Coaching, Mentoring and Managing: A Coach Guidebook

(Steven Felgate) #1
process between the coach and individual or team; it requires good
chemistry, a lot of listening and observing — and caring. Barbara
Jordan exudes that caring, whether she is in front of an audience,
beside a group of citizens or among her staff.
As a StaffCoach™, you will use all three approaches —
coaching, mentoring and counseling — as your people need them.
For the people who do average work, meet all their goals and
handle their accountabilities, you will get the best results from
coaching them. Help them directly improve their performance and
go beyond “just enough.”
Coaching is at the heart of the StaffCoach™ Model. Its actions
are the foundation for mentoring and counseling. The guidelines,
steps and techniques apply to all. Whenever you want to move
your people, get buy-in, inspire or motivate, coaching is the
answer.

The Coaching Role ..............................................................................................


Coaching is a before, during and after set of activities. It goes
beyond the game and throughout your people’s employment. It’s
not a single action. You won’t be able to review an employee’s
past performance, note that he has been doing just enough to get
by — no more, no less — and decide this guy needs some
coaching. Since you have five minutes you call him in, give him a
“one more for the old gipper” speech and shove him out the door
with a friendly pat on the shoulder and an “I know you can do it”
farewell. This may be abdicating or copping out, but it sure
isn’t coaching.
Your role as a coach involves basic, continuous facilitation.


  1. Involvement and trust
    Your overall relationship, just like a preseason, is devoted
    to communicating your willingness and ability to support
    the team. Immersing yourself in their activities and
    interests and involving them in discussions is a trust-
    builder, for both sides. As tasks occur, just as a regular
    season of play arrives, team members should be convinced
    that you are the right coach for them ... even if your
    decisions aren’t always popular. You and the team are


Coaching, Mentoring and Managing

3


“If you don’t
overcome the
obstacles, you’ll
never become
the success.”
— John Mackovic
Free download pdf