. Coaching is a
form of consulting. But the coach stays with the client to help implement
the new skills, changes and goals to make sure they really happen. Therapy.
Coaching is not therapy. We don't work on "issues" or get into the past
or deal much with understanding human behavior. We leave that up to the
client to know and figure out while we help them move forward and set personal
and professional goals that will give them the life they really want.
Sports. Coaching includes
several principles from sports coaching, like teamwork, going for the goal,
being your best. But unlike sports coaching, most professional coaching
is not competition or win/lose based. We strengthen the client's skills
vs help them beat the other team. It's win/win.
Best friend. A best friend
is wonderful to have. But is your best friend a professional who you will
trust to aim you forward to the most important aspects of your life and/or
business? Have a best friend and a coach.
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What
is the basic philosophy of coaching?
Simply put, that we humans are great,
that we're all discovering what we really want and that we get can get
what we want faster and easier by having a coach who's been there and who
can help us.
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Who
hires a coach and why?
People hire a coach because
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They want more.
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They want to grow.
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They want it easier.
It's as simple as that. Coaches help
a client get all three. Quickly.
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What
happens when you hire a coach?
Many things, but the most important
are:
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You take yourself more seriously.
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You take more effective and focused
actions immediately.
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You stop putting up with what is dragging
you down.
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You create momentum so it's easier
to get results.
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You set better goals that you might
not have without the coach.
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Does
the coach work on personal goals or business/professional goals?
Both, actually. And, with the line
between personal and business life blurring in the 90s, the coach is the
only professional trained to work with all aspects of you.
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Where
does the coach focus with an average client?
We focus where the client needs
us most. And, we tend to weave in the following discussions:
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Getting the client's Personal Foundation
strengthened.
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Helping the client beef up their Reserve.
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Helping the client set goals based
on their Personal Values.
By including these with what the client
wants from us, we help the client have fewer problems and focus on what's
going to make them the most successful. We've found that clients really
enjoy the approach.
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Why
does coaching work?
Coaching works for several reasons:
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Synergy between the coach and client
creates momentum.
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Better goals are set -- ones that naturally
pull the client toward the goal rather than goals that require the client
to push themselves to the goal.
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The client develops new skills, and
these skills translate into more success.
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Why
is coaching becoming so popular?
Coaching is becoming popular for
several reasons:
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Many people are tired of doing what
they "should" do and are ready to do something special and meaningful for
the rest of their lives. Problem is, many can't see it, or if they can,
they can't see a way to reorient their life around it. A coach can help
them do both.
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People are realizing how simple it
can be to accomplish something that several years ago might have felt out
of reach or like a pipedream. A coach is not a miracle worker (well, they
are, sometimes) but a coach does have a large tool kit to help the Big
Idea become a Reality. Fortunately, people now have time and resources
to invest in themselves in this kind of growth.
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Spirituality. If you've tracked the
phenomenal success of James Redfield's Celestine Prophecy on the NY Times
best-seller list during 1994, you get a sense of just how many people are
willing to look at, and consider, the notion of spirituality. Wow. Many
coaches are spiritually based -- even the ones who coach IBM and AT&T.
America is getting spiritual quickly. (Our working definition of spirituality?
How connected you are with yourself and others.") The coach helps the clients
to tune in better to themselves and others.
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Please,
give me some context about coaching...
A personal coach does just what
an athletic coach or music teacher does, only in a more complete and bigger
way. A coach challenges you and takes the time to find out what winning
in life means to you. A coach is your partner in living the life you know
you can accomplish, personally and professionally. A coach is someone to
hold you accountable for your life, to make sure you really do live up
to your potential.
No matter where you are in life,
there is always a desire for more. More success, more money, closer relationships,
a deeper feeling of meaning in life, etc. It is the nature of people to
want to attain more, become more, be more, and we all struggle with how
to get what we're looking for.
Most people believe that "hard work
and doing it on your own" are the keys to finding the life, success, money,
or happiness that they seek. They believe that a price must be paid to
attain what they want, and often that price is poor health, not having
enough time to enjoy life, strained family relationships or lessened productivity.
The saddest part is that, even though this effort may result in more of
something, it is often not the something you had in mind, and you are back
where you started, or worse, further from your real intentions.
Athletes and performers know about
this trap. They know they need someone else, a trained someone else to
help them set goals, discover real needs, and work effectively toward ultimate
goals of excellence. So, they are willing to hire a coach or a teacher.
No serious athlete or musician would expect to progress very far without
one.
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What
about people who are already doing great in their lives. Why would they
need a coach?
They might not need a coach. But
it is helpful to find out: Are they doing what they most enjoy? Are they
tolerating anything? Is life easy? Are they going to be financially independent
within the next 15 years? Do they have what they most want? We've discovered
that, often, people need to expect more out of their lives. A coach can
help in this process.
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Can
a dependency be created between coach and client?
Not really. The client may "need"
the coach in order to maximize an opportunity or accelerate their growth,
yet not be "dependent" on the coach. Anyone who's up to something "needs"
structure, guidance, support and a place to brag, so in that sense, the
coach is necessary. But an emotional, psychological dependency is not created.
The coach works with people who are just fine and strong enough on their
own. Remember, we're not resolving issues here. The coach is helping the
client to create a better future: More success, more money, and a higher
quality of life.
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Can
coaching hurt someone?
No. How? We aren't doing psychological
work. We're not trying to control the client's thinking. We're not cattle
prods; we're partners.
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Can
I hire a coach just for a short-term, special project?
Yes. Some clients hire a coach to
help them accomplish specific goals or projects. Usually, however, the
client keeps working with the coach after that because there are even more
interesting things to accomplish.
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How
long must I commit if I start working with a coach?
Most coaches ask for a three to
six month commitment but usually let you stop immediately if coaching is
not working for you right now. Very, very few coaches ask for a written
agreement or contract. (As a coach, I never did, and my practice stayed
full. And while clients do come and go, I don't think a contract is wise.)
For the corporate client, however, a signed agreement is simply good business.
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