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Being a 'Good-Enough' Coach is the Best that we can Be...

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Rob Thompson
8
Rob Thompson
Coach, United Kingdom

Being a 'Good-Enough' Coach is the Best that we can Be...

Working as coaches we detect and explore the patterns which reveal pictures of a client's inner landscape – a window to their 'inner-selves' perhaps? To contain that narrative, we explore our own relationships with the content – at some level referencing our inner-selves to find meaning and feeling. Sometimes this is conscious thinking about similar issues in our own lives and how they resonate with our own attitudes and beliefs.

Working with one school leader recently, it became clear that his beliefs towards the academic potential of students from disadvantaged backgrounds was very different to that of students from more affluent families. This counter-resonated with my own beliefs and I experienced a strong somatic response. I considered the position of the school leader. He was under pressure to improve exam results, student behaviour was becoming difficult to manage, staff absences were the highest they had ever been whilst responding to the CoVID pandemic.

Afterwards, I thought about how being a parent had clear parallels with what happened in the coaching session. Winnicott's (1958) concept of the 'good enough mother' came to mind and with it the need to be a 'good-enough coach'. He described how from the moment that babies are born, they are immersed in the relationship with the mother. In the ongoing relationship, the anxieties or feelings a child cannot manage are projected towards the mother (Klein 1923). She introjects such feelings, contains them and returns them in a more manageable form and with new meaning. She contains her own anger, shame and fears as she empathises with the child. As the child encounters a new relationship between mother and father, she sees herself as an independent entity. Parents adopt roles over time which increase levels of independence. Periods of frustration are useful to the child to adapt to different circumstances. If a mother's complete commitment to baby's needs doesn't decrease, then the child's sense of a real external world is distorted. The illusion that expressing a need always results in immediate caring does not allow the child to experience a world which does not always conform to her needs.

In my coaching encounter I contained the emotions and perspectives of the coachee. In re-projecting these experiences, I created the conditions for the coachee to perceive a new reality. In this case, discussing the pressures he was under allowed him to explain that his frustration was with a system that demanded fast results and that this was being expressed as distorted attitudes towards groups of students. As I 'bore-witness' to this re-narration, the coachee created new directions for supporting his team to work with these students. By acting in 'third position', I used his experiences to challenge him to re-imagine what could be done, rather than being bogged down in the present.

Being a 'good-enough coach' is a complex balance of listening, containing, interpreting and externalising. In Western's (2012) Paternal-maternal-paternal (PMP) model for coaching, paternal and maternal descriptors are metaphors for any adult in either parenting or coaching scenarios:
- The maternal role involves the importance of relationship, listening, containment and reframing.
- Paternal roles involve engaging the client with the external world to address the issues and put them to work. This challenges clients to transfer learning into new actions or behaviours. Otherwise as coaches we collude, and relationships become too therapeutic. This ultimately serves no purpose as the status quo is retained.
⇨ Do you view your own coaching in this 'good enough' way?

Klein, M. (1923). The Development of a Child. International Journal of Psycho-Analysis, 4, 419-474
Western, S. (2012). Coaching and Mentoring: A Critical Text (1st ed). SAGE Publications Ltd.
Winnicott, D.W. (1958). Collected Papers. Through Paediatrics to Psycho-Analysis, London: Tavistock Publications.

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  Philippe Guenet
4
Philippe Guenet
Coach, United Kingdom
 

Business Coaching Should not be About Solutions

I am also a coach (ICF coach) with a focus on Business / Leadership and particularly Systemic Coaching (team coaching).
I'm not so focused on the lifestyle / career / personal coaching but rather after helping organisations and leadership to become better.
I find that my coaching is often compromised by the situation. Clients want solutions, they don't find the time to invest in themselves and in the team relationships. They want expertise from you and it is difficult to explain to them that behaviours and leadership style or team relationships are not something that you tell, but something you work at. Agile so called coaching has polluted the landscape massively and done so much damage to the idea of coaching.
So, I am having to dance between the stance of a mentor and the stance of a coach. This is certainly not as good as I would want to be a coach.
Many of those clients definitely need a coach, but they do not want to buy coaching.

