Common Mistakes Businesses Make With Their Coaching Culture
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5 Mistakes Companys Make When Trying to Integrate Coaching into their Culture

Posted by Marianne Bateup, PCC (Australia) | April 12, 2021 | Comments (1)

Building a strong coaching culture in an organization is an excellent way to drive performance against strategic goals, create a point of difference and improve engagement, productivity and retention. However, when endeavoring to create a coaching culture, there are five main missteps that organizations make that can sabotage the process, despite the best of intentions.  

Misstep 1: Developing a coaching culture is untethered from the organization’s strategic goals. 

If the goal of developing a coaching culture is seen as independent from the organization’s other strategic goals, values and vision, its destined to fail. A coaching culture must be aligned and utilized as a means to drive progress against strategic goals. Is the desired coaching culture a vehicle to improve performance? Engage or empower employees? Support a change management process? Upskill teams? Deliver more innovation?  

Organizations should start by considering their short, mid and longterm strategic goals and how developing and embedding a coaching culture will help achieve those goals. As coaches, we can query this from the outset to make sure the organization is on the right path.  

Misstep 2: People in the organization aren’t upskilled in coaching. 

A true coaching culture is more than just bringing in external coaches  it’s about building the capacity to coach others at all levels of the organization. Developing this skill is essential for truly embedding coaching into the organizational culture 

The process of upskilling an organization in coaching will usually involve engaging external trainers to upskill managers on how to utilize coaching as a leadership tool. While this may seem like a quick way to put us coaches and trainers out of a job, it’s actually quite the opposite. When delivered effectively, our role becomes that of a strategic partner who guides the organization to maintain the coaching culture over time.  

Misstep 3: Coaching isn’t structured and woven into the learning and development process. 

Without using coaching to help apply training and identify and overcome blind spots, learning and development (L&D) can suffer. Too often organizations invest in structured training programs only to see the trainees fail to apply the learnings and fall back into old habits. Leaving it up to the employee to change their behavior in line with the training and be accountable to making those changes stick won’t always work. Why do we expect employees to be able to quickly unlearn old behaviors and adopt new ones with very little support? 

This is where having a coaching culture in place can help. In coaching cultures, coaching will be a necessary and structured step in the L&D process. The Center for Creative Leadership recommends a 70-20-10 split between on-the-job training, developmental relationship learning (such as coaching) and formal trainingThrough coaching, employees are supported and held accountable throughout the learning process to apply the learnings gained in formal training in on-the-job settings 

Misstep 4: Senior leaders aren’t driving the coaching culture. 

Efforts to develop a coaching culture often don’t start at the top. Rather, employees try to push the approach up the ranks. Without senior leaders backing the move to adopt a coaching culture 100% and also modeling it to the organization, the employees driving the process can become unmotivated and the desired coaching culture may never come to fruition 

To develop and embed a coaching culture, it needs to be clear to everyone in the organization that coaching is a top priority. The only way to do this is to have the process driven from the top down. As coaches, we can help by finding ways to gain buy-in from the leadership team early in the process. Often this starts with executives experiencing coaching and seeing the benefits firsthand. 

Misstep 5: There isn’t the right balance between individual coaching, group coaching and team coaching. 

Many organizations that say they want to develop a coaching culture overlook the importance of providing a crosssection of coaching options including individual, group and team coaching. All three are important and if the incorrect balance is struck, it can impact the value of coaching in the organization.  

For example, individual coaching may help each employee perform better and remain accountable to their goals. It may also help them relate better to other people in the organization. But what it won’t do is create cohesion and direction for a team or give coaching recipients the opportunity to learn from others in their group while still pursuing their own purpose. This is where team or group coaching can add important additional dimensions 

Aspiring to develop a coaching culture is a worthy pursuit; however, if the incorrect steps are taken, it can fall apart before it takes hold and employees can become disillusioned. A true coaching culture relies on fully prioritizing and committing to the process. Avoiding these common missteps is a good place to start.  

© 2021 Marianne BateupAbilitise Pty Ltd, Some Rights Reserved 

Headshot of Coaching World contributor Marianne Bateup, ACC.

Marianne Bateup, PCC (Australia)

Marianne Bateup, PCC, is a professional coach, consultant, and trainer with demonstrated success in supporting individuals, teams, and businesses to recognize their potential and expand their capabilities. Along with coaching skills, Marianne has more than 20 years of experience in large-, medium- and small-sized organizations, working on 5 continents. Marianne has an executive MBA, a diploma of leadership coaching and mentoring, and certificates in training and in business and personal coaching. She is skilled in leadership, business and career coaching, intercultural communication, and cross-cultural team building. Learn more at abilitise.com.au.

The views and opinions expressed in guest posts featured on this blog are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the opinions and views of the International Coach Federation (ICF). The publication of a guest post on the ICF Blog does not equate to an ICF endorsement or guarantee of the products or services provided by the author.

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Comments (1)

  1. Companies that upskill their employees and teach them new skills prove they are invested in their workforce. This leads to job satisfaction and better employee retention.

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