Coaching, Mentoring and Managing: A Coach Guidebook

(Steven Felgate) #1
186

Possible
“Kevin, have you thought of anything that might
be preventing your ability to improve since we
talked last?”
Better
“Kevin, if you had to name two or three things that
keep you from performing as well as you want to,
what would they be?”


  1. Don’t counsel Kevin alone. He should be aware that a
    third person will be nearby — perhaps just outside your
    meeting place. Having this person in the room would
    jeopardize the confidential environment most counseling
    sessions benefit from, but his presence could provide a
    supportive account of any incidents you anticipate.


Make Sure the Changes Are Behavior-Related

For every counseling session, the desired changes should be
aimed at behavior, not attitude. That’s the only real change you
can measure with someone — and the only change that ultimately
alters attitude.

Determine Your Minimum Standard of Performance

You must have a measuring stick. You must know what you
should reasonably want. The team member can help determine
how to rise to that standard, but you alone must define the
standard.

Coaching, Mentoring and Managing

5


The only real
change you can
make in someone
is in behavior,
not attitude. T

E


A


M


F


L


Y


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