
- 152 pages
- English
- PDF
- Available on iOS & Android
The Manager as Coach
About this book
In theory, managers serve as guides, directors, decision makers, and energizers for their employees. Unfortunately, few managers have, themselves, been trained in the skills and techniques to get the best results from their employees, and managerial styles can run the gamut from permissive-but-ineffectual to aloof to autocratic. In The Manager as Coach, the authors focus on the key purposes of coachingāimproving individual performance, solving problems, and securing resultsāin order to address the challenges of effective management head-on. Dispelling popular myths and misconceptions about coaching as a passing fad or a collection of superficial motivation techniques, they offer practical tools for mastering the skills of effective coaching to the benefit of employees and the organization, identifying four primary roles that managersāas coachesāplay on a regular basis: trainer, career advisor, strategist, and performance appraiser. Featuring diagnostic exercises, worksheets, and a listing of resources, The Manager as Coach will help readers develop the qualities and skills to align individual and organizational goals and forge dynamic, productive relationships. Whether large or small, manufacturing or service, every organization selects managers and assigns them the task of securing results through people. In theory, managers serve as guides, directors, decision makers, and energizers for their employees. Unfortunately, few managers have, themselves, been trained in the skills and techniques to get the best results from their employees, and managerial styles can run the gamut from permissive-but-ineffectual to aloof to autocratic. This volume in The Manager as ⦠series addresses the challenges of effective management head-on by exploring the role of manager as coach. Focusing on the key purposes of coachingāimproving individual performance, solving problems, and securing resultsāthe authors dispel popular myths and misconceptions of management coaching as a passing fad, a process of endless tutoring, or superficial motivation techniques, and offer practical tools for mastering the skills of effective coaching to the benefit of both employees and the organization. They identify four primary roles managersāas coachesāplay on a regular basis: trainer, career advisor, strategist, and performance appraiser. Featuring diagnostic exercises, worksheets, and a listing of resources, The Manager as Coach will help readers develop the qualities and skills to align individual and organizational goals and forge dynamic, productive relationships.
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Information
Table of contents
- Contents
- Publisher's Note
- 1 Introduction to Performance Coaching
- 2 Nature of Performance Coaching
- 3 Roles and Responsibilities of Performance Coaches
- 4 Competencies of Performance Coaches
- 5 The Performance Coaching and Management Process
- 6 Practices in the Performance Coaching and Management Process
- 7 Performance Coaching Success Inventory
- 8 Resources
- Notes
- Index