31 Coaching Techniques and Tools

At its best, coaching is about partnering rather than about one person being “the expert” and lecturing the other. The coach helps the employee develop a higher level of expertise. The coach can use a variety of methods to facilitate the coaching process:

  • Listening actively; the coach does not solve the employee’s problems—the employee solves his or her own problems.
  • Helping employees distinguish what is important from what is not.
  • Leading employees outside of their comfort zone.
  • Acknowledging the employee’s accomplishments and empathizing (not sympathizing) when the employee is down.
  • Providing perspective based on the coach’s own experiences.
  • Helping the employee set goals, develop an action plan for moving ahead, and anticipate and overcome potential obstacles.
  • Recommending specific books or other sources of learning.
  • Encouraging journaling to gain awareness of emotions and behaviors and to track progress toward goals.
  • Participating in role-playing and simulations to promote skill practice.
  • Meeting on a regular basis, with on-the-job “homework” assignments between meetings.

The GROW model was popularized in the coaching industry by Sir John Whitmore in his 1992 book Coaching for Performance: GROWing Human Potential and Purpose. Whitmore’s acronym stands for:

  • Goals.
  • Reality, or current reality.
  • Options.
  • Way forward, or what you will do.

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Human Resource Management V2 Copyright © 2017 by [Author removed at request of original publisher] and Ellen Mathein is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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