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Your Executive Coaching Solution: Getting Maximum Benefit from the Coaching Experience (Repost)

Posted By: nebulae
Your Executive Coaching Solution: Getting Maximum Benefit from the Coaching Experience (Repost)

Joan Kofodimos, "Your Executive Coaching Solution: Getting Maximum Benefit from the Coaching Experience"
English | 2007 | ISBN: 0891062211 | 161 pages | PDF | 3 MB

Coaching in business has come a long way! Once used primarily to deal with problem employees, this powerful tool for building strategic effectiveness and supporting executives through career transitions has become a badge of status for today's high-potential leaders. Although much has been written for practicing coaches, Joan Kofodimos delivers a first-of-its-kind user's guide for coaching consumers. Dozens of checklists, samples, and life-inspired case examples take readers through each and every step of a successful coaching process to benefit participants, coaching sponsors, and the organization's ROI.



Summary: Good information
Rating: 5

Used the steps defined in the book to help a co-worker improve his performance. Very specific and relevant information.


Summary: Understanding Executive Coaching
Rating: 5

In this easy to read primer - intended for executives considering the application of one-on-one coaching for themselves or someone within their organization - by highly experienced executive coach Joan Kofodimos, the reader gets a complete description of how individual executive coaching works. Starting with a discussion of coaching's potential value; Kofodimos identifies when to use coaching and how to choose a coach; as well as walks the reader through the coaching processes from initial performance contracting to the completion and closure process.

In the opening sections we learn:
* All coaching is not the same - development needs determine the shape of the coaching assignment. The author considers the following three as typical: 1) to address performance issues; 2) to support position transition needs; and 3) to enhance strategic effectiveness.
* Coaching may not be the solution - whether coaching can help depends upon the readiness of both the individual and the organization.
* The coach should fit the need - the coach's competencies and defined role should be identified when choosing a coach.

From the coaching process discussion we learn:
* The distinction between the contracts with the sponsor and the person to be coached
* How the insight phase gathers data, presents feedback, and creates the development plan
* How the development cycle works and repeats itself as new behavioral skills are put into practice
* How closure of the coaching process is really a transition to self-development

In summary, the book is a complete guide to understanding the individual executive coaching process, with a particular focus on individual development. I liked the examples and output samples provided and appreciated the strong emphasis on doing sound background development work (building sponsor as well as coachee commitment, insight development, etc.) before beginning the actual coaching (development cycle) process. I also liked the fact that the author did not feel the need to use her book as a platform to promote herself or her firm, Teleos Consulting - her competency is evident in her understanding of how to do executive coaching. My only regret with the book is that the author might have included a chapter on how the process works when combining organizational coaching (the team element) with one-on-one executive coaching.

Dennis DeWilde, author of
"The Performance Connection"
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