Chapter 14 - Developing behavioural agility - team coach Flashcards
Generally speaking, how can a co-sec operate as a team coach?
- become a behavioural process expert
- develop ‘softer social interactions’ and relationships competence in order to facilitate not only tasks but also the people who are performing those tasks
What is a team coach and what are the different types?
‘team coach’ refers to the behavioural approach to supporting the board as a team, both as a group of individuals and collectively
Different types of coach:
* one-to-one coach
* mentor
* systemic team coach
* facilitator
* other supporting roles - supervisor, mediator, counsellor
What did Ruth Wageman et al say about team coaches?
All teams need an expert team coach to become high-performing, especially when they get stuck and have difficulties in improving the ability to become more effective and make better decisions together
Outline the case for coaching
The coaching leadership style, along with the visionary leadership style, significantly outperforms the more neutral and directive styles.
Lorinkova et al (2012)– experiment - At the early stage of team performance, the directive style wins, however, over time, the empowering style begins to catch-up and outperform the directive style
Google – Project Oxygen –
* what makes a good manager is one who is a good coach
* technical skills was the least important
* skill of coaching can be developed
What is coaching?
Whitemore: Unlocking a person’s potential to maximise their own performance. It is helping them to learn rather than teaching them.
What are the core skills of coaching? Think Joe Hudson
- Building a trusting coaching relationship
- Asking effective questions and listening to/noticing responses
- Supportive effective goal-setting
- Providing effective feedback
What is a coaching mindset?
A coaching mindset refers to holding the belief in the potential of the person that we are coaching such that, with appropriate support and challenge, they will be able to find answers within themselves to the questions that they are asking, rather than be dependent on upon others – similar to growth mindset
How can you build coaching relationships?
- Good starting point: trust - think Maister et al
- Time - research on successful therapeutic relationships between patient and client - time for success - treat people like human beings rather than human doings
- Timpsons Test
- Marcus Buckingham - frequent check-ins should be every week or every two weeks at most
Give examples of coaching questions
- Open questions – default questions and most likely way a coachee will raise awareness of an issue – Have you thought about X?
- Closed questions – useful at certain times such as when checking – ‘Am I right in saying that these are your options’?
- ‘Why’ questions – useful to open people up – caution with doing too much as could feel like an interrogation
- ‘What’ questions – Swiss army knife of open coaching questions – help someone explore their current reality in detail and are a useful substitute for why questions
- ‘How’ questions – useful to move us forward to where we want to go and are therefore voiced in coaching when considering options and actions
What did Deloitte’s research on mentoring find?
retention is 25% higher in companies that engage in mentoring
What is mentoring?
David Clutterbuck: Offline help by a more experienced individual willing to share knowledge with someone less experienced in a relationship of mutual trust
What is the difference between a mentor and a coach?
A mentor is more likely to make introductions and to develop a mentee’s networks – can explain organisational politics due to inside knowledge.
A coach is someone likely to provide feedback that is formalised and defined – therefore, more likely to be entering into a paid relationship i.e. external coaches
What are the four types of mentor that a governance professional may find themselves with board members relating to facilitative and task expertise. BEAD
- Buddy mentor: low need for facilitative expertise and low need for task expertise – someone who is useful for a settling-ins process i.e. during director induction – valuable during first few months
- Expert mentor: low need to facilitate expertise and high need for task expertise – not to focus on personal issues but to be more technical and situation-specific
- Attached mentor: high need for facilitative experience and high need for task experience – ‘knowledgeable friend’ – mentor will use their skill in asking questions to enable thinking, but also can provide organisational and subject matter knowledge if required to aid mentee’s thinking
- Detached mentor: high need for facilitative expertise and low need for task experience – most nondirective and is similar to a classic coaching style – cosec supports directors with broad issues beyond the technical – they will use their experience and challenge and help the mentee to widen their perspective and explore options as they would using a coaching approach
According to Leary-Joyce and Lines, what is systemic team coaching? Think EGC training days…
Leary-Joyce and Lines: A process of coaching the whole team both together and apart (i.e. one to one), over a designated period of time to enable it to:
- Align on common purpose
- Collaborate and learn across diversity
- Develop collective leadership
- Achieve performance outcomes
- Engage effectively with key stakeholders
- Jointly transform the wider business
How would a co-sec play a role in ‘systemic board coaching’?
- This form of coaching takes over a period of time and co-sec usually has highest tenure
- ‘Boundary spanning’ – pay attention to what is happening outside of the team
- Coaching the team together and one-to-ones