OEC Consultant's Corner
Case Studies
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Coaching print
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By: Michael Crystal, Ph.D.
We would love to say that
every coaching assignment begins with great expectations and concludes with
a happy ending, but unfortunately that is not the case. Following
are three very different engagements from the perspective of initial expectations, results,
and lessons learned.
Case Study #1: Positive Expectations, Positive
Results
As part of a development initiative for a group of high
performers, I was assigned to coach two executives with very different needs.
After meeting with each and with their shared manager, we established concrete
objectives and goals—around communications, leadership, and process-management
skills. The development plans were tailored not only to the individuals’ goals
and objectives, but also to their schedules. One I met with once a month, with phone contact between sessions, for
six months. The second I met with weekly for nine months.
Reticent because this was their first coaching experience,
each asked, "Is this because I’m doing something wrong?" These were valued
employees for whom coaching was being provided as a perk. Once they realized we
were working on enhancing the good and sustaining the excellent, it reinforced
the idea they were good and could be even better. That gave the process
traction, and both found the experience and endgame to be very positive. A
month after we concluded, one called to report he’d been promoted.
This was a win-win, but there is a lesson: To make the
intervention successful, the coach has to be very accommodating because there
is no single formula that works.
Case Study #2: High Failure Potential, Positive Results
After a foreign owner acquired an American firm, I was assigned to coach a functional
Senior Vice President under consideration for promotion. A high performer from the
American firm who was now managing a cross-cultural team, he was not behaving in a
way that was acceptable to the culture of the acquiring institution. Feedback revealed
he had a tendency to walk into situations with his mind made up and dig his heels in.
This personality issue exacerbated the cultural clash, putting him at risk with the new
management. The objective was for the executive to become both flexible and adaptable.
We began by agreeing to definitions: flexibility—being able to go into situations without
preconceived notions; adaptability—being able to change course or direction when required
yet not lose effectiveness. I was able to gain his trust through empathy. In my corporate
life, I had managed a team similar to his, so he recognized I came to him with a real-world
perspective. The more he began to trust, the more he began to realize I could help.
He allowed me to collect feedback from key people on his staff but tended to react to it
with excuses or denial. This is where a good coach recognizes that instead of getting
behind and pushing, you need to get in front and pull the coachee toward a better place.
It took time, but I got him to recognize that the best way to objectively determine how
he behaved with the group was for me to sit in on a few staff meetings. We positioned it
as an effort to better understand and improve the functioning of the team. My written
observations were descriptive, not evaluative, in recognition that success depended on
letting the executive draw his own conclusions and see the need to change his behavior.
We slowly gained momentum and he began to respond. The key was an incremental approach that
allowed him to work on one thing at a time. I would collect feedback from the team, which
provided positive reinforcement. Once he saw that something was working, he was very good
at execution.
The process took more than a year. As the intense work neared conclusion—I’m now working
with him once a quarter for reinforcement—I went back to the team members who had provided
feedback a year earlier. I asked the same questions, to get an-apples-to-apples comparison,
as well as a few new ones. The feedback revealed a real win for the executive, the team,
and the process.
We did not go into this engagement with high expectations for success. For the first four
months, the executive wasn’t convinced coaching would work. Had he persisted in his
habitual ways, he undoubtedly would have suffered the consequences. The lesson here
is the importance of taking it a step at a time and pulling rather than pushing.
Case Study #3: Positive Expectations, Negative
Results
As a consultant, I counsel client organizations to assess senior
executives on how they’re doing against behavioral expectations as
well as goals. The two have to be in balance. This engagement proved
to be a classic case of what happens when an organization doesn’t balance
both sides of the ledger.
We were called in to coach a highly successful rainmaker who, we were told, needed
to improve his leadership skills. For a variety of reasons, we were not able to
do a 360° assessment up front but we soon discovered this was someone who broke
all the rules. Each session revealed increasingly antisocial behavior.
Eventually, his behavior became so objectionable the executive was suspended.
A condition of his continued employment was seeing a psychotherapist twice a week
while continuing weekly coaching.
My job was to work on getting him back into the organization. But we came to
a point where we both questioned whether, given the bad blood he had caused,
the "soil" wasn’t too poisoned to allow him to be "repotted."
No matter how much he was willing to change, would the team accept him back?
I expressed these concerns to the CEO, who granted me the opportunity to do a 360°
with the team. Although I concluded and reported that my concerns were justified,
the CEO was committed to bringing the executive back. Finally, when the team
approached the CEO and threatened to quit, the company recognized it couldn’t
sacrifice the group for one individual.
From the coaching perspective, this was a lose-lose. All management could
see was incredible performance against goals. It didn’t recognize the
deleterious effect of the negative behavior on the rest of the organization
until almost too late. We weren’t given enough information up front to
recognize the depth of the problem, but we also didn’t ask enough—or
the right—questions. The lessons learned?
- When you see even a little
smoke—even an anecdote or a fleeting perception—look for
fire!
- Do a 360° by interview as early as
possible to try to get the whole picture. The push, these
days, is to execute—pull the trigger. But in coaching, that
can be disastrous. We sometimes have to do a deeper, more
thorough discovery if we are going to be of optimal value to
the person we’re coaching and to the organization.
- It isn’t that often that a coachee needs both thera-
peutic counseling and coaching. But as a coach,
you must be able to recognize the need when it
arises.
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Therapy |
Coaching |
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Treatment directed toward the cure of a
pathological condition (i.e., a disease or disorder). A
means of helping individuals relate to themselves the
stories of their lives as they’re living those lives in
a way that makes them happier than they might be without
it. Not a way of getting at the truth or healing, it
teaches them to seize the narrative of their lives in a
way that makes things better.
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Developing and extending individuals’
abilities and motivation by giving them systematically
planned, progressively more “stretching” tasks to
perform while providing them with ongoing appraisal and
counseling. A powerful alliance designed to promote and
enhance the lifelong process of learning, effectiveness,
and fulfillment.
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There was a win in this situation. The team became stronger as a result
of this experience and came away with a stronger sense of purpose and
shared responsibility.
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For more information about coaching
services available through The Ayers Group, contact Joan Caruso, Managing Director,
Organizational Effectiveness Consulting, at joan.caruso@ayers.com or 212.889.7788.
Michael Crystal, Ph.D., is an Ayers executive coach/consultant
across a broad range of industries and organizations. He draws on more than a
decade of experience in corporate HR and OD in FORTUNE 500 firms.
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