Chapter 10

Interpersonal Methodologies

People First

Coaching

In this section I’m faced with the daunting task of showing you around the waterfront without allowing detailed inspection of the boats!

I’ve allocated three chapters to the methodologies of consulting, because the book’s mission is to cover all aspects of consulting: entry, marketing, proposals, implementation, ethics, life balance, and so forth. So what follows is an oxymoronic “detailed overview.” Buckle your seat belts.1

Coaching is something that all consultants have always done. When you are implementing a project, you are virtually always helping your buyer and others in the actions and behaviors required for success. Any consultant on retainer is a coach, perforce. The movement in the past decade to set coaching aside as some sort of specialty is bizarre. The best coaches are those who understand organizational dynamics, change management, team building, and so forth. Most coaches, with their degrees and certifications from so-called coaching universities, have a very limited view of the organizational universe, sort of like driving a car through one of those peepholes in the hotel room door.

Besides, who certifies the certifiers?

Coaching is not mentoring, the latter being a reactive, sounding board type of relationship. Coaching is assertive and proactive.

You can coach individuals or teams, but it’s a distinction with little difference since teams comprise individuals.

The key thing to immediately sort out ...

Get The Consulting Bible: Everything You Need to Know to Create and Expand a Seven-Figure Consulting Practice now with the O’Reilly learning platform.

O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.