coaching your employees, march 2014

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Coaching your Photo by Ashraful Kadir [link ] employees Ed Batista March 20, 2014 An HBR Exchange Webinar

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Slides from my HBR Exchange webinar on "Coaching Your Employees." Topics include Leadership roles, When coaching works (and when it doesn't), Coaching tools, Coaching traps, and Putting it into practice.

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Coaching your

Photo by Ashraful Kadir [link]

employees

Ed Batista

March 20, 2014

An HBR Exchange Webinar

Page 2: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Photo: Seth Anderson

Who am I?

Executive coach

Instructor @ Stanford GSB

www.edbatista.com

HBR Guide to Coaching Your Employees

Page 3: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Photo: Seth Anderson

Why coachingmatters to me

Started as a client

Changed my view of leadership

Impact on my clients & MBA students

Page 4: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

AgendaThe headline

Leadership roles

When coaching works (& when it

doesn’t)

Coaching tools

Coaching traps

Putting it into practice

Photo by Theresa Thompson [link]

Page 5: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

The headlineCoaching is an essential leadership

role…

…that can result in huge benefits

…but it’s not an all-purpose tool

…& it requires specific skills

Photo by Garry Knight [link]

Page 6: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Leadership roles

Photo by Keoni Cabral [link]

Page 7: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Leadership rolesHeroic

leader

Expert

Trainer

Evangelist

Post-heroic

Coach

Mentor

Motivator

Page 8: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Leadership rolesExpert

Provides answers

Domain knowledge is basis for

authority

Page 9: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Leadership rolesExpert

Trainer

Focused on the task at hand

Shows what is to be done (& how to do

it better)

Page 10: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Leadership rolesExpert

Trainer

Evangelist

Spreads a message

Rallys others to the cause

Page 11: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Leadership rolesHeroic

leader

Expert

Trainer

Evangelist

Post-

heroic

Coach

Mentor

Motivator

Page 12: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Leadership rolesCoach

Offers questions

Helps others discover their own

answers

Page 13: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Leadership rolesCoach

Mentor

Focused on others’ development

Long-term growth > immediate

performance

Page 14: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Leadership rolesCoach

Mentor

Motivator

Message-agnostic

Helps others’ identify their goals

Page 15: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Leadership rolesIncreasing emphasis on post-heroic

But highly contextual

Coaching ≠ all-purpose tool

Must fit your needs as a leader

Page 16: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

When does

Photo by Antony Stanley [link]

coaching work?

Page 17: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

When does coaching work?

High-potentials

(Long-term development)

Page 18: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

When does coaching work?

High-potentials

Knowledge workers

(They’re the experts, not you)

Page 19: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

When does coaching work?

High-potentials

Knowledge workers

Commitment > control

(Intrinsic motivation is key)

Page 20: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

When does

Photo by Ed Yourdon [link]

coaching not work?

Page 21: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

When does coaching not

work?Serious underperformers

(Coaching ≠ a performance plan)

Page 22: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

When does coaching not

work?Serious underperformers

When you have the answers

(Asking leading questions ≠ coaching)

Page 23: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

When does coaching not

work?Serious underperformers

When you have the answers

Control > commitment

(Heroic leadership isn’t obsolete)

Page 24: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

But ask yourself…Are they really underperformers?

It may be an attribution error

Page 25: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

But ask yourself…Are they really underperformers?

Do I really have the answers?

It may be comforting to think so

Page 26: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

But ask yourself…Are they really underperformers?

Do I really have the answers?

Is control really more important?

Perhaps I need to let go

Page 27: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

But ask yourself…Are they really underperformers?

Do I really have the answers?

Is control really more important?

If the answer is No, coaching may work

Page 28: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Coaching tools

Photo by zzpza [link]

Page 29: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Coaching toolsCoaching mindset

Listening skills

Powerful questions

Modes of inquiry

Emotion management

Effective feedback

Page 30: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Carol Dweck

Perceptions shape reality

How do we perceive our abilities?

How do we perceive our mistakes?

Mindset

Photo by Mike Disharoon [link]

Page 31: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Talent & intelligence are inherent traits

Mistakes are failures or character flaws

Negative emotional response to mistakes

Talent & intelligence can be developed

Mistakes are learning opportunities

Pay close attention to mistakes & learn more

Fixed Growth

Mindset

Adapted from Carol Dweck [link]

Page 32: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

A coachingmindset

Photo by Andrew Yee [link]

Page 33: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

A coachingmindset

Growth mindset applied to employees

Emphasis on learning

Support + challenge

Empathy + accountability

Not trying to “fix”

Adapted from Hunt & Weintraub [link]

Page 34: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Listening skills

Photo by Ed Yourdon [link]

Page 35: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Listening skillsFocused attention > time

Make the other feel heard

How they feel > what you hear

Eliminate distractions

Cultivate presence

Page 36: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Powerful

Photo by Erik Charlton [link]

questions

Page 37: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Powerful

Getting beyond Yes or No

What…? & How…? > Why…?

