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So
You're a Player. Do You Need a Coach? Fortune
Magazine, Feb. 21, 2000
The hottest
thing in management is the executive coach--part boss, part
consultant, part therapist. Who are these people? And what
are they doing in your company?
Since
Mary Bradford took over as sales manager of the New England
region of Met Life's resources division a year ago, her sales
office has acted more like a New Age institute than an old-line
insurance company. She has organized retreats at which her
sales associates could get massages or do tai chi along with
their business. She has encouraged them to keep journals.
Last fall they had a combined business meeting and bicycling
trip at Bar Harbor, Me. And oh, yeah, by year-end they had
boosted their sales by nearly 60%.
Bradford
attributes her unorthodox approach and her uncommon results
to a secret weapon: her executive coach.
Several
years ago Bradford was another middle-management burnout candidate:
on the job early each morning, on the phone each night until
ten, giving far too little time to her family. She was facing
a stressful mid-career move from Washington, D.C., back to
Maine and a big transition to a new job at Met Life. But a
boss let her in on his little secret: He had a personal coach.
She might want to get one too. A friend of hers, who also
had a coach, made the referral, and Bradford began having
weekly phone conversations with Talane Miedaner, an executive
coach in New York City who has worked with people at Bear
Stearns, Citicorp, Motorola, Salomon Smith Barney, and Sears.
Miedaner
pushed Bradford to reexamine her goals and values. She helped
her to reclaim control of her time. Often, she helped her
with the nitty-gritty of her job. As is so common with salespeople,
Bradford had a habit of overpromising. Miedaner coached her
to underpromise and overdeliver--much more impressive. Miedaner
helped Bradford plot strategies for opening doors with prospective
clients, and rehearsed with her when Bradford interviewed
for a promotion. Bradford began to believe that if something
felt impossible or outrageous, it was exactly the right thing
to do.
Bradford
says her year of coaching "was like a grenade in my life
that's still going off." It taught her, she says, that
"people have to take more responsibility for their own
growth and development. They can't depend on human resources.
Coaches can help people come to grips with huge changes in
the way we do work, in getting through big transitions."
Even so,
she's careful whom she tells about her coaching. "Some
people think it's therapy," she says. "They think
it's weird."
Corporate
coaching is one of the stranger wrinkles in management these
days--one of the hottest things in human resources, except
that it doesn't usually come out of human resources. (In fact,
HR is often the last to know.) It is a grassroots movement
that is spreading in some of the unlikeliest corners of corporate
America, including IBM, AT&T, and Kodak. Some companies
don't want to talk about it (like Goldman Sachs, which canceled
an interview for this story).
Coaches
are everywhere these days. Companies hire them to shore up
executives or, in some cases, to ship them out. Division heads
hire them as change agents. Workers at all levels of the corporate
ladder, fed up with a lack of advice from inside the company,
are taking matters into their own hands and enlisting coaches
for guidance on how to improve their performance, boost their
profits, and make better decisions about everything from personnel
to strategy.
It's not
that executive coaching is particularly new. Chief executives
and those approaching the top have long sought counsel from
personal consultants, wise board members, or industrial psychologists.
But in the past five years coaching has gone mass-market.
In the age of Every Man for Himself, every man can have a
coach--and, in an ever more commonly held view, needs one.
The four-year-old International Coach Federation says its
online coach-referral service gets 2,600 hits a month. Its
membership has increased eightfold in the past two years,
to 2,400 members, but the federation guesses the total number
of coaches is more like 10,000. At Harvard Business School,
Linda Hill, professor of business administration, says she's
inundated with requests to coach. "Coaching is becoming
something of a heavy industry. It's amazing," says Warren
Bennis, professor of business administration at the University
of Southern California's business school.
What exactly
is a coach? Part personal consultant, part sounding board,
part manager. Yes, manager. Remember him? That person whose
job used to be to advise, motivate, and train--but whose nose
is now mostly stuck in e-mail? For a surprising number of
people, it is now the coach--not the boss--who pushes them
to hire, to fire, to fine-tune a sales pitch, to stretch.