  Jaap de Jonge
3
Jaap de Jonge
Editor, Netherlands
 

Forms of Business Coaching

Some thoughts. Quite a few people indeed neither understand the differences between various facilitative interventions styles, nor the consequences of choosing one or the other coaching / consulting approach. There are many reasons for that.
I recommend to start the assignment with building a very thorough understanding of the situation of the coachee. Probably that situation is really complex… After that phase you are in a better position to explain the pros and cons of potentially applicable approaches as well as which one you believe is best for the client and why.
In my opinion the client decides and should decide upon the facilitation style s/he is going to pay for.
If ultimately you don't agree with a coachee on the approach to use, that's OK. Communicate that clearly and walk away with dignity. You will win their trust and when the client finds out you were right after all, s/he may come back to you. Or s/he recommends you to someone else.

  Rob Thompson
1
Rob Thompson
Coach, United Kingdom
 

Taking a Coaching 'stance'

@Philippe Guenet: I recognise what you say here Phillipe, and Jaap is also correct in that if a client is paying for services then they will probably hold the trump card on their meaning of coaching. ...

  Philippe Guenet
1
Philippe Guenet
Coach, United Kingdom
 

Coaching Stance and Firefighters

@Rob Thompson: I wish that it was a topic of conversation, very difficult to approach it. Only the more advanced people in the more advanced organisations tend to be open to it, because often, people ...

  Jaap de Jonge
1
Jaap de Jonge
Editor, Netherlands
 

(Selling) Coaching Requires a Very Good Relation

@Philippe Guenet: Many people are open to consider changes in their own life/behavior/worldview only at certain special moments in their life. That could for example be during an education program or ...

  Philippe Guenet
0
Philippe Guenet
Coach, United Kingdom
 

Coaching Needs Rapport

Yes, I know this and coaching (especially individuals) even requires rapport and intimacy. It makes it that much more difficult to stand up such a business. With this said, change should be more and...

  Maurice Hogarth
1
Maurice Hogarth
Consultant, United Kingdom
 

Reality of Expectations in Coaching

"Good enough" is a statement of quality. It is adequate, sufficient, meets the need. Good enough. In every aspect of our lives we have levels of expectation. For the "cheap & nasty" a low level, for ...

  Gera
1
Gera
Teacher, Kenya
 

When the Future is Uncertain, Coaching Loses its Space

Working with students who learn in current very challenging environment I found out that students' main challenges are related to making a better decision that balances both the present and future nee...

 

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Special Interest Group


More on Coaching
Summary Discussion Topics
topic Coaching by Managers and by Leaders
topic The GROW Model / Coaching Framework
topic Team Coaching by Managers
topic The Enneagram of 9 Personalities. Types and Centers
topic Mentoring versus Coaching
topic The Coach as a Facilitator for Self-Findings
topic Has Coaching Become Too Technical?
🔥 ACT Hexaflex Therapy and Business Coaching
topic Qualities of a Good Coach. Checklist
topic Preconditions for Successful Coaching
topic Coach People's Strengths or Weaknesses?
topic Assumptions of Coaching: You Can Change and Develop Yourself
topic Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy (REBT)
topic Effective Coaching
topic The Impact of Personal Coaching
topic Coaching is Expert-aided Goal-oriented Learning
topic Why Leaders Need Coaching
topic Coaching as Social Capital
topic Does Business Coaching Really Work?
topic How to Get Help from Someone Else?
topic Teacher Professional Development (TPD) Models
topic The Need for Relational Coaching
topic Using Incentives and Rewards in Coaching
topic Coaching and Pedagogy
topic Qualitative and Quantitative Benefits of Coaching
topic Use of the Body in Coaching
👀Being a 'Good-Enough' Coach is the Best that we can Be...
topic How to Raise Productivity by Coaching?
topic The Wheel of Life: Balance your Life
topic Psychodynamics, Coaching and the Validity of All Emotions
topic The Empowerment Corner: Unleashing your Full Potential Through Personal Guidance
Special Interest Group
Knowledge Center

Coaching



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