Title: COACHING, COUNSELLING AND MENTORING
1COACHING, COUNSELLING AND MENTORING
2Coaching and Mentoring
- Development is contingent on how well the
Coach/Mentor is able to - Establish a developmental relationship
- Help the individual learn from his/her experience
3Coaching
- A role played by a manager to improve
performance of a subordinate on the job. It
involves planned practices, careful observations
and effective feedback
4Mentoring
- A role played by an experienced individual (not
usually an immediate supervisor) who helps the
protégé develop and perform beyond his/her
immediate job level. Mentoring focuses on
orientation and socialisation to the organisation
its culture, people in the form of feedback,
guidance and advice.
5Outcomes
- Coaching outcomes
- Development of skills and abilities in a specific
skill domain - Self confidence
- Mentoring outcomes
- Knowledge development including personal growth
- Self awareness
6COACHING
- Focused on skills and results
- Comes from direct managers
- Strengthens and enhances learning daily
- Conveys a set of beliefs, values and vision
- Enables goal setting
7Importance Benefits of Coaching
- Empowers employees
- Unleashes creativity
- Increases commitment
8Specific benefits of Coaching - Individual
- Reduces employee fears relating to status
- Ownership
- Increases and endorses employee skills
- Helps people overcome personal obstacles
- Improves communication
- Improves individual understanding
- Higher risk-taking through confidence building
9Specific benefits of Coaching - Organisational
- Improves recruitment and retention
- Trust, respect, listened to and valued
- Reduces misunderstanding and mistakes
- more positive and supportive work climate
- Increases and improves organisational
communication - Increases creativity increased entrepreneurial
thinking
10Helping others set goals
- Major facet of coaching
- Goal setting can be incorporated into performance
feedback - Success depends on organisational environment
- Goal setting important
- SMART
- Specific
- Measurable
- Achievable and Attainable
- Realistic
- Time Bound
11Skills and Characteristics of Effective Coaches
- Desire to help others achieve full potential
- Ability to give (positive negative) feedback
- Honesty and trustworthiness
- Willingness NOT to assign blame
- Good communication skills
- Balance in thinking (learning results)
- Responsibility and accountability
- Constructive means of dealing with conflict
management
12Strategies for Effective Coaching
- Face-to-face meetings lasting 35-45 minutes
- Do what you require to be done!
- Provide
- High levels of supportive behaviour
- Low levels of non-supportive behaviour
- Moderate levels of initiating behaviour
- Collaborate to find solutions jointly
- Plan, prepare and rehearse
13Counselling
- Not to be mistaken for coaching
- Used to address personal or attitudinal problems
rather than those related to ability - Best left to specific professionals
14Two methods of counselling
- Directive
- Probing, questioning and discussing
- Non-Directive
- Listening (sometimes leads to a solution)
- Managers should not get involved in counselling
15MENTORING
- Its a relationship, not just a procedure or
activity where one person professionally assists
the career development of another, outside the
normal manager/subordinate relationship. - Mind, S 1993 Business Mentoring and Coaching
16- What is mentoring?
- Why have a mentoring program?
- The benefits of mentoring
- Roles and key attributes
- Mentoring agreements
17About ½ of the Australian top 25 companies were
running mentoring programs in 2003
- All state governments
- Military
- Boeing
- Sydney Olympics
- Wesfarmers
- Tabcorp
- Citibank
18WHY MENTORING?
- Business activity speed
- Globalisation (pressure of competition)
- Makes sense and is cost effective
- Easy to administer
- Improves self confidence
- Effective in transferring professional, technical
and management skills - Focuses on skills and potential
- Wide organisational benefit
19Types of Mentoring Relationships
- Formal
- Officially designated relationships
- Informal
- Spontaneous
- Informational peers
- Collegial peers
- Special peers
20Mentee Objectives
- Sets out to achieve new skills and knowledge to
apply to their career - Seeks guidance and advice in their professional
development - Accepts responsibility for their own decisions
and actions - Acts on expect and objective advice
- Carries out tasks and projects by agreed times,
and - Maintains confidentiality
21Mentor objectives
- Facilitates the mentees professional growth
- Provides information, guidance and constructive
comments - Evaluates the mentees plans and decisions
- Supports and encourages and, where necessary,
highlights shortfalls in agreed performance, and - Maintains confidentiality
22Organisational benefits of Mentoring
- Skills and knowledge transfer
- Politics transfer
- Teach after learning
- Increase competence of both parties
- Increase self-esteem of both parties
- Development of practical networks
23Organisational benefits of Mentoring (cont.)
- Visibility of individual competencies
- Communication enhancement
- Greater understanding of individual differences
- Meet current and future organisational needs
24Mentee benefits of mentoring
- Greater job satisfaction
- More promotions
- Higher incomes
- Less likely to leave
- Leadership/management training
- Increased self-confidence, self awareness, and
growth
25Mentee benefits of mentoring (cont.)
- Development of friendships that can provide
valuable contacts - Increased interpersonal skills
- Greater insight into organisational practices and
requirements - Insight into informal workings
- Saves time allows mentees to learn from others
experiences rather than by themselves
26Mentor benefits of mentoring role
- Personal satisfaction
- Develops patience, insight, and understanding
- May be exposed to cultural, social, or economic
characteristics different from their own - Improves leadership/management and communication
skills - Trains employees to meet current and future
organisational need (ensures survival)
27Mentoring Agreements
- Why have a mentoring agreement?
- What should be in the agreement?
- What shouldnt be in the agreement?
28Mentoring Agreements
- Should be tailored to the specific relationship
- Set out mutual expectations and agreed
arrangements - Goals (viable achievable, useful)
- SMART