Encyclopedia of Leadership

(sharon) #1

13.2


COACHING HIGH-PERFORMERS:


AN OVERLOOKED ELEMENT OF SUCCESS


Contributed by George Campbell and inspired by Chris Argyris, Geoff Bellman, John O’Neil,
Lyle Sussman, and Richard Finnegan.

Coaching high-performers, an obvious yet powerful source of organizational improvement, is


a neglected area. The very fact that they arehigh-performers somehow seems to negate their


need for coaching. Leaders frequently misdirect their coaching efforts to poor or mediocre per-


formers, leaving high-performers to find their own way. This tool clarifies the difference


between problem-based coaching and high-performance coaching, and provides steps to devel-


oping a style for coaching high-performers.


The leverage achieved from helping high-performers is extraordinary. When high-per-


formers grasp new concepts or new ways of working, their drive for accomplishment and abil-


ity to implement create powerful momentum. Their success draws the rest of the organization


in the same positive direction—an example of a rising tide raising all boats. High-performers


reject coaching from the traditional, problem-based mode. It doesn’t meet their needs.


Coaching needs to feed their appetites and expectations. Like elite athletes and master musi-


cians, high-performers embrace coaching that fits their fast-moving, success-filled world.


Coaching needs to support their optimistic and forward-thinking attitudes, and challenge


them to set and attain lofty goals.


SECTION 13 TOOLS FORLEADINGPERFORMANCE 395


Follow the squeaky wheel theory.
✔ Offer coaching to people who are causing trouble; help
bring their performance up to standard.

Work with the known.
✔ Help poor and mid-level performers bring their work
up to an expected level of achievement.

Work toward solving a problem.
✔ Coaching starts with the definition of a problem or
identification of a performance gap.

Think short-term.
✔ Focus on the steps needed to close the performance
gap.
Construct a linear process.
✔ Agree on a logical, step-by-step process for closing the
performance gap.

Problem-based coaching High-performer coaching

Follow the springboard theory.
✔ Work with people who are already successful; help accelerate
their already stellar progress.
[☛3.2 Sigmoid Curve]
Work toward the unknown.
✔ Help the high-performer become a lamplight for new ideas,
new ways of performing. Help them discover new capacities,
new ways of applying knowledge and skills.
[☛1.6 Boards of Play]
Work toward achieving a vision.
✔ Coaching starts with the definition of a vision. Current
performance is not really the issue; defining the vision and
finding a route to its achievement is the key.
[☛2.4 Visioning]
Think long-term.
✔ Focus on career, business breakthrough, and life ambitions.
[☛14.2 Rethinking Your Thinking]
Build a nonlinear, quantum-leap process.
✔ Encourage leaps, keeping the long-term map in mind. High-
performers will fill in the spaces between the leaps.
[☛1.9 Paradigms]
Free download pdf