Being Nice is Not Enough Ten coaching situations where challenge - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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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


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NOVEMBER 2016 BAREFOOT COACHING WINTER CONFERENCE

Being Nice is Not Enough

Ten coaching situations where challenge could be the answer

Presenter: Jenny Rogers

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www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10

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High levels of liking between you and the client High levels of trust on both sides Authentic concern for the client Humour and playfulness Willingness to challenge No ego on your part: you are as undefended as you expect your client to be Confidence: knowing how to blend challenge with support

CONDITIONS THAT MUST BE IN PLACE TO CHALLENGE YOUR CLIENT

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www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10

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Different from what friends and family can provide – and not a replacement for these relationships It’s rare to talk to another human being who really listens It’s rare to be heard without judgement It’s unusual to comment on the immediate behaviour of another person without the wish to control or curry favour Both coach and client can walk away from the relationship

COACHING IS AN UNUSUAL KIND OF CONVERSATION

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www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10

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UNDERSTANDING THE NEED TO BALANCE SUPPORT WITH CHALLENGE

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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

  • uncomfortable. Relationship

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

  • learn. Longer term, coaching

unlikely to be sustainable

Support Low HIgh

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WHY CHALLENGE MAY BE NEEDED

Amazingly, human beings are not perfect; we make mistakes People close to us may collude or attack We defend ourselves: it doesn’t feel safe to be vulnerable We blame others or assume guilt unnecessarily We feel shame We side-track, lure people away from the issue with red herrings We succumb to faulty thinking Perspective narrows under stress Healthy growth comes from self awareness, courage and humility

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www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10

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Nick: Hospital Chief Executive

  • 1. CLIENT HAS A TROUBLED RELATIONSHIP

Could be with peer, partner, boss – or the whole organization Coach’s underlying assumption: we are always part of the problem, even if all we have done is ‘nothing’ Coach’s challenge 1 Ask: ‘What’s your own responsibility for what has happened/what is going on?’

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www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10

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The relationship really matters The client has already tried all the obvious solutions Challenge Try some version of ‘the empty chair’: The simplest version is: ‘Let’s both stand up for a moment. Sit in my chair and imagine you are the other person looking at you in that empty chair. How do you feel? What do you see? Or even just ‘If you were in their shoes, how would you feel?’

  • 2. CLIENT HAS A RELATIONSHIP CRISIS

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www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10

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Nick: Hospital Chief Executive

  • 3. THE CLIENT IS UNAWARE OF SOME ASPECT OF

THEIR BEHAVIOUR

Examples

Compulsive talker/interrupter Seems intimidating Lacks assertiveness with you/compulsive apologizer Overwhelms with detail/never gives detail Arrives late/cancels at short notice/seems unmotivated Denies the problems they cause with others Solution: feedback: the single most underused coaching technique

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www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10

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CRITICISM AND FEEDBACK: THE DIFFERENCES

CRITICISM FEEDBACK

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

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www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10

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1. Face up to your reluctance; check on your motive 2. Ask permission: ‘May I offer you some feedback?’ 3. ‘What I noticed….’ Describe: facts, observation, behaviour 1.

  • r

4. ‘I sensed….’ NB no judgements 5. ‘The impact on me was….’ 6. ‘And I’m wondering…’ 7. Ask other person for their view 8. Coach around what emerges

HOW TO GIVE CLIENTS FEEDBACK: 7 vital steps

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www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10

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The client is unusually animated

  • or unusually silent
  • or suddenly looks tired

You feel tired, bored, irritated, animated, engaged The client seems disengaged or unhappy Coach’s challenge: offer feedback in the here and now Ask what’s going on for the client Say what’s going on for you and what you notice in the client and in yourself

  • 4. SOMETHING IS DIFFERENT IN THE

CONVERSATION

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www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10

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It has a ‘round and round’ feel You notice that you feel anxious The word ‘I’ is intruding more and more into your own words You feel an overwhelming need to find a solution for the client and to press your advice on to him or her Coach’s challenge: tackle it Ask what’s going on for the client Say what’s going on for you Most likely cause: you are working on the wrong goal

  • 5. SOMETHING IS DEFINITELY WRONG IN THE

CONVERSATION

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www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10

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Shrugs shoulders, ‘I don’t know: you tell me’ ‘Sent’ by someone else? Client’s agenda items are all about changing someone or something else, about what is ‘out there’ not what is ‘in here’ Coach’s challenge: coaching is about personal change, so if in client’s view nothing needs to change in their own behavior, then coaching can’t happen Double check what is going on in client’s life, eg since you last saw them Give them a moment to review and reflect If there’s still no agenda then wish them well and say goodbye’

  • 6. THE CLIENT DOESN’T HAVE AN AGENDA

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www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10

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Coach’s challenge: do 3-way contracting where you encourage boss and client to be frank Run a bespoke 360 exercise for the client where you interview his or her colleagues and write a tactful but no-holds barred report

  • 7. BOSS THINKS CLIENT NEEDS COACHING,

CLIENT IS BAFFLED

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www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10

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  • 8. THE CLIENT HAS MADE A SERIOUS

MISTAKE

Examples Failed to act on a whistleblower’s information Gave a disastrous presentation Bullied a colleague Failed to check out an important process Inadvertently caused a serious accident or incident What NOT to do Collude: ‘it wasn’t your fault’ Trivialize: ‘We all make mistakes’

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www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10

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WHEN THE CLIENT HAS MADE A SERIOUS MISTAKE

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’

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www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10

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Examples Everything is black or white: no shades of grey Profound pessimism: if bad things can happen, they can happen to me Health anxiety Helplessness Always someone else’s fault Everything should be perfect Coach’s challenge: offer feedback on what you have observed Ask for client’s response

  • 9. THE CLIENT DEMONSTRATES FLAWED

THINKING PATTERNS

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www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10

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Examples Health: ignoring an obvious symptom Legal: about to so something which is against the law Is unaware of facts which could endanger themselves or others Proposed actions may imperil an important relationship After exploring, checking for understanding, looking at upsides and downsides etc with the client, it may be essential to offer them plain speaking/advice

  • 10. THE CLIENT IS AT RISK IN SOME WAY

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www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10

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There are legal or medical issues with clear right/wrong answers It’s a crisis and needs rapid action You have a duty of care: there is physical or moral danger The client cannot make their own decisions You are offering facts not opinions The subject is complex and bewildering: you have genuine expertise Giving advice is unlikely to create dependency Your own motivation is entirely positive

WHEN IT’S ESSENTIAL TO OFFER ADVICE

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www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10

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Coach’s challenge: offer straightforward information and advice Stress your concern for the client Follow this by stressing the client’s autonomy

  • and encouraging disagreement

THE CLIENT IS AT RISK contd/

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www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10

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Examples Drinking at work; severe addiction problems of other sorts Suicidal ideation Mental health problems Coach’s challenge: Rapport ; question to understand; summarise and explore Offer feedback including your own concerns and feelings Coach the client around finding help Last resort: break confidentiality

VARIANT: THE CLIENT COULD SERIOUSLY ENDANGER SELF OR OTHERS

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www.JennyRogersCoaching.com Twitter: @JennyRogers10