All in Knowing coaching

Confidence and Coaching: The growth of my confidence as a coach and the neuroscience behind that. Part 1 by Andrew Parrock

I remember when I first discovered that I had been accidentally coaching. I had been mentoring people, and often used a technique that I had used as a teacher; asking questions to get my student to think for themselves and reach their own conclusions. I knew this worked, from practical experience, but did not know that this technique was central to coaching. I was confident in my approach, knowing how and when to use it.

Curiosity is my ‘in the moment’ progress and success measure for coaching by Yvonne Thackray: Part 2

Understanding that curiosity is one of the basic traits needed for survival has been a paradigm shift for me, my coaching practice, and my education because it addresses how I have intuitively applied curiosity in my coaching practice with my clients to enable their potential. In Part 2, I’ll go into more detail of how curiosity manifests itself in my work as a coach and the approach I’ve used to write up these experiences for curious coaching practitioners to consider as part of their own continuing professional and personal development.

Curiosity is my ‘in the moment’ progress and success measure for coaching by Yvonne Thackray: Part 1

Understanding that curiosity is one of the basic traits needed for survival has been a paradigm shift for me, my coaching practice, and my education because it addresses how I have intuitively applied curiosity in my coaching practice with my clients to enable their potential. In Part one, I describe why curiosity is important in my practice, and in Part two, I will explain how curiosity unfolds and emerges though my work as a coach.

Matching coaches with clients, the next evolution in Internal Coaching by Simon Dennis (Part 2)

In Part 1 of this series, I reported on how external coaches have shifted their practice, as time has moved on, on refining their model and refining their offer so that they're offering something unique and specialist. Absolutely, it might restrict their market, I think though there's an element that says it makes you a better coach because you're dealing with your strengths and your unique offerings. Building on this focus of being a better coach, I apply this notion into the internal coaching context and its practical application with a proposed blueprint.

An award-winning team coaching framework developed from experience and shared knowledge by Pradip Shroff

My encounter into team coaching began with one of my early coachee who was a Vertical head of a Global engineering technology company. He felt that exchange of ideas among his subvertical heads were not adequate. He also saw silos and he wanted this to change. Recognising this gap, he encouraged me to accept the challenge of coaching his team.

Capabilities trump expertise: I'm not the expert, I'm the coach. I'm not the expert, I'm the supervisor. I'm not the expert, I'm the manager. By Simon Dennis

In a business where you get new people joining an organization, very early on they are expecting to be told what to do, expecting to be given their next task, or expecting to be given their next strategy – they are expecting the answers. People who are leading the business are expected to have all the answers.