Coaching Tips 101

Coaching is a key part of your core responsibilities as an effective manager and leader on your teams. And just because you may have coached a high school soccer team does not mean that you are equipped to coach your direct reports in the office. Coaching takes practice and constant checking in with yourself and your coachee. Here are some ways to improve your coaching skills in the work environment.

1. Create a safe environment. In order to coach someone you need them to trust you. If you haven’t had a good rapport with this person in the past, you have some catching up to do. Start learning more about them, asking about their interests outside of work, and looking for commonalities between the two of you that you can see eye to eye on.

2. Set up an informal routine. Coaching is about conversations and setting up regular communication with your coachee. This shouldn’t only consist of a formal weekly check-in, although that can help. Find informal ways to connect such as getting coffee together, taking breaks, going for walks, or connecting over happy hour.

3. Align interests to goals & objectives. It is important to guide your coachee in identifying their strengths and genuine interests when it comes to being successful at their job. The end goal for you is to get them to be highly engaged in delivering great services and products. Learn more about what motivates your coachee at work (new projects, perfecting a new process, visibility from higher ups, etc.). Then offer them opportunities that connect their interests to their core role and responsibilities.

4. Listen and observe. This is the most important part--when you are in conversation with your coachee, you should be doing less than 20% of the talking! Things to keep in mind - avoid multi-tasking, show engaged body language (eye contact, nodding your head, smiling...etc.), try to see it from their perspective, and clear your own objectives. Avoid the temptation to steer the conversation in one direction of the other. Give your coachee full freedom to drive the conversation. If you find they are not talking, try step 5.

5. Ask the HOW and WHAT questions. Your job is to ask open ended questions and get them to solve their own problems and come up with new ideas. Questions such as, “How will you deal with the next client?” “What is your thinking process when you don’t know the answer right away.” “What steps will you take to prepare for this upcoming presentation?” If your coachee says, “I don’t know…” don’t take that as their final word. Ask them, “What would you say if you knew?” or ask them to think of a few options before you put in your two cents.

6. Appreciate good work. A sad statistic: over 60% of employees don’t remember being appreciated for their work. It is not enough to say, “Good job on that presentation!” What a good coach will do is focus on a trait/skill that the coachee implemented and how it helped achieve a better result. For example, “Thank you for your persistence in working with that difficult client. Because of your hard work, you were able to come up with a mutually beneficial solution for our team and the client, and we gained another loyal customer.”

7. Prepare for constructive feedback. Building regular informal conversations into your coaching strategy will pay off when/if you have to provide feedback that is focused on getting someone to improve something. Because your coachee will be used to you providing regular feedback (usually appreciative feedback) the difficult conversations should not seem so hard. Remember that when you provide critical feedback: 

8. State the issue clearly; state the facts; avoid pointing fingers by using "you" statements; provide specific examples; and state your recommendation with specific follow-up steps. If possible, create success metrics with your coachee so that you both will know when the goal is reached

9. Be open to feedback yourself. Have you encouraged your coachee to provide you feedback on your managerial style? If not, give it a try and check yourself. Are you likely to get defensive? Are you able to ask for clarification if something is not clear. What is your body language saying when someone gives you feedback? Can you coach your direct report into becoming an excellent coach as well?

This is just the beginning of developing yourself into an effective coach. More tips and tools will be coming in the next few weeks on each of these steps!

Increase Your Concentration

If you find concentrating hard, try these tips:

CLEAR EVERYTHING

  • Clear your desk.
  • Turn off email/phone ringer/alerts/texts.

  • Put on your headphones. Even if you don’t listen to music, you will prevent [most] people from approaching you.

  • If someone comes over, know what you will say: “Hi Joe, I am heads down working on an urgent deadline right now [this may or may not be true]. Can we have this discussion in 2 minutes or less? Or, how about sending me an email with the request and deadline and I will respond by 3 pm today.”

  • Set a timer (20-30 mins) to focus without distractions.

DO IT

  • Do the task.

  • If you can concentrate longer than the time, keep going as long as it doesn’t take up time you scheduled for another task.

  • Once you find yourself getting distracted, STOP and refresh.

EVALUATE & ASK

  • Did you concentrate for the whole time? If not, what distracted you? How can you prevent that next time? Do you need to set smaller amounts of time to concentrate for, or maybe find a quieter less distracting space to work in?

  • How far did you get? Determine what of the task is left to do. Decide if you can take a short break and continue working or if you need to revise your schedule.

REWARD!

  • Figure out your reward system: do you take a 10 min break, watch hilarious cat YouTube videos, check your email, go for a walk, call a friend…?

  • Reward yourself and/or take a break.

  • Start the cycle over again.

Multi-tasking: A necessary evil or just plain evil?

We all do it, and sometimes even job descriptions or interviewers say we should be awesome at this in order to succeed in the job. During my next interview I will remind those interviewers that multitasking reduces task efficiency by 60%, reduces IQ by 10 points, and damages working relationships (How and Why Not to Multitask, Harvard Business Review).

But, if you have to do it, here are some DOs and DON’Ts:

  • DO batch similar tasks together and complete them using a streamlined process or template. Then before finalizing make small customizations for each. Ie. You have to crank out 10 prospect emails to various clients. Create a template and then customize. Limit your customization to 5-7 minutes per client.

  • DO schedule time in your day to scan emails in your Inbox. Respond to any that will take less than 3 minutes of your time. This usually entails “Yes/No” responses or forwarding onto someone else. For anything else, defer it and block out the task in your calendar.

  • DON’T multitask when you are speaking with someone. This means one-on-one conversations, phone calls, and meetings. If you can’t focus on what they are saying kindly request that you reschedule or reconvene at a time when you can focus. Otherwise you are damaging your credibility and relationship.

  • DON’T multitask with items that you have identified as urgent or important (I will be posting a follow-up blog on tips for prioritization and concentration next week).

  • DON’T multitask with items that require creative thought, brainstorming, research, strategic or deep thinking.

Be more productive and work LESS!

Have you ever heard or said this?

"I had such a long week! I worked 60 hours this week..."

It really bothers me that telling someone that we work more than 40 hours is an indicator of how hard we work or how successful we are. I truly believe that we don’t have to work 40+ hours and neglect the other parts of our lives to be professionally successful. Instead we need to find ways to work smarter.

I have been reading the book The Four-Hour Workweek by Timothy Ferriss and wanted to share his tips on increasing productivity so that we have more time to do what we actually want to do.

We could all take a cue from Pareto’s Law that says:

  • 80% of outputs result in 20% of inputs

What does this mean when you apply it to your own work?

It could mean that 80% of your results come from only 20% of your effort & time. Or 80% of your revenue/sales is coming from 20% of your products/customers/clients.

Do a truthful analysis of how you spend your time each day and connect your time and effort to results and achievements. Take a look at your customers, what you spend the most time doing, and who takes up most of your time. I use www.Toggl.com to help me monitor how long it takes me to complete a task, which I can tie to projects and deliverables. At the end of each week and month Toggl gives me a report on how much time I spent on everything that I tracked.

One you have collected the date, prioritize:

If you find that 80% of your prospect follow-ups are unproductive, can you streamline your communications to them? Can you cut out high maintenance customers that contribute less than 10% to your bottom-line? Can you politely, yet firmly decline requests to work with difficult people who cause 80% of your frustrations?

Give it a try and work smarter, not harder!