Coaching is used as a leadership development tool to help leaders improve their skills. It involves assessing leaders through tools like 360 reviews and developing individualized plans. Coaches work privately with leaders, challenging them and providing support to enact meaningful changes over multiple sessions. When implemented successfully as part of an organizational development program, coaching can help address leaders' specific needs and lead to promotions or improved performance. The relationship between coach and coachee is important, as is ensuring coaches have proper training and ethical standards.
Cybersecurity Awareness Training Presentation v2024.03
Ganesh chella on leveraging coaching to develop leaders
1. The Eighth Oil & Gas HR Round Table
Creating Gen Next Oil & Gas Business Leaders
Leveraging the power of Coaching to develop leaders
A practitioner’s perspective
August 27, 2009
3. o How leaders develop
o What is Coaching
o What do Coaches actually do behind closed doors
o How is Coaching actually used to develop leaders
o Two cases
o What determines success and RoI
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5. How do leaders develop?
There is a difference between Leader development is not
ordinary experiences and an event but a process
developmental experiences that takes time
Leaders develop when they are
exposed to developmental
experiences.
Development has to be
integrated into work and
cannot stand alone
5 CCL’s leader development model
6. The key ingredients of leader development
o Any developmental experience is effective if it has all of the following
three ingredients:
Coaching is one of the
1. Assessment
most powerful
developmental experiences
2. Challenge
It meets all these three
3. Support criteria
6 CCL’s leader development model
8. What is Coaching?
o Coaching is a personalised helping relationship between a
coach and a client within a productive and result-oriented
context.
o Coaching is about reinventing oneself, creating new stories,
new identities and new futures.
o Coaching is set in an organizational context.
o Coaching is specific, need based, time bound and
measurable.
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9. Coaching is a multi-disciplinary profession
Its scientific roots can be traced to
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10. How Coaching entered Leader Development as a sub-discipline
of Consulting Psychology
o Many firms started offering psychological services to corporations after World war II.
o Initial practices included
- Psychological testing
- Team development
o Many consultants advised their clients on how they could operate or change their
organisations
o Leadership development was increasingly emphasising self awareness and
behavioural change to enhance performance
o A variety of executive assessment approaches including assessment centers and 360
not only gave executives the opportunity for feedback, but also created the need for
skilled professionals to help understand the feedback.
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11. Training, Coaching and Therapy
Teach Training
Behavioural
Modify Behaviour Coaching
Most executives Transformational
Modify Thinking
are Coaching
psychologically
healthy and do
not need
therapy
Eliminate Root Cause Therapy
Coaching is deeper than training but not as deep as therapy!
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13. What do Coaches
actually do behind
closed doors?
…… they work with psychologically healthy executives who
are performing well to help them find solutions to their
problems and fully utilise their potential.
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14. What do Coaches
actually do behind the
closed doors?
…… Coaches are engaging in highly skillful conversations –
in which they listen, empathise, probe, discover the real
stories, self-disclose, confront, challenge and encourage.
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15. What do Coaches
actually do behind the
closed doors?
……. they are constantly ensuring that there is a goal towards
which he and the executive are working, a goal that the
executive is committed to - a goal that will give the
executive true leverage and value.
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16. What do Coaches
actually do behind the
closed doors?
……. they are also helping the executive evolve strategies
and action plans that will help him achieve the goals
chosen by him within a defined time frame.
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17. What do Coaches
actually do behind the
closed doors?
…… they are using behavioural or psychometric tools to
assess the Executive’s current behaviour or personality
preferences to expand his self awareness, make him more
choiceful in new situations.
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18. What do Coaches actually
do behind the closed
doors?
…… Coaches are demonstrating the highest level of human
values, so the executive finds the journey of self discovery and
growth safe and supportive.
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19. What do Coaches
actually do behind the
closed doors?
…… Coaches uphold strong ethical standards.
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21. There are several steps involved in setting
up a coaching program in a leadership
development context
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22. Typical ingredients in a leader development initiative
Identification of The leadership The leadership
potential development roadmap competency
framework
Individual Cross functional The sponsorship /
readiness exposure manager support
Find Coaches and set Development
Assessment up the Leadership Planning
and Feedback development Coaching
process
Real World Learning inputs to
challenges / big build concepts, Reviews
break perspectives and skills
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23. Finding Coaches and setting up the Coaching
relationship
Pre-engagement process
Clarifying contractual issues
o Choosing the right Coach o Clarifying the agenda
o Duration
o Clarifying the leadership
o Number of sessions
development context o Data requirements
o Ensuring right chemistry o Confidentiality
o Reporting requirements
o Aligning the Coach, Client
o Commercial terms
and Supervising Manager o Reviews
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24. Finding Coaches and setting up the Coaching
relationship
The Right Coach
o Has a genuine interest in people Global Standards that matter
o Has good professional credentials o 200 hours of training
o Skills
o Has been trained through a program o Process
that has globally acceptable rigour o Tool
o Psychology grounding
o Has a system perspective but is also o About 50-100 hours of on-going
psychologically minded practice
o Regular supervision
o Is governed by ethical standards
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25. Assessment & Feedback
o Coaches and leaders need
assessment data to work on
o 360 degree feedback is widely used
360 data
o Psychometric tools may be used
where required
– MBTI
– FIRO-B Psychometric data
– Thomas Profiling
– Belbin’s team role inventory
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26. Helping the client come up with a development plan and
implementing it is an integral part of the Coaching
engagement.
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27. Typical needs that Coaches address
o Better delegation
o Getting out of micro managing
o Enhancing executive stature
o Building assertiveness
o Managing seniors, young employees
o Learning to think strategically
o Increasing managerial skills - planning, leading, controlling, decision
making.
o Enhancing flexibility in behavioural responses
o Coping with stress
o Developing a vision for one’s career
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29. An Organisation story
o Client: Leading provider of telecommunications equipment and
related services to mobile and fixed network operators globally.
o Wanted Coaching as a part of their leaders development initiative for 9
coachees based in two cities
o Mid to senior level managers
o 6 sessions with each coachee
o Information made available:
− internal tool similar to the MBTI
− a detailed 360 degree report
− a detailed analysis of each coachee
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30. The Organisation story
o Coaches assigned by CFI after matching profiles and preferences
o All 9 coachees completed their 6 sessions over a period of 8- 10 months
o Broad needs identified:
Communication
Improvement in Self-presentation
Networking skills
Outcome - 8 of the coachees were promoted!
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31. Voices
o “The last two months has seen some significant improvement in the way I
am perceived within the firm. There are leaders from other offerings who
count on me now to provide feedback to their respective businesses though
I am no expert in their domains.”
o “I thoroughly enjoyed interacting with the coach. I felt I could open up
with him and tell him what I think is right and what deserved to change.
There were times when I could use that time to introspect and speak my
mind which we normally tend to avoid. Infact, in many meetings I was
playing the role of a key contributor than just a listener.”
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32. More voices..
o “It was good to have a sounding board – Coach S was someone who has
climbed up the corporate rung taking in stride a lot of challenges. His
personal experiences helped and most importantly, he is someone who is
not directly involved in your day to day professional life.”
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33. The individual story
Client: The HR Head of a mid-sized pharma company who was part of
a leadership development initiative.
o He had undertaken a 360, MBTI and FIRO – B.
o His 360 pointed out to “focus on execution” being a challenge.
o Coaching dialogue pointed out to deeper issues with being “attuned to the
needs of others” leading to poor execution.
o Coachee committed to this goal and made clear strategies and action plans
o Execution on key projects and emerging HR issues has improved
significantly in the last 6 months.
o The CEO is pleased with his progress.
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