Article

How Improving Your Coaching Skills Will Improve Your Life

Topic: LeadershipPublished October 13, 2015

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Wait a minute Kevin...isn’t coaching supposed to be about the person we are coaching, not about us?rnYes, the best coaches do put 100% of their focus on helping the other person become more successful and confident.rnSo if this is true, then why are you writing about how the coach will benefit? Don’t you have your priorities wrong here?rnNot at all. Let me tell you why . . .rnThe improvements to the coaching life that I will describe below can’t, by definition, come true without the coach being 100% focused on the person they are coaching. This is a deep principle of life – that it truly is better to give than receive; that we can’t harvest until after we plant the right seeds; that when we do things in the right order for the right reasons, good things will flow to us.rnI’ve written, spoken and trained a lot about how we can become better coaches. I am fully convinced that we can build those skills, and that when we do, we can help others grow, learn and improve.rnAnd when we do that, good things can come to us, as a result, not because that was our goal. So then, how can coaching improve our lives?rnI’m glad you asked.rnYou make your job easier. If we are coaching at work as a supervisor or manager, this one is the obvious one and perhaps the most immediate benefit. If you help people get better, they are able to do more with less of your input or help. This provides you the chance to delegate new things and in general to do your work with fewer interruptions and less frustration. Who doesn’t want that?rnYou gain deep personal satisfaction. In nearly every instance when I ask a coach what is in it for them when they coach successfully, they say, there is a sense of pride and satisfaction when they know they helped someone else overcome a challenge, improve significantly and more. My personal experience echoes this sentiment. There is a tremendous wave of positive emotions that comes from helping others be more successful. This deep well of positivity and pride makes us feel better about ourselves, but also makes us more confident in our own abilities.rnThe skills you gain apply to the rest of your life. Think about it; the skills of coaching others are skills you use not just at work but in all parts of your life. If you become a better listener, better at asking questions, more aware of how and why people change, or if you build your capacity to be persuasive and influential; do you think you might be able to apply those to become a better neighbor, parent, sibling or spouse?rnYou learn more than they do. It may seem counter intuitive, but it is completely true. First of all, great coaches ask lots of questions, so there is learning for you there right away. Secondly, through these conversations, you get access to their experiences, and what is working (and not working) for them. Also, when you share your ideas in words, you clarify those ideas making them more real and powerful for you too. Perhaps most importantly of all, as you help others navigate through their situations, you learn more about yourself.rnI could lengthen the list for you, but you get the idea. Plus, ask yourself this question: is there one of these things that you currently desire for yourself?rnIf so, start building your coaching skills today.rnWithout question, I am trying to convince you that you need to build your coaching skills. Your organization needs it, your team members deserve it, and yes, there are also great things that will flow to you . If you want to learn more about how to build these skills for the benefit of everyone, start here.

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