COACHING FORORGANIZATIONALCHANGE 161
my coaching. Therapy training allows me to ask questions, confront and push
with a certain level of expertise. I am trying to move the person to try or do
something that is different from what he or she is doing now. But there must
be a comfort zone within which risks can be taken. A keen awareness of the
psychological implications of personal and organizational change is valuable
in that regard.
Just as the pressure on leaders has intensified greatly in recent years, so
too the expectations for coaches have risen as well. Much of that pressure
comes in a form that is antithetical to effective coaching. There are time
constraints that do not always meet the needs of good coaching. There is a
demand for progress that may fit the time line of organizational plans, but
not the time line of behavior change. It is a challenge for coaches to do that
well and with integrity. Yet that is the reality of the pressure that organiza-
tional change places on us all.
Sally Helgesen
Coaching Anthropology
M
y coaching is done in the service of driving organizational change. To
accomplish that, I engage in a deep, narrative study of how the leaders
in the organization do their jobs, in the context of the organization’s culture.
Out of that understanding, I analyze how well that leadership style is suited
Sally Helgesen is the author ofThe Web of Inclusion: A
New Architecture for Building Great Organizations,in
which she explores how innovative organizations make
use ofthe talents and ideas of all their people, learning
lessons in transformation in the process. She is also the
author ofThe Female Advantage: Women’s Ways of Lead-
ership.She can be reached at [email protected].