Observers
of the phenomenon say that an executive coach often functions
as a therapist, too--though the coaches themselves tend to
deny this with some fury. Warren Bennis believes that "a
lot of executive coaching is really an acceptable form of
psychotherapy. It's still tough to say, 'I'm going to see
my therapist.' It's okay to say, 'I'm getting counseling from
my coach.' "
If ever
stressed-out corporate America could use a little couch-time,
it's now. Trust in big companies is at an all-time low. Baby-boomers
have been burned; Gen Xers aren't expecting the Corporation
to take care of them. Under the circumstances, employees are
much likelier to go outside and get independent advice to
help them be better managers, says Karen Cates, assistant
professor of organizational behavior at Northwestern's Kellogg
Graduate School of Management. Beyond that, she says, mentoring
systems have mostly failed. Organizations are so lean that
they don't have time for it. You're paid for what you produce,
not for time you spend developing people. Bosses are managing
by e-mail. "Given the impersonal nature of business today,
we're likely to say, 'Go take that hill--and oh, by the way,
send me an e-mail when you get there,' " says Charles
F. Cleary, chief operating officer of Log On America, a telecommunications
and Internet service provider in Providence.
Times
could hardly be more trying for people all up and down the
corporate ladder. Woe to the boss who's too authoritarian;
he'll just cost the corporation good talent. Woe to the manager
who leans too heavily on hierarchy; virtual teams call for
flexible leaders who can pull together strangers in distant
parts of the country and, for the duration of a project, get
them to bury their personal agendas and work together. Meanwhile,
the major currency of the manager--experience--has never been
so devalued. "You can't turn to your nice gray-haired
mentor and say, 'From your 30 years of experience, how does
one handle a dot-com?' " says Barry Mabry, a partner
at Ernst & Young who is using a coach. "Nobody on
earth has experienced this kind of business environment."
What's
really driving the boom in coaching, says John Kotter, professor
of leadership at the Harvard Business School, is this: "As
we move from 30 miles an hour to 70 to 120 to 180...as we
go from driving straight down the road to making right turns
and left turns to abandoning cars and getting on motorcycles...the
whole game changes, and a lot of people are trying to keep
up, learn how, not fall off."
Coaching
in its present form began in the 1980s, when some of these
trends were just beginning to take shape. Thomas J. Leonard,
a financial planner in Seattle, was trying to help some yuppie
clients figure out what to do with their six-figure salaries
and realized that they needed more than just the traditional
tax and investment advice. He asked them if they wanted to
talk more broadly about life issues, "and they jumped
at it," he recalls. "They had no emotional problems;
they didn't need to see a therapist. They wanted to brainstorm,"
he says.
Leonard
gave up his financial planning practice and began full-time
"life planning" a couple of years later. At some
point, one of his clients suggested that he call it coaching.
By the late 1980s he was training others to coach. "I
had an inkling there was something interesting and powerful
about this idea," he says. The need intensified through
all the corporate downsizing and restructuring in that period.
"All of a sudden you had all these people starting their
own businesses or consulting practices. They were people leaving
the corporate environment and they'd never had Entrepreneurialism
101," he recalls. They wanted to figure out how to make
more money, how to launch a great new concept or project,
how to reduce stress. Sometimes they just wanted somebody
to talk to. He began a formal coach training program called
Coach University in 1992, which put him ahead of the curve;
soon there followed managed care, which left a lot of therapists
anxiously seeking new ways to earn a living; and then came
the Internet, which, combined with globalization, left a lot
of managers looking for ways to cope with breathtaking change.
But who,
exactly, can be a coach? That's the scary part: pretty much
anybody. Many of them are therapists. Many more are dropouts
from consulting. Many of the coaches interviewed for this
story were garden-variety professionals, in past lives an
Andersen consultant, a CPA, an IBM salesman, a low-level bank
executive, a marketing vice president for Bloomingdale's.
The federation says that so far there's been no attempt to
license coaching. It has made an effort to establish standards,
but the boom in coaching worries even a lot of coaches, who
are concerned that rogues may give the profession a bad name.
But right
now coaches are so hot that credentials are almost beside
the point. What seems to matter most is word of mouth--did
the coaching work miracles for somebody you know? Corporate
coaches are in such demand that they can charge from $600
to $2,000 a month for three or four 30- to 60-minute phone
conversations. Some charge as much as $400 an hour. So a lot
of them are earning far more than psychologists or psychiatrists.