Maximize openness & reflection

Minimize defensiveness

Ask once & stop

questions

Page 38: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Modes of inquiry

Photo by Garry Knight [link]

Page 39: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Leadership rolesExpert

Trainer

Evangelist

Coach

Mentor

Motivator

Page 40: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Leadership rolesAdvocacy Inquiry

Page 41: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Leadership rolesCoaching is inquiry

Leadership also requires advocacy

Finding the right balance is the key

Page 42: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Modes of inquiryPure inquiry

Starts with receptivity (even

silence)

Key is avoiding presumptive

questions

Adapted from Edgar Schein [link]

Page 43: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Modes of inquiryPure inquiry

Diagnostic inquiry

Focus & redirect

Feelings, motives, actions

Adapted from Edgar Schein [link]

Page 44: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Modes of inquiryPure inquiry

Diagnostic inquiry

Confrontational inquiry

Introduces new ideas &

hypotheses

Substitutes the coach’s narrative

Adapted from Edgar Schein [link]

Page 45: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Modes of inquiryPure inquiry

Diagnostic inquiry

Confrontational inquiry

Process inquiry

Focus on the coaching relationship

Infrequent but essential

Adapted from Edgar Schein [link]

Page 46: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Emotion

Photo by Ed Yourdon [link]

management

Page 47: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Emotionmanagement

Emotion awareness

Sensing

Understanding

Emotion regulation

Verbalizing

Expressing

Page 48: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Emotionmanagement

Reasoning = just the tip of the iceberg

Emotions = vaster, faster, more

powerful

Work in concert, not in opposition

(Not always)

Photo by NOAA [link]

Page 49: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Emotionmanagement

Regulation ≠ suppression

Emotions convey emphasis

Emotional experiences stick

Photo by NOAA [link]

Page 50: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Emotionmanagement

Critical for coaching managers

You will have strong feelings

And we’re leaky

Investment > attachment

Page 51: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Effectivefeedback

Photo by Ana Karenina [link]

Page 52: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Effective

Essential to managerial coaching

(But it is a form of advocacy)

feedback

Page 53: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Effective

Social threat

Feedback is stressful

Minimize threat response

feedback

Page 54: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Effective

Social threat

Cultivate the relationship

Make the other feel known

Respond to bids

Regularly express appreciation

feedback

Page 55: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Effective

Social threat

Cultivate the relationship

Avoid defensive triggers

The net (David Bradford)

feedback

Page 56: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

My behavior… Actions Statements Non-Verbals

Needs Motives

Intentions

Feelings Reactions

Responses

The netMe and

my…

You and your…

Photo by The Mighty Tim Inconnu [link]

Page 57: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

The netStay on our side of the net

Focus on observed behavior

Disclose our response

When you do [X], I feel [Y].

Minimize defensive triggers

Photo by The Mighty Tim Inconnu [link]

Page 58: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Traps for the coaching manager

Photo by Casey Fleser [link]

Page 59: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Traps for the coaching manager

Giving advice prematurely

Overpowering resistance

Creating dependence

Excessive support

Insufficient support

Adapted from Edgar Schein [link]

Page 60: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Putting it intopractice

Photo by Erich Ferdinand [link]

Page 61: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Putting it intopractice

Coaching moments (Attention > time)

But gauge readiness

Make coaching normal

Not a “performance review”

Celebrate small victories

Page 62: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Experientiallearning

Act

Reflect

Conceptualize

ApplyWhat will I do

more of, less of, start or stop the next time?

What do these results imply?

What conclusions can I draw?

What happened?

What resultedfrom my actions?

Page 63: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Experientiallearning

Act

What?

So What?

Now What?

Page 64: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Experientiallearning

Wash, rinse, repeat

(Over and over again)

Page 65: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Resources

Photo by See-ming Lee [link]

Page 66: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

ResourcesFor more on post-heroic leadership…

David Bradford & Allen Cohen,

Power Up

Page 67: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

ResourcesFor more on leadership roles…

Pierluigi Pugliese,

Scrum Master as Team Coach

& Ed Batista,

Leading in Four Dimensions

Page 68: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

ResourcesFor more on mindset in general…

Carol Dweck, Mindset

& Ed Batista,

The Meaning of Mindset

Page 69: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

ResourcesFor more on a coaching mindset…

James Hunt & Joseph Weintraub,

The Coaching Manager

Page 70: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

ResourcesFor more on inquiry & coaching traps…

Edgar Schein, Helping

Page 71: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

ResourcesFor more on inquiry…

Edgar Schein, Humble Inquiry

Page 72: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

ResourcesFor more on emotion…

Antonio Damasio, Descartes’ Error

Page 73: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

ResourcesFor more on emotion in

organizations…

Vanessa Druskat & Steven Wolff,

Building the Emotional Intelligence of

Groups

Page 74: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

ResourcesFor more on feedback & all of the

above…

HBR Guide to Coaching Your Employees

Page 75: Coaching Your Employees, March 2014

Thank you

Photo by Alex Guerrero [link]

Follow me @edbatista

Read more at www.edbatista.com