NOVEMBER 2016 BAREFOOT COACHING WINTER CONFERENCE
Being Nice is Not Enough
Ten coaching situations where challenge could be the answer
Presenter: Jenny Rogers
Slide1
www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10
Being Nice is Not Enough Ten coaching situations where challenge - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
NOVEMBER 2016 BAREFOOT COACHING WINTER CONFERENCE Being Nice is Not Enough Ten coaching situations where challenge could be the answer Presenter: Jenny Rogers Slide1 www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10 CONDITIONS THAT MUST
Slide1
www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10
Slide2
www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10
Slide3
www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10
Slide4
www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10
Challenge High
High challenge low support Client is undermined, indignant and defensive; coaching likely to end prematurely High challenge, high support Client trusts and likes coach; can learn even when
capable of being long and productive Low challenge, low support Low impact coaching, just a nice chat; coaching likely to peter out High support, low challenge Coach colludes with client; client misses opportunities to
unlikely to be sustainable
Support Low HIgh
Slide5
www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10
Slide6
www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10
Slide7
www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10
Slide8
www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10
Given in anger Given when calm For benefit of giver: to punish For benefit of receiver: to develop Wild generalisations; opinions Specific; factual Evaluative Descriptive About the whole person About specific behaviour Says ‘we’ or ‘people’ Says ‘I’ One way Two way No help or support with follow-up action Agreeing action and support is part of the process
Slide9
www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10
Slide10
www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10
Slide11
www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10
Slide12
www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10
Slide13
www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10
Slide14
www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10
Slide15
www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10
In your own mind distinguish between: regret, shame, guilt and remorse: They are all different – and help the client to differentiate them Deconstruct what actually happened Agree that the mistake was serious – if it was, or challenge over- emphasis on the ‘mistake’ if it wasn’t as serious as the client believes Distinguish between the person and the behaviour Reassure that one mistake does not define us for ever Offer a self-forgiveness protocol Encourage client to keep a ‘forgiveness diary’
Slide16
www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10
Slide17
www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10
Slide18
www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10
Slide19
www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10
Slide20
www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10
Slide21
www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10