Of course,
this whole notion is still foreign to much of traditional
corporate America. "I have worked for organizations that
would find this quite threatening," says the Kellogg
School's Cates, who, like lots of other business school professors,
increasingly finds herself called on to coach her consulting
clients. Part of the fear has to do with confidentiality.
"As a coach, I know a lot about the companies and the
people who live there," she says. Beyond that, "it
can be very frightening for an organization to have its own
employees talking to outsiders. They'll want to know: Are
the outsider's goals aligned? What are you talking to that
person about?" She adds: "Ten years ago, you certainly
wouldn't have been allowed to do this."
It was
pretty threatening when Charles Cleary broached the idea of
using an outside coach as a change agent in his region of
AT&T's Growth Markets sales organization. Rosemary Turner
Slade Lucerne remembers it well. Cleary was a vice president
and general manager in Growth Markets and new to AT&T;
she was the staffing and training manager and an 11-year veteran.
"My first reaction was to say, 'Chip, we don't do that.
It's not part of our training curriculum. It's not on our
intranet. We don't have the budget. We can't,' " she
recalls. But Cleary had spent the better part of the prior
decade at Teleport Communications Group, a telecom maverick
acquired by AT&T. He'd come from a nimble, entrepreneurial
culture and knew that was what he needed to somehow graft
onto AT&T, to make his region a truly high-growth sales
unit. "If AT&T and I both spoke languages, it was
speaking French and I was speaking Spanish," he recalls.
"I knew what I had to make happen at AT&T. And I
knew the road would not be smooth," he says. He enlisted
the help of Cheryl Weir, an executive coach who had spent
13 years in sales at IBM.
In one
of their early conversations, Weir asked Cleary, "Where
do you want to end up at the end of the year?" He told
her "something pretty loosey-goosey" like that he
wanted to be No. 1. "Well, quantify that," she insisted.
When he told her 5% over his revenue target, she replied,
"Ahhh, you can do that in your sleep." What would
constitute hypergrowth? she wanted to know. Fifteen percent?
She nudged: Why don't you aim for 20? (That's big, Cleary
says, about double the rate of his piece of the industry.)
"She made me put a stake in the ground," recalls
Cleary. "This team was not used to putting stakes in
the ground."
Cleary
brought Weir into the office for a couple of days of intensive
training with the staff. "We got into a room and locked
ourselves down," Cleary recalls. They talked about their
bad habits and what they were really like at home with their
families, and they confessed their workplace failings--things
like, "Well, I don't spend any time with my people. Or,
when they come into my office, I say yeah, yeah, yeah, boom,"
says Cleary. At some point Cleary gave an impassioned speech,
and they all agreed on a sales target (the consensus was to
boost revenues by 16%, which would be about double the prior
year's growth rate) and began to plot how they'd pull it off.
By year's
end, revenue growth was 16%. That put Cleary's outfit in the
top three fastest-growing in AT&T's Growth Markets. "We
blew out the numbers," he says. "Cheryl accelerated
our transformation, no question about it." In January,
Cleary was lured away by a job as chief operating officer
of Log On America. But by that time, Lucerne had long since
been won over. The whole package cost $11,000 for two days
of training plus about $2,000 quarterly for follow-up coaching
with Weir, "and I honestly think we earned that back
in a week," says Lucerne. Weir is continuing her work
at AT&T with Cleary's group and four others, and will
be coaching at Log On America as well.
Another
way to look at the spread of coaching is that it bridges the
growing chasm between what managers are being asked to do
and what they have been trained to do. It is almost like the
difference between generals in peacetime and generals in war,
says Harvard's Kotter. "We have a lot of people who were
trained to be superb managers but now have horrendous leadership
challenges thrown at them. I think a lot of the coaching is
aimed at trying to help people develop skills and actions
that are different from what they grew up with."
