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18 Feb 2008 03:56:07 | CMOE Development Team
I>Athletes Versus Employees
Most athletes are young, open to improvement, eager to learn and
anxious to receive what a coach can provide. For the athlete,
there is a defined season and something tangible to compete for.
Feedback is automatic, immediate, and specific; and athletes can
easily change coaches and/or teams. Employees, on the other
hand, aren’t as emotionally committed. When have you seen an
adult cry or rant and rage when a goal was not achieved? For
employees, feedback and performance are hard to quantify. Work
goes on; there is no end and often only vague scorecards.
Lastly, employees do not demand corporate coaching or search
critically for performance improvement. Without belaboring the
point or making value judgments, suffice it to say that the two
have different values and motivations. However, these
differences do not change what constitutes effective coaching
behaviors.
The application of CMOE’s Eight Step Coaching model may differ,
but the concepts will not. All coaches for example, need to
create a supportive, trusting relationship (Step One). Further,
all coaches need to create the internal motivation or initiate a
desire to pursue a more effective course of action (Step
Two). Sports Coaching Versus Corporate Coaching
In sports, the coach can rarely outperform those coached, yet in
business the coach will probably be an accomplished player. One
of the most successful coaches in the National Basketball
Association never played professional basketball. Is it possible
to conceive of a successful sales manager who never was a
salesperson? In sports, coaching is a full-time job supported in
many cases with assistant coaches; in business the coach has
many diverse responsibilities. In gymnastics the coach’s span of
control is usually on-on-one. The number of “suits” on the
bench, during a college basketball game, often equals or
outnumbers the “uniforms” or actual players. Athletes can
practice before the game and take time-outs; in business the
clock is always running. Most athletic coaches see themselves
as, first and foremost, teachers. Even though the word "coach”
has become a popular addition to most managers’ job
descriptions, we doubt that many would also include teacher. So
while the playing field and conditions are different, we believe
that there are some unique lessons to be learned from sports
coaching and applied to corporate coaching.
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If you would like more information on Corporate
Coaching or to learn what 100,000 managers have learned
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website.
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