The 5 Stages of Sustainability
The 7 Levels of Corporate Sustainability
Affirmations
Are you a Hedgehog or a Fox?
A Better Way to Change
Bifocal Vision
Business Sustainability
The CEO's Trusted Advisor
The Changing Context of Business
Charisma
The Coach as Shaman
Coaching across Cultures
A Coaching Typology
The Coming Shake-Out in the Coaching World
Competing Commitments
Conscious Incompetence
Context - a powerful tool for change
Current Reality - Telling the Truth
Desire and Addiction
The Dangers of Executive Coaching
Ecopsychology and "Green and Away"
Emergence and Coaching
Endings
Energy
Excellence in Executive Coaching
Faulty Thinking and the ABC Model
The Future Landscape of Coaching 06/07
The Future Landscape of Coaching 07/08
Guilt is Good for You!
Happiness
Hassleme!
"I turned my face for a moment ..."
Inner Leadership and Psychosynthesis
In Praise of Ignorance
The Integral (AQAL) Model
Integral Leadership
Limitation Celebration
Managing Progression and Regression
Mentoring, Coaching, etc.
MBTI and Coaching
The Miracle Question
On Valuing
The One Thing You Need to Know
The Paradox of Choice
Parallel Worlds
Playing at Leadership?
Playing to our Strengths
Presence
Reflections on Being 50
Resilience
Shifting Stuck Patterns
The Set-Up-To-Fail Syndrome
Social Business
Sustainable Business
Time Management
Transformational Coaching
Values Priorities
What really makes people happy?
What I do
What is the Job of a Manager?
What is Success?
Which Mentor?
Working Identity
 
Excellence in Executive Coaching

Given the widely varying qualifications, background and experience of coaches, how do potential purchasers of coaching recognise a good coach? During 2004 I and around 30 other experienced coaches were interviewed by Ginny Kidd as part of her quest to understand excellence in executive coaching. Her action inquiry process led her to a scaled competency model (the table below shows a summary of the six competencies she developed). In the full model, each competency has four levels and within each level are detailed descriptions of the behaviours that the coach exhibits.

Excellence in Executive Coaching

Generally I don't like competency frameworks - they can tend to over-emphasise conformity and sameness and militate against novelty and indeed excellence (more on this) - but this one I do like. And, as well as its role in assessing coach competence, this framework can also be used developmentally to support the journey to becoming an excellent coach. Copies of the paper "Action Inquiry into Coaching" which outlines the findings are available from Ginny at ginny@mainstayinternational.com

 
 
 
Copyright © 2008. Dr M H M Munro Turner. All rights reserved