That has
certainly been the case at Kodak, which has experienced upheaval
in the past five years as it adjusts to new competition and
the Digital Age. Dan Carlson began working with an outside
coach last year to solve his part of Kodak's horrendous challenge:
cranking up productivity with a work force that had all but
melted down. At the time he was a department manager in the
color film manufacturing operations of Kodak--"This is
the heart and soul of Kodak," he says--and he was taking
coaching to the factory floor. Here people were used to top-down,
command-and-control-style management. Here there was an entitlement
mentality. "These are folks that are third-generation
employees, some of them. When they stepped inside Kodak, they
had an expectation of lifetime employment." But restructuring
had taken 18,000 jobs out of Kodak's work force and had torn
at corporate loyalties.
Carlson
began to work with coach Jan Austin last March on the advice
of an outside consulting firm. She met with frontline supervisors
and their group leaders. She also conducted, among other things,
a dozen two-day clinics to teach managers how to motivate
rather than command, how to communicate with workers and elicit
their opinions. At one point the group spent four hours discussing
fear: was it a good motivator?
Carlson,
an 18-year Kodak veteran, realized that he sometimes stinted
on overtime even when it was truly needed. "It's one
of those metrics that sticks out like a sore thumb,"
he says. He began to stand up and say, "No, we need to
make this investment, and here's why." He began to shift
his focus from managing for results to investing time and
attention in his people. "It was a leap of faith,"
he acknowledges. But it produced results. As employees became
more invested in their work, waste levels dropped significantly.
So did overtime. Productivity increased. He'd wanted workers
to "find their voice," to start speaking up when
they saw how to make things better. They started taking more
initiative both inside and outside work. One factory worker
confided to him that she'd always wanted to sing a solo in
her church choir but had been afraid. Not only did she sing
the solo at church, but she also sang it for Carlson--right
there on the factory floor.
Carlson
recently got a promotion. He is now manager of color film
sensitizing, a division of more than 1,000 employees, and
he has called on Austin to work with the larger group until
the end of this year. He wants to develop coaching abilities
in-house, and he has sent three employees for coach training.
At many
companies, coaching has become the Band-Aid for a lot of the
dysfunction caused by the trial and error of doing business
in new ways. Matrixed organizations, 360-degree performance
reviews, virtual teams--they don't always work as well in
practice as in theory. At Ernst & Young, Cynder Niemela
has made a career for herself as a coach who troubleshoots
teams. Niemela had collected an MBA, a degree in sports psychology,
and a decade of informal coaching experience before Ernst
snapped her up 2 1/2 years ago and made her a change-management
consultant. She'd worked with virtual teams before--groups
of clients, consultants, and outsourced workers all pulled
together around a temporary project. Often, she says, "they're
dysfunctional. They don't align their goals with the corporation
or with each other...."
When she
began to work on a big hospital merger project at Ernst two
years ago, the 120 members were divided into subteams, but
each of those was off in its own orbit. She assumed the role
of head coach, teaching the subteam leaders how to coach their
teams and communicate with one another. She devised a toolkit
and a training program to keep everybody on the same track.
"Executives now are so challenged," she says. "When
you bring a group together around a task, people become commodities
for the sake of the task. They get lost."
The hospital
project was a success, and word of her work got around. Since
then she has been in hot demand. She's currently coach for
two big project teams, and she is working to spread coaching
around Ernst. She counsels 15 partners, she conducts coaching
workshops for 18 of Ernst's human resources employees, and
she's launched an internal coaching network and a rigorous
certification program for those inside the firm who'd like
to become coaches. Rigorous because "so many people are
coaching, and they don't have the experience or the skills,"
she says.
Coaching
really is the Wild West of HR. Until a year and a half ago,
the federation didn't have a credentialing program. There
is still not much consensus about what kind of business experience
or academic pedigree qualifies someone to be a corporate coach.
"I wonder about the vulgarization of coaching,"
says Warren Bennis at USC. "I'm concerned about unlicensed
people doing this." Angelo DeNisi, president of the Society
for Industrial and Organizational Psychology, says, "If
somebody comes in and doesn't know anything about your job
or your organization and they lay out a plan for you, it's
time to run."
At Ernst,
Niemela says, "I've met so many consultants who just
call themselves coach." She's also seen psychologists
who claim to be corporate coaches but don't know what's meant
by the Big Five. Even Marcia Reynolds, president of the International
Coach Federation, expresses concern. "Surprisingly, we've
had no major ethical violations brought up to our membership,"
she says. "We do have to watch ourselves. There are going
to be unethical coaches."
