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18 Feb 2008 04:01:46 | CMOE Development Team
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Coaching employees on sensitive and personal topics like
performance or contribution to the organization can be as
difficult and agonizing as telling a young son or daughter about
sex for the first time. You end up playing the same mental games
in your head over and over again: “What should they be told? How
much do they already know? (Or how much do they want me to think
they know?) How much detail should I go into?” If you are unable
to answer any of these penetrating questions, you tend to put
the task off for another six months. Eventually, you discover
the harsh reality that there is very little they are unaware of,
but a lot they don’t know.
Nearly everyone feels uncomfortable when coaching employees, yet
few are willing to admit that they feel ambivalent or
inadequate. Many leaders who say, with some pride, that they
have no hesitation, often approach the job like a bulldozer
(over aggressively). In fact, coaching employees is risky (you
may lose control of the situation), and you are vulnerable (you
have to substantiate your case, and your leadership style may be
questioned by the employee). Consequently you exaggerate your
worst fears, you get uptight, you spend the night before the
discussion is to take place worrying, and you try to figure out
ways to avoid or postpone it. But deep down, you know that this
isn’t a helpful strategy.
Many leaders will rationalize that the issue or concern isn’t
worth the time or effort of a coaching session. But this comes
back to haunt them later when the employee’s work is put under
the microscope of others (their boss, customers, regulatory
agencies, etc.) when the employees position is considered for
advancement, at performance appraisal time, or during the
crucial high-exposure stages of an important project. At these
time, the earlier hesitation ends up directly costing both the
leader and the employee.
There are many explanations and rationalizations about why
leaders resist coaching employees more frequently about progress
and problems. The reality is that no one wants to hurt people or
jeopardize their performance in areas that are meeting or
exceeding expectations. Leaders go about insulating themselves
from facing the reality that a meaningful discussion will
actually help improve things.
The fact is most employees favor directness, candor (trust), and
honesty, as well as efficiency, excellence, and quality. But
these goals cannot be met unless leaders are more willing to set
aside their ambivalence and hesitation.
As a leader, you just need to accept that, to some extent,
resisting potentially difficult situations is normal and
natural. Then you need to make sure that these perceptual
obstacles do not get in the way. Simply anticipate your own
hesitations and ambivalence. Tell yourself over and over again
that it is okay, and simply move forward and trust the 8-Step
Coaching process to work if you carefully attend to each
step.
About Author :
To learn more about how CMOE can help your organization become
more effective at coaching
employees, contact a Regional Manager at (801)569-3444. You
can also visit their website.
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