(EXTRACTION
FROM TEAM MANAGEMENT: Coaching Your Team at http://www.mindtools.com)
Coaching should be something that all managers
do with their teams. It helps to improve
a person's performance, and deal with any issues before these become major
problems.
FIVE POINT GUIDE FOR USING INFORMAL COACHING
|
Be patient, and change your perspective
·
Take time
to explore the current and upcoming workloads of team members
·
adjust
schedule to the demands placed upon your team
·
Be aware of
what members of your team are doing
·
be
available so that you can offer support and informal coaching if required
|
Be aware of a people's moods
·
be more
sensitive to other people's emotions
·
Learn to
recognize small changes in behavior and body language
·
note how
people react when a task or project has been successful
|
Ask for permission before coaching
·
always ask
whether it's a good time to take a few minutes for a coaching conversation
|
Coach – don't manage or
direct
·
Avoid
offering advice or direction and calling it "coaching."
|
Use informal moments to make the best use of time
·
use
informal moments like sitting in the break room, or passing the person in the
hallway
·
use time at
the end of a meeting that ends early, or when traveling together to a
client's office or other work location
·
The spirit
of informal coaching is to be spontaneous, efficient, and professional
|
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