High-Performance Coaching for Managers: A Step-by-Step Approach to Increase Employees' Performance and Productivity

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Coaching is a necessary skill for managers. It is important as a fundamental part of an organization's talent efforts―including talent acquisition, development and retention strategies. For a coaching program to succeed in an organization, it should be recognized as a useful approach throughout the organization and become part of the fabric of the corporate culture. Performance Coaching for Managers provides an important tool for organizations to use to train their managers on coaching.

This book differs significantly from other books in the coaching market. Many books on coaching cast coaches as facilitators who question their clients (the coachees), helping them to articulate their own problems, formulate their own solutions, develop their own action plans to solve problems, and measure the success of efforts to implement those plans. That is called a nondirective approach.

But this book adopts a directive approach by casting the coach as a manager who diagnoses the problems with worker job performance and offers specific advice on how to solve those problems. While there is nothing wrong with a nondirective approach, it does not always work well in job performance reviews in which the manager must inform the worker about gaps between what is needed (the desired) and what is performed (the actual). The significant difference between what is currently available in the market and what is offered in this book is the authors' collective experience of over 70 combined years of hands-on research and delivery experiences in the Human Resources Development field.

According to the Harvard Business Review (2015), workers generally expect their immediate supervisors to give them honest feedback on how well they do their jobs―and specific advice on what to do if they are not performing in alignment with organizational expectations. When workers do not receive advice―but instead are questioned about their own views―they regard their managers as either incompetent or disingenuous.

Effective managers should be able to offer direction to their employees. After all, managers are responsible for ensuring that their organizational units deliver the results needed by the organization. If they fail to do that, the organization does not achieve its strategic goals. This book gives managers direction in how to offer directive coaching to their workers.

Author(s): William J. Rothwell, Behnam Bakhshandeh
Publisher: Routledge/Productivity Press
Year: 2022

Language: English
Pages: 560
City: New York

Cover
Endorsements
Title
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
Foreword
Preface
Acknowledgments
About the Authors
Advance Organizer
Building a Strong Foundation for High-Performance Coaching Journey
1 The General Concept of Coaching
2 Performance Coaching
3 Mindset, Attitude, Behavior, and Performance
Phase One—Building Relationship and Recognizing the Situation
4 Step 1: How to Establish Relatedness and Building Rapport?
5 Step 2: What Is the Issue at Hand?
6 Step 3: What Should Be Happening?
Phase Two—Analyzing the Gap
7 Step 4: What Is the Measurable Gap?
8 Step 5: How Important Are the Gaps?
9 Step 6: What Are the Root Causes of the Gap?
Phase Three—Analyzing the Solution
10 Step 7: How Many Ways Can the Gap Be Closed?
11 Step 8: What Is the Most Effective Way to Close the Gap?
12 Step 9: What Are the Consequences of Closing the Gap?
Phase Four—Implementation and Evaluation
13 Step 10: What Are the Damages of Inaction?
14 Step 11: How to Implement the Solution?
15 Step 12: How to Evaluate the Successful Implementation?
Support, Maintenance, Self-Evaluation, and Self-Rating
16 How Effective Are You?
Appendix A: Sources for Education and Implementations
Index