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Coaching and Behavioural Change

Thinking on executive coaching, stakeholder-centred methodology, feedback culture, and what actually produces durable behaviour change.

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Point of View

Stated Positions on Contested Questions

A Coaching Culture Is Not Produced by Training Managers in Coaching Skills

Most organisations that want a coaching culture invest in coaching skills training for managers. This is necessary but nowhere near sufficient. A coaching culture is a specific kind of organisational environment, and environments are produced by systems, not by individual skills.

Feedforward over Feedback: Why the Direction of the Conversation Changes Everything

Feedback is information about the past. Feedforward is information about the future. The distinction is not merely semantic: it changes what the conversation produces, how the receiver engages with it, and what actually changes as a result.

The Coaching Engagement Is Often Won or Lost Before the First Session

The quality of a coaching engagement is determined, more than by any other single factor, by the quality of the contracting that precedes it. Most coaching failures are contracting failures.

The Stakeholder Is the Data: Why 360 Feedback Changes Behaviour When Coaching Alone Does Not

Most executive coaching is a private conversation between a coach and a coachee. The coachee's stakeholders, the people whose daily experience of working with this leader is the primary evidence of whether development is happening, are largely absent from that conversation.

Chasing The Bright Side – Pragmatic Optimist!

The pragmatic optimist does not pretend the difficulty does not exist. They hold the reality clearly and act anyway. This is not a personality trait. It is a practised leadership orientation that can be developed deliberately.

DESTINED TO BREAK | 40% of new leaders fail within the first 18 months

Four out of ten newly promoted managers and executives fail within 18 months of taking a new role. The research has held at that number for at least 15 years. The landmines are the same across industries and levels: culture, relationships, stakeholder expectations, and the absence of a structured transition architecture. The cost of failure has been calculated at between two and twenty times total compensation. The opportunity cost is larger still and almost never measured.

Leaders need to appreciate Power

Power can be a useful tool for leaders, as it allows them to make decisions and take actions that can help their team or organization...

You Don’t Learn From Experience

Raw experience without structured reflection produces habit, not growth. The leaders who develop fastest are not the ones with the most experience. They are the ones who reflect most deliberately on it.

The Work-Life Balance Debate: A Perspective on Career and Personal Growth

The work-life balance debate misses the point. The real question is whether the work you are doing is worth the life it is costing. Integration, not balance, is what leaders actually navigate.

The Look of Leadership: Hot or Not

Dynamics of Appearance & Leadership In the realm of leadership, the adage "dress for success" has long been hailed as gospel truth. From...

Field Note

From the Facilitation Room

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