Coaching, Mentoring and Managing: A Coach Guidebook

(Steven Felgate) #1
verbal acuity (not to mention some tap-dancing thrown in,
perhaps). Balancing individual needs and team needs is as tough
as looking at the short-term and long-term goals you are
constantly reassessing.
A second balancing act with regard to integrating your
individual and potential stars into a strong team deals with the
approaches and the steps of the StaffCoaches™ themselves. What
you have been doing for and with the individual team members —
coaching, mentoring, counseling — also needs to be done with
them as a whole. Talking to a group of people is a challenge when
each listens differently, has different points of view and is
emotionally charged at different levels. The tips and techniques
work; the orientation and adaptation on your part cause success.
StaffCoaching™ has as its focal point staff, or your team,
coaching the team of individuals.

Group vs. Team ..................................................................................................


Groups have been around since the beginning of time; human
nature draws people to one another. Group behavior ranges from
supportive to chaotic, from disaster to success. Many managers are
fine with group performance. For the StaffCoach™, though, it is
increasingly evident that groups that experience the highest output
are those that have bonded into a team.
A main distinguisher between a group and a team is their
orientation to one another. A group is two or more people working
in proximity, each doing her own thing to accomplish a goal. A
team shares the same goal. Its work is dependent upon each team
member for the final results. An example is the curriculum team at
National Seminars. While it is a group of people with different
accountabilities — one laying out materials, one proofing, another
editing, another administering tasks — none is successful without
the other. The final product, whether book, CD or electronic
presentation, cannot be completed without the team’s integration
of talent.
The coach’s job is all about getting results. You do that by
building your team, individual talent upon individual talent. You
balance the multiple needs, recognizing one and minimizing
another to integrate them into a unit. Taking care of your

Coaching, Mentoring and Managing

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StaffCoaching™:
The Coaching Process

Coaching Mentoring Counseling

InvolvementTeam

AssessPresent
Performance

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