BOOK SUMMARY 151 Becoming a Coaching Leader
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Summary written by: Jennifer Fitzgerald Hansen
"The way to enjoy success yourself is to focus on
the success of those around you, by making THEIR success YOUR mission. Help
them to figure out how to win both in their career and in life, and you will
enjoy both success and significance."
- Becoming a Coaching Leader, page 36
In his
book Becoming a Coaching Leader, Daniel Harkavy wants to provide
leaders within an organization the opportunity to become great coaches. It
doesn’t matter your title, manager, director or VP, you are already a coach so
why not become a great one? In order to develop and grow those employees around
you, Harkavy gives more than the what and why but more of the how to become a
coaching leader. The entire book encompasses the coaching sessions his business
would provide you if you hired his group to come to your organization. This
book allows you to transform both your personal as well as professional life
along with that of your team.
The Golden Egg
The Tools In Your Coaching Tool Box: A Blueprint
"A
Coach comes in and helps them to see even more possibilities ... helps them
make additional changes that will enable them to benefit even more ... ask the
right questions and clarify and recall their conviction ... [which] will assist
them to change their habits so that they can become even more successful and
purposeful."- Becoming a Coaching Leader, page 39
Harkavy
sees the role of a coach as being a combination of multiple roles, each with
different abilities and strengths. The ‘coach’ is not just resigned to a
singular skillset of counselor or teacher or trainer or consultant or mentor or
coach. Instead, he believes the skills enjoyed by each of these roles needs to
be encompassed within a great coach. Sometime you are one, sometimes you are
another, so it is important to have all the skills necessary to support and
grow your clients or team members.
So,
what makes a GREAT coach? According to Harkavy, great coaches have mastered the
following eight core competencies:
1. Discernment –
“the ability to see what is not visible, to understand what is not being said.”
2. Conviction driven –
great coaches have deep convictions about the way things should be done.
3. Accountability –
which enables a coach to provide the necessary follow-up and encouragement in
order to help people achieve what they want to accomplish.
4. Uses systems effectively – tracking is essential in coaching, so having the
‘right’ system for accountability, for note taking, for follow up, for
encouragement is imperative.
5. Communication –
the ability to listen, to question and to envision and then to communicate in a
clear, concise way to the client what needs to be done.
6. Self-discipline –
consistency in the coach’s behaviour as well as the client’s is imperative in
order for the client to succeed. “Our convictions drive our disciplines.”
7. Vision oriented –
the coach needs to have the ability to see what a client can become as well as
the qualities, abilities and experiences that will enable success.
8. Leadership –
for Harkavy, great coaches are great leaders. People must be willing to follow
you to be successful.
When
Harkavy contrasts good coaches and great coaches, it all comes down to great
coaches providing opportunity for what can be and leading people “boldly and
positively into the future.” I loved his idea to coach with passion in order to
have more successes!
Gem #1
The Coaching Leader's Most Valuable Tool: Your Life Plan
"While
some good undoubtedly comes from goal setting, I much prefer life planning.
When you choose life planning, you understand that every decision you make will
enable you to either increase or decrease your net worth – not in dollars and
cents alone, but in every part of your existence."- Becoming a Coaching
Leader, page 58
This
idea differed the most from other coaching books I have read. Here Harkavy
speaks to the need to assess where you are in life right now and what are the
most important aspects. He then has you write a vision for each area along with
strategies to increase “your net worth in each area”. These areas may
include your life with your partner, your children, and your health – whatever
matters to you. Harkavy suggests you spend a minimum of eight hours doing this
particular exercise. This is to be done without anyone else around, not while
you are answering emails or drafting proposals. This is solid ‘thought’ time. He
has walked away from business clients who didn’t want to start here and instead
wanted to dive into the ‘business’ planning side of things.
After
completing your life plan, you start to schedule time to follow through on the
strategies you have identified to help you with each aspect of your life. You
are to use your life plan to form the bones of next week’s schedule [see GEM
#2]. And this life plan is not a secret – share it with those around you, for
both support as well as affirmation of what is important to you.
Gem #2
Schedule Your Day ... or They Will
"If
you don't identify your top priorities and schedule your day around them, at
the end of the day you'll always find yourself using leftover space to cram in
what you consider important. And you know the worst thing? That's usually
exhaustion time."- Becoming a Coaching Leader, page 118
This
partly relates to GEM #1. As a coach, once you have identified the important
parts of your life—and that does include the work aspect—set up your day for
success. One of Harkavy’s suggestions is to know your hourly wage; are you
working on something that should be done by someone in your pay scale or should
it be passed on to someone else while you work on more important work? People
will put lots of demands on your time; you need to decide which things
require your attention.
Harkavy
quotes the legendary coach of the Dallas Cowboys, Tom Landry, who once said, “A
coach is someone who tells you what you don’t want to hear and has you see what
you don’t want to see, so that you can be who you’ve always known you could
be.”
Each
chapter ends with a summary of all the key benefits of implementing the ideas
and strategies previously discussed in the chapter, which allows the reader a
straight forward, to-do list for execution. The benefits are divided into those
for your team members, as well as your organization or company as well as how
the skills will help you as an individual. Often the reinforcement of multiple
benefits for a variety of stakeholders is part of the drive to make the
necessary changes in our habits to go from good to great. This book will have a
positive impact for both team members, the company as a whole and the coach
leading his people into impactful change!
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