Coaching Across the Generation Gap
Coaching across generations can be tricky. You may wonder: Who are these Millennials? Who is Generation Z? What are they like and what do they care about? It can feel like, if only we could understand them, we would be able to meet them better where they are.
Similarly, you may wonder about the methods for best engaging them: What are the unlocking questions for today’s youth? Would they respond more to encouragement or challenge? Do they yearn for embodiment, balance, stability, fulfillment, authenticity, or something else entirely?
However exhaustive the descriptions or guidance for intergenerational coaching might be, it will necessarily be of limited use. Expanding your capacity to coach the next generation is not about figuring out the tips and tricks. Instead, your ability to coach across generations is determined by your own inner preparation rather than by any external knowledge you might acquire.
Inner preparation is important because the challenges we face in coaching intergenerationally are largely the limitations that we, as coaches, bring to the table. Our societies are engrained with patterns of how we treat those older than and younger than us. Embedded power dynamics privilege age above youth along certain dimensions (e.g., wisdom) and youth above age in others (e.g., energy). On top of these broad patterns, we have our own individual experiences of aging, authority, wisdom, youth and even death. If we have not worked through these challenges, we bring them as baggage into our coaching relationships, often impeding our ability to be of service.
So, how to approach this work? First, set aside some time for reflection. Consider your relationships across age—both as the junior and as the senior—and look for how they affect your coaching relationships. Spend time unpacking your relationship with youth, aging, authority and wisdom. What did you hate about being younger? What do you love about being older? Inevitably, reflecting upon age brings up the bogeymen of our own mortality; face these, too. To help you get started on this process, I’ve included an approach for structured reflection below.
Ultimately, as with all coaching, it is only by doing our own inner work that we are able to be of service to others. Generational differences across coaches and clients are a call for us to break out of our patterned ways of acting. Awareness and reflection are the first steps.
Reflection Questions
The following questions are intended to unpack your thinking about generational differences. Focus on the handful of prompts that feel most resonant to you in the “Expand and Understand” section. You need not answer every question; three to eight questions is sufficient. Then move on to answer each of the questions in the ”Synthesize and Apply” section. For maximum benefit, you may want to sit down in a quiet space, avoid distractions, and write your answers out longhand with pen and paper.
Expand and Understand
- Views of Age and Youth
- Older people have…
- Older people lack…
- Younger people have…
- Younger people lack…
- Generational Responsibilities
- The future generations must…
- The future generations cannot…
- When it’s all said and done, I think the impact of my generation on the world will have been…
- Personal Experience of Age
- What I love about being my age is…
- What I loved about being younger was…
- What I’m excited about growing older is…
- What I hate about being my age is…
- What I hated about being younger was…
- What I’m dreading about growing older is…
- Past Experience of Intergenerational Relationships
- When you were younger, how did the older generation treat you?
- If this was not ideal, how would you have wanted to be treated?
- When you were younger, who “coached” you (even if this was not formal coaching)? Who mentored you or gave you advice?
- What worked well in those situations? What worked poorly?
- Current Experience of Intergenerational Relationships
- What relationships do you have now that have an age gap to who you might coach?
- Mid-level manager to young employee?
- Grandparent to adult grandchild?
- Parent to child?
- Boss to employee?
- What patterns have you developed in those relationships?
- What relationships do you have now that have an age gap to who you might coach?
- Your Legacy
- What do you have to give to future generations?
- How do you want younger people to see you? To interact with you?
- Associations with Related Values
- What is your relationship with authority?
- …With wisdom?
- …With aging?
- …With youth?
- …With death?
- Fears
- When you think about youth, what scares you?
- When you think about aging, what scares you?
Synthesize and Apply
- What did you learn through your reflections? What is emerging as true? What else are you curious about?
- Where, if at all, are these mindsets and patterns of behavior showing up in your coaching?
- What’s the impact of those? Alternatively, what might the impact be?
- What do you want to do about it?
© Copyright Meredith Whipple Callahan
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Meredith Whipple Callahan, ACC, will be exploring this topic more in-depth at ICF Converge 2019, which is taking place October 23-26 in Prague, Czech Republic. Join her session “Coaching the Next Generation to Full Potential” in the Discover content group on Friday, October 25 at 3:00 p.m. (local time). By attending this session, you can earn 0.25 CC/0.25 RD in Continuing Coach Education units.
Interesting post.
It’s clear, nowadays, that the age patterns are not valid anymore.
In the end, I think it all comes down to being humble and leaving prejudices aside.
The world is composed of different people with different beliefs and practices; one factor affecting these is that people are born in different generations. Check my blog Ways to Encourage People to Bridge Generation Gap Hope this will help. Thanks.
Cheers,
Carol
I find that simply “knowing is an obstacle”. The more I think I understand someone, an experience, or perspective, the less curious I tend to be. Knowledge is good, but identifying can be slippery.