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What I Have Learned about Coaching Clients

Each coaching client is unique.     As coaches, we each have a philosophy of coaching, a code of ethics, strategies, curiosity, and intuition.     We have our own experiences and inclinations that inform us but (we hope) do not limit our effectiveness.    Even so, we must be flexible, ready to adapt to the personality, expectations, and individuality of each client.   My observation is that all my coaching clients (past and present) have certain characteristics in common, however.   They are smart.   Most are in leadership roles that are only given to professionally and vocationally competent people.  They have both training and life experiences to draw on.   They are gifted.   We define spiritual gifts in various ways, but I believe that God has gifted each person with special abilities.  These gifts may not always be fully developed, but they are present in the individual.   They know a lot more ...
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Leadership: Control or Collaboration

The 20 th   century industrial model thrived on a tight command and control model.     It increased production, but it often fostered an “us” versus “them” approach--industry versus labor union, employer versus employee, “boss” versus workers.       In his New Leadership Paradigm , Steve Piersanti picks up on this in calling for a shift from the old paradigm of control to one of collaboration.  The control approach depended on coercion, dominance, and secrecy to “keep people in line.”  The new paradigm calls for collaboration.  Piersanti describes collaboration in this way: “Leadership is exercised through invitation, request, dialogue, persuasion, respect, openness, kindness, integrity, and partnership, without compulsion.”   This is the way that the church was intended to function.  In Romans 12:4-8, the apostle Paul writes,   For just as each of us has one body with many members, and these members do not ...

The Gifts of Fall and Denominational Meetings

Each season bring its own gifts.    Fall brings us cooler temperatures, the familiar rhythms of school and work, football, and denominational meetings! Some may be surprised at the last item of that list, so let me explain.   In my Southern Baptist tradition, fall is the time for associational meetings and state meetings.  As a denominational person and collegiate minister, I was expected to be present in those gatherings.  Associational meetings are made of messengers from local churches in a county (or maybe a combination of two or more) who gather in October (usually) to learn about local and state ministries, worship, and listen to sermons.   My appreciation for these annual associational meetings grew when I was campus minister at Carson Newman College (now University) in east Tennessee.  In that role, I would be expected to represent the college in three or four such meetings.  Of course, these were usually smaller, more ...

Leadership Dilemma: Outgrowing Your Mentor

Benjamin Franklin said this about mentoring:   “There are two ways to acquire wisdom; you can either buy it or borrow it.  By buying it, you pay full price in terms of time and cost to learn the lessons you need to learn.  By borrowing it, you go to those men and women who have already paid the price to learn the lessons and get their wisdom from them.”   Mentors are important in our personal and professional development.  They not only share their experiences with us, but they open doors by introducing us to people in our field and sponsoring us to be involved in special projects or events.   Is it possible that one can outgrow her or his mentor?  This is not only a possibility but very likely. In the Book of Acts, we read the story of a mentor-protégé relationship that prospered for a period but ended with some discord.  We sometimes forget that Barnabas was a mentor for Saul, the persecutor of the Way who would become i...

Impact: How to Inspire, Align, and Amplify Innovative Teams—A Book Review

Let me warn you upfront:     this is a complex, multilayered volume written by an author with both an engineering (Ph.D.) and public policy background as well as practical experience in the gaming industry (Roblox).     Keith Lucas invites us into a deep dive to creating, leading,     developing, and sustaining teams that are both innovative and entrepreneurial.    He believes that “high-performing teams create engines of innovation in the behaviors they cultivate and the people they hire, develop, and retain.”   There are two major themes in the book:  developing teams that practice aligned autonomy and developing “mission athletes” in those teams.  Although the ground covered in the first area is very familiar territory, Lucas gives it a fresh spin.  He knows the accepted literature in the field but is not limited by it.  The section on developing team members acknowledges the reality that not everyo...

Transitions

As I looked over a group I was meeting with this week, I realized that practically everyone there was going through a time of transition—sending children back to school or launching them into world; dealing with birth or death; supporting aging parents or considering one’s own aging; beginning a new position or leaving one;  celebrating good health with new activities or recognizing the limitations of changing health; beginning a relationship or ending one. Change and transition are not the same.  Change is an external event or situation that takes place: a new job, a new life situation, a change in lifestyle.  Change can happen very quickly.  Transition is the inner psychological process that people go through as they internalize and come to terms with the new situation that the change brings about. Recognizing that we are in transition leverages change for significant growth.  When you touch an artistic mobile, equilibrium is changed. ...

Life Coaching vs. Therapy: A Comparison

Life Coaching vs. Therapy: A Comparison Ethical and effective coaches know when a client’s needs go beyond the scope of coaching and require referral to a licensed mental health professional. Recognizing these boundaries protects both the client’s well-being and the integrity of the coaching process.     Aspect Life Coaching Therapy Primary Focus Future-oriented growth and goal achievement Healing and recovery from past or present emotional/psychological distress Approach Strengths-based, action-driven, and solution-focused Diagnostic, treatment-based, and process-oriented Time Orientation Focuses on present and future Often explores past to understand and heal present issues Scope Clarifying goals, building skills, enhancing performance, increasing life satisfaction Addressing mental illness, trauma, emotional regulation, and behavioral challenges Typical Client Mentally healthy individuals seeking growth, clarity, or life transition support Individuals experiencing emotional...