The association
is trying to impose discipline by requiring training at places
like Coach U, which was started by Leonard and then sold two
years ago to his protege Sandy Vilas. (Vilas had been a speaker,
a trainer, and a stockbroker, and had worked in oil and gas,
and real estate, before becoming a coaching guru.) Coach U
is a virtual training firm that offers more than 50 teleclasses--that's
right, courses conducted via conference call. Its headquarters
is Vilas' summer home in Steamboat Springs, Colo. But plenty
of other coach training firms have sprung up that aren't accredited
by the coach federation; some don't care to be. There are
even new coaching associations. And plenty of coaches with
impressive academic pedigrees and corporate track records
don't have the slightest inclination to go back and attend
correspondence classes at a place like Coach U, no matter
how convenient.
And they
are convenient. As a student at Coach U, you can take a class
at your desk in the middle of the week. Just clear your calendar
for an hour, put on your headset, and bring a case study from
something you've tried on your friends. Assignments are made
by e-mail.
It is
1 P.M. on a Tuesday in November, and Cheryl Weir is about
to conduct a class on that most basic of coach skills--Listening.
She is at the telephone in her office, which is at home. She
dials into the conference call first, and several minutes
later her pupils begin to assemble, each one entering the
virtual classroom with an electronic beep that signals they're
on the line. Via e-mail, they've been given a couple of reading
assignments and asked to practice on ten people since last
week's class. Today one student describes an executive client
who "is like a hamster in a wheel, running around and
around, and just doesn't know how to get off." This sends
the class off into a discussion of running on adrenaline and
how this interferes with their ability to listen to their
clients. Another student admits to being an adrenaline junkie:
"I am very results-oriented," she confesses. "I
am always in a hurry, always listening for the bottom line:
What do they want? How can I fix it?" Periodically, Weir
will ask, "How many agree with that statement?"
Those who do press a key on their phone pad, which produces
a beep, in a virtual show of hands.
This is
all just a prelude to actual coaching, much of which takes
place over the phone. Many coaches and their clients have
never met face to face. But it may not be the face-time that
matters most in managing to get the best out of employees.
One size doesn't fit all, according to research by Cynthia
McCauley, vice president at the Center for Creative Leadership.
When it comes to management styles, some employees need lots
of feedback, others need lots of challenge. Some need somebody
to hold them accountable, others need a sounding board. "It
all depends on your psychological makeup and what you're good
at," she says.
Ernst
partner Barry Mabry has found a coach to be a valuable sounding
board in today's crazy business climate. He'd received a notice
last year telling him that coaching would be available to
Ernst & Young partners. He made a call and soon found
himself on the phone with "a strange woman." (It
was Cynder Niemela.) "I was in New Orleans; she was in
San Francisco. She didn't know much about my area of work,"
he recalls. But within 20 minutes, he decided she could be
both trusted and helpful. Ever since, he has had routine telephone
conversations with her in which he has discussed matters ranging
from the mundane (how to improve communications with subordinates)
to the cosmic (what do you want to get out of life?). "Why
do I need a coach?" he muses. "I've wrestled with
this." He's a corporate finance partner in New Orleans.
He has been with Ernst 27 years. He's successful; he's happy.
His recent performance review was quite flattering. "Perhaps
it's for the same reason that Tiger Woods needs a coach or
Pete Sampras needs a coach," says Mabry. "Tiger
Woods would say, 'I know how to play golf.' But his coach
is probably the most important person in his life."
This coaching
phenomenon, like all mass movements, will have its excesses:
dubiously credentialed people hanging out their shingles,
no doubt; conflicting advice and agendas, quite possibly,
in offices where Everyman has a coach. But corporate America
had better heed the phenomenon, even if it falls outside the
traditional corporate organizational chart. It's a reminder
that people won't run on autopilot or by remote e-mail. No
matter how much the world has changed, people on the job still
need some mentoring, some monitoring, some meaningful interaction.
And if workers can't get that in-house, why, they're likely
to outsource it.
Who qualifies as an executive coach? At the moment, just about
anybody. "I wonder about the vulgarization of coaching,"
says Warren Bennis of USC's business school. "I'm concerned
about unlicensed people doing this."
Copyright
© 2000, Time Inc., all rights reserved.
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