Coaching Case Study Dianne Ward
(Executive Coach, UNITED STATES)
Disclaimer:
In my current role as a Sustainability Coach for leaders, I have the combined role of being a consultant, mentor, and coach. So, my case study is not pure coaching, but blended coaching that is expected in my role.
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Who are the main players in this case study: Bill Smith – Team Leader
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What is the core problem or challenge you applied your coaching skills to?
Bill is a visionary thinker, and he promotes growth, inclusion and innovative thinking. When Bill talks to his team, he is very inspiring and appears to be very open-minded. In the last couple of months, Bill has noticed that his team seems distant, and does not seem to be communicating with him. This is a huge problem because Bill needs the support and commitment of his teams, and the free flow of information is critical to his success as their leader. Because Bill wants to inspire trust and growth in his team, he is frustrated that this gap is showing up. Bill asked me to provide coaching on what could be in his style to keep his team members from being more open with him. After several conversations with Bill to try to get him to identify what may be going on, he asked me to reach out to his direct reports.
From talking with some direct reports, I have been told that Bill is not as open as he promotes. Team members have stopped sharing insights and feedback because they feel that Bill is resistant, he will not let them finish what they are trying to say, and Bill makes them feel that they are wrong. Morale has been slipping for months but does not show up on the monthly satisfaction surveys. Because his team is uncomfortable giving feedback or being transparent on the monthly employee satisfaction surveys, Bill has acknowledged publically that there must not be any problems with employee engagement.
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What specific coaching skills or approach did you use in this case?
Powerful questioning
DiSC
Self-Awareness
Effective Feedback
Outlining Observations
Create trust
Visualization
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Explain your process in detail
We have had many attempts at this issue, and we are still in the process of sorting it out. Here are some of our attempts and the result:
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Aligning to Bill’s values
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Feedback
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Stay away from the story
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Visualization
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Action Planning and Structures
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What were the results of your process? Was your coaching/program effective? Why? Why not?
To date, I would say that my coaching has made minimal progress. With each attempt, Bill is very engaged and committed at the beginning. We always quickly align with his goal and his vision at the beginning of our session. As we put together his plan for how he wants to accomplish it, we run into roadblocks. As I ask questions on how his strategies will work, his intentions, and how his team may react, I get resistance. And, if we make some progress at that moment, by our next session (or even sooner), Bill has taken a totally different approach and has continued to reinforce the results that he says he did not want.
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If you could approach this problem again, what would you do differently?
Because this is my corporate role, I do not have the option of saying that I cannot work with this client. However, if I found myself in this situation with an outside client, I would wrap up our sessions and advise that they need to another coach that would be better suited for them.
In my current role, I would spend more time upfront establishing a formal coaching agreement. I would also set up flags that would indicate that we ask for outside support (i.e. His boss or another coach) if we ran into permanent roadblocks.
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What are the top 3 things you learnt from this experience?