HOME

ABOUT US

ABOUT CPI

SERVICES

NEWSROOM

WHITE PAPERS

CONSULTANT'S CORNER

Friday, November 20, 2009 Spring 2004   VOLUME 1 ISSUE 5  
Newsletter Home Page
IN THIS ISSUE...
President's Letter
Landmark Building is New Home to Ayers' New York Offices
J&J Chairman to Headline Ayers' New Leadership Series
"Re-Tension* in the Global Economy" —Panel Discussion Provides Cautiously Upbeat Outlook
Staffing/IT Consulting—Market Turnaround Requires New Mindsets
Ayers and CPI—At the Intersection of High Touch and High Tech
Successful Landings
Matching Coaches to Coaching Needs—Credentials, Chemistry, and Common Interests
OEC Consultant's Corner: Coaches Talk About Their Self-Chosen Specialties
Staff Announcements
UPCOMING EVENTS

June 1 – “College Day” sponsored by The Ayers Group


June 2
 – Leadership breakfast seminar featuring William Weldon, Chairman and CEO, Johnson & Johnson

AYERS REPORT

Editor in Chief: 
Joan Caruso

Writer: 
Catherine Carlozzi

Designer: 
Loan Tran

If you have questions or comments on this month's issue, send your feedback to loan.tran@ayers.com
Matching Coaches to Coaching Needs—Credentials, Chemistry, and Common Interests
Joan Caruso
Managing Director
Tel:  212.889.7788
joan.caruso@ayers.com

Successful coaching shares something important with a successful dating service:  both depend on creating the best possible match.  Force-fitting a coach to a coaching need is as chancy as throwing two people together simply because they’re single.  Success is far more likely if the parties have something in common to create a bond and if the chemistry is right.  The more you understand about the two individuals, the more effective you can be in making the relationship work.

 

At Ayers, we are very careful in mapping and matching coach-coachee profiles.   Achieving the right fit involves:

§         Establishing a coachee profile—Every coaching assignment begins with a process of gathering information about the person to be coached.  Depending on the nature of the engagement, this may be done through interviewing or questionnaires.  Because we coach by objectives, we try to get as specific as possible about what the person needs to get from the coaching experience.  The match has to take into account the objectives as well as the coachee’s personality and what it will take to enhance his or her receptivity, improving the likelihood of a successful outcome.
 

§         Selecting coaches with the appropriate background and expertise—We look at whether the assignment requires a coaching generalist, who can focus on a variety of things, or a specialist.  Then we turn to our deep bench of carefully vetted coaches who meet our rigorous standards. (Credientials vs. Certification)

§         Looking for a connection—As we review the profiles of the coachee and the targeted coaches, we look for common factors that have the potential to create the kind of connection that generates good chemistry:  a hobby, an interest, a life experience, etc. 


One trend that has worked to our advantage in making effective matches is the gravitation of coaches to areas of specialization.  (Consultant's Corner)  Our coaching team balances coaching generalists with specialists in a wide variety of areas.  Some work best with and thrive on solving interpersonal relationship and communications problems.  Others focus on assessment coaching—helping determine whether an executive has the potential to take the next step or which path is best for a high-potential executive with multiple options—or transition coaching—helping senior people grow into leap-of-scope assignments quickly.

 

Some specialties revolve around team building:  senior-executive teams (including boards of directors), sales teams, and also corporate start-up or spin-off situations.  We recently called on our specialists from the latter category to work with a group charged with carving a particular function out of the client’s corporate divisions and creating a new business dedicated to that function.

 

We also have coaches who specialize in working with executive women.  We recently heard from a client that would like to create separate coaching, mentoring, and training programs for key high-potential female executives. Twenty years ago, the thinking was to avoid development experiences that were exclusively for women.  Now that women have achieved critical mass in the workplace, employers are looking at their distinct needs, which has given rise to a coaching specialty. 

 

Good coaching focuses on what’s important to the individuals to be coached, so they know their time is not being wasted.  By marrying careful coachee profiling and a deep bench of coaches who meet high standards and have expertise across a broad spectrum of areas, we can create relationships that ensure the best possible result.


[PRINTER FRIENDLY VERSION]
ARTICLES BY TOPIC:
Ayers Update
President's Letter
Landmark Building is New Home to Ayers' New York Offices
J&J Chairman to Headline Ayers' New Leadership Series
"Re-Tension* in the Global Economy" —Panel Discussion Provides Cautiously Upbeat Outlook
Staff Announcements
Career Transition
Ayers and CPI—At the Intersection of High Touch and High Tech
Successful Landings
Staffing/IT Consulting
Staffing/IT Consulting—Market Turnaround Requires New Mindsets
Organizational Effectiveness Consulting
Matching Coaches to Coaching Needs—Credentials, Chemistry, and Common Interests
OEC Consultant's Corner: Coaches Talk About Their Self-Chosen Specialties
LETTERS

There are no letters for this article. To post your own letter, click Post Letter.

[POST LETTER]
Published by The Ayers Group
Copyright © 2004 The Ayers Group. All rights reserved.
TELL A FRIEND
Created with eNewsBuilder