Nondirective Coaching: Helping People Change

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Nondirective Coaching: Helping People Change by Terry R. Bacon, Ph.D.

June 2011 First Published 2001 Whatever the specific coaching task in each of these cases, fundamentally, the coach is trying to help the other person change— improve performance, make better choices, do something differently, avoid ineffective behaviors, or change an attitude or perspective.

The purpose of coaching is to help people change. Of course, a particular coach may be giving performance feedback, teaching an employee how to use equipment, brainstorming with a group on how to improve quality, advising a colleague about improving customer relationships, or counseling a young person about her career options and helping her think through them. Whatever the specific coaching task in each of these cases, fundamentally, the coach is trying to help the other person change—improve performance, make better choices, do something differently, avoid ineffective behaviors, or change an attitude or perspective. The problem is that change is difficult for most people, and data from Korn/Ferry’s Coaching Effectiveness Survey TM shows that most coaching is only moderately effective. Forty-five percent of coachees report that their sessions with their current coach have not had much positive impact on their work performance, and sixty percent of those surveyed said they would like better coaching than they are currently receiving. The irony, of course, is that coaches can’t make people change; they can only offer guidance and help. Change is the coachee’s responsibility, and no change will occur, no matter how helpful or brilliant the coach, if the coachee isn’t able to make it happen.


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