Answers to Your Questions About
Executive Coaching
Author: Susan Dunn, M.A., The EQ Coach
What is executive coaching? Coaches help executives increase
their productivity, quality, work relationships and work satisfaction
by increasing their emotional intelligence. They also help the
executive define authenticity and values. Skills, training, education
and experience will get you in the game, but the higher up you
go, the more your emotional intelligence makes the difference.
An executive coach is part advisor, part sounding board, part
cheerleader, part manager, part strategist. And, evidently, part
guardian angel. “A coach may be the guardian angel you need
to rev up your career,” says MONEY Magaine.
Harvard University research shows that 85% of top performers’
and managers’ success is due to 20 people skills that can
be learned and mastered. We can increase our emotional intelligence
over time, unlike our basic IQ, and it matters more to happiness
and success. It is crucial for executives and leaders.
According to Warren Bennis, Ph.D., Distinguished Professor of
Business Administraion, USC, “Emotional intelligence, more
than any other asset, more than IQ or technical expertise, is
the most important overall success factor.”
One executive coach says that he “helps executives and
teams reach peak performance in both their professional and personal
lives.” Some of the areas that might be addressed are leadership,
communication skills, team building, stress management, conflict
resolution, overcoming blocks to success, emotional intelligence,
and work-life balance.
A MAJOR GROWTH INDUSTRY
According to “The Economist,” (Dec. 2002), executive
coaching is growing by about 40% a year.
It’s a major growth industry says the Harvard Business
School Journal, July 2002. “At least 10,000 coaches work
for businesses today, up from 2,000 in 1996. And that figure is
expected to exceed 50,000 in the next five years. Executive
coaching is also highly profitable; employers are now willing
to pay fees ranging from $1,500 to $15,000 a day.”
Start-Ups Magazine names coaching as the number two growth industry
after IT (Information Technology), and says it’s the number
one home-based profession.
Why the boom? John Kotter, Professor of Leadership, Harvard Business
School, says it’s the pace. “As we move from 30 miles
an hour to 70 to 120 to 180…as we go from driving straight
down the road to making right turns and left turns to abandoning
cars and getting on motorcycles…the whole game changes,
and a lot of people are trying to keep up, learn how not to fall
off.”
In order to cope with the fast pace and information overload
in today’s world, global interaction on a daily basis, and
ethical issues -- in order to become change-proficient -- executives
realize they need strong emotional intelligence skills.
DOES COACHING WORK? WHAT’S THE ROI?
A study of 100 coached professionals found a 570% return on investment.
Coaching improved productivity 53%, quality 48%, work relationships
77%, and overall job satisfaction increased 61%.
The Manchester survey ( http://www.susandunn.cc/businessgraph.htm
) of 140 companies shows 9 in 10 executives believe coaching to
be worth their time and money. The average return was more than
$5 for each $1 spent. (The Denver Post)
RESULTS
Emotional intelligence relates to values and ethics, as well
as interpersonal social skills, self-awareness, and emotional
management of self and others. Values-based leadership increases
retention and profitability and reduces turnover and legal costs.
According to the Global Employee Relationship study, when employees
believe they work for ethical companies, 55% are truly loyal,
compared to only 25% in less ethical companies. Unethical behavior
contributes to the 25% who say s they are chronically disappointed,
angry, lacking loyalty and likely to leave or sue.
An Ethics Resource Center study found that 90% of employees value
leaders with integrity as highly as they value income.
CONCLUSION
The Harvard Business Review says “the goal of coaching
is the goal of good management: to make the most of an organization’s
valuable resources.” The most valuable resource to any organization
is its people. An executive establishes the organizational culture,
which influences every employee in the organization.
“Don’t forget that the culture starts at the top,”
says Steve Wilson, a Columbus, Ohio-based business psychologist.
Daniel Goleman concurs in his book, “Primal Leadership.”
Executives are getting coached on emotional intelligence skills
not only for their own personal use but for the future of the
organization. As one of my clients told me, “I can’t
take my people any farther than I am.”
About the author: ©Susan Dunn, M.A., Clinical Psychology,
The EQ Coach. Executive and individual coaching, EQ-culture programs
for organizations, Internet courses on emotional intelligence.
http://www.susandunn.cc
, and mailto:sdunn@susandunn.cc for FREE ezine, “EQ in the
Workplace.” Please put “EQ” for subject line.
Increase your EQ and everyone benefits.
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