Archive for January, 2009

Why Coaching is the Way to Go in Team Management

Posted in Business with tags , , , , , , , , , on January 23, 2009 by Paul Conant

When someone’s asks me the key to managing I always refer to one word “coach”, What comes to your mind when you hear the word coach? Do you picture a basketball team with a man/woman shouting out directions? Or perhaps a football team with a man/woman pacing to and fro and calling out the names of the players?

Coaching is no longer reserved to sports teams; it is now one of the key concepts in leadership and management. Why is coaching popular?

Coaching levels the playing field.

Coaching is one of the six emotional leadership styles proposed by Daniel Goleman. http://www.danielgoleman.info/blog/. I was introduced to Daniel Goleman books by my brother Scott Conant. www.scarpettanyc.com, I will let you know that reading his books have made the biggest impact on my personal life and career. I learned that it is a behavior or role that leaders enforce in the context of situational leadership. As a leadership style, coaching is used when the members of a group or team are competent and motivated, but do not have an idea of the long-term goals of an organization. This involves two levels of coaching: team and individual. Team coaching makes members work together. In a group of individuals, not everyone may have nor share the same level of competence and commitment to a goal. A group may be a mix of highly competent and moderately competent members with varying levels of commitment. These differences can cause friction among the members. The coaching leader helps the members level their expectations. Also, the coaching leader manages differing perspectives so that the common goal succeeds over personal goals and interests. In a big organization, leaders need to align the staffs’ personal values and goals with that of the organization so that long-term directions can be pursued.

Coaching builds up confidence and competence.

Individual coaching is an example of situational leadership at work. It aims to mentor one-on-one building up the confidence of members by affirming good performance during regular feedbacks; and increase competence by helping the member assess his/her strengths and weaknesses towards career planning and professional development. Depending on the individual’s level of competence and commitment, a leader may exercise more coaching behavior for the less-experienced members. Usually, this happens in the case of new staffs. The direct supervisor gives more defined tasks and holds regular feedbacks for the new staff, and gradually lessens the amount of coaching, directing, and supporting roles to favor delegating as competence and confidence increase.

Coaching promotes individual and team excellence.

Excellence is a product of habitual good practice. The regularity of meetings and constructive feedback is important in establishing habits. Members catch the habit of constantly assessing themselves for their strengths and areas for improvement that they themselves perceive what knowledge, skills, and attitudes they need to acquire to attain team goals. In the process, they attain individually excellence as well. An example is in the case of a musical orchestra: each member plays a different instrument. In order to achieve harmony of music from the different instrument, members will polish their part in the piece, aside from practicing as an ensemble. Consequently, they improve individually as an instrument player.

Coaching develops high commitment to common goals.

A coaching leader balances the attainment of immediate targets with long-term goals towards the vision of an organization. As mentioned earlier, with the alignment of personal goals with organizational or team goals, personal interests are kept in check. By constantly communicating the vision through formal and informal conversations, the members are inspired and motivated. Setting short-term team goals aligned with organizational goals; and making an action plan to attain these goals can help sustain the increased motivation and commitment to common goals of the members.

Coaching produces valuable leaders.

Leadership by example is important in coaching. A coaching leader loses credibility when he/she cannot practice what he/she preaches. This means that a coaching leader should be well organized, highly competent is his/her field, communicates openly and encourages feedback, and has a clear idea of the organization’s vision-mission-goals. By vicarious and purposive learning, members catch the same good practices and attitudes from the coaching leader, turning them into coaching leaders themselves. If a member experiences good coaching, he/she is most likely to do the same things when entrusted with formal leadership roles.

Some words of caution though: coaching is just one of the styles of leadership. It can be done in combination with the other five emotional leadership styles depending on the profile of the emerging team. Moreover, coaching as a leadership style requires that you are physically, emotionally, and mentally fit most of the time since it involves two levels of coaching: individual and team. Your members expect you to be the last one to give up or bail out in any situation especially during times of crises. A coaching leader must be conscious that coaching entails investing time on each individual, and on the whole team. Moreover, that the responsibilities are greater since while you are coaching members, you are also developing future coaches as well.

If only the retail CEO’s of the world understood that. Most big box companies (Circuit City, Office Depot, etc, etc) rely on smashface management styles to scare the team members to doing what is required. We will discuss this in the coming months and why more CEO’s have no idea this is happening…

Who you are & Where are you going?

Posted in Business with tags , , , , , , , on January 16, 2009 by Paul Conant

The bigger the problem, the better & stronger I feel when I solve it! -Paul Conant

Today we discuss: Developing A Vision of Success!

Success is more than economic gains, titles, and degrees. Planning for success is about mapping out all the aspects of your life. Similar to a map, you need to define the following details: origin, destination, vehicle, backpack, landmarks, and route.

Origin: Who you are

A map has a starting point. Your origin is who you are right now. Most people when asked to introduce themselves would say, “Hi, I’m Jean and I am a 17-year old, senior highschool student.” It does not tell you about who Jean is; it only tells you her present preoccupation. To gain insights about yourself, you need to look closely at your beliefs, values, and principles aside from your economic, professional, cultural, and civil status. Moreover, you can also reflect on your experiences to give you insights on your good and not-so-good traits, skills, knowledge, strengths, and weaknesses. Upon introspection, Jean realized that she was highly motivated, generous, service-oriented, but impatient. Her inclination was in the biological-medical field. Furthermore, she believed that life must serve a purpose, and that wars were destructive to human dignity.

Destination: A vision of who you want to be

“Who do want to be?” this is your vision. Now it is important that you know yourself so that you would have a clearer idea of who you want to be; and the things you want to change whether they are attitudes, habits, or points of view. If you hardly know yourself, then your vision and targets for the future would also be unclear. Your destination should cover all the aspects of your being: the physical, emotional, intellectual, and spiritual. Continuing Jean’s story, after she defined her beliefs, values, and principles in life, she decided that she wanted to have a life dedicated in serving her fellowmen.

Vehicle: Your Mission

A vehicle is the means by which you can reach your destination. It can be analogized to your mission or vocation in life. To a great extent, your mission would depend on what you know about yourself. Bases on Jean’s self-assessment, she decided that she was suited to become a doctor, and that she wanted to become one. Her chosen vocation was a medical doctor. Describing her vision-mission fully: it was to live a life dedicated to serving her fellowmen as a doctor in conflict-areas.

Travel Bag: Your knowledge, skills, and attitude

Food, drinks, medicines, and other travelling necessities are contained in a bag. Applying this concept to your life map, you also bring with you certain knowledge, skills, and attitudes. These determine your competence and help you in attaining your vision. Given such, there is a need for you to assess what knowledge, skills, and attitudes you have at present and what you need to gain along the way. This two-fold assessment will give you insights on your landmarks or measures of success. Jean realized that she needed to gain professional knowledge and skills on medicine so that she could become a doctor. She knew that she was a bit impatient with people so she realized that this was something she wanted to change.

Landmarks and Route: S.M.A.R.T. objectives

Landmarks confirm if you are on the right track while the route determines the travel time. Thus, in planning out your life, you also need to have landmarks and a route. These landmarks are your measures of success. These measures must be specific, measurable, attainable, realistic, and time bound. Thus you cannot set two major landmarks such as earning a master’s degree and a doctorate degree within a period of three years, since the minimum number of years to complete a master’s degree is two years. Going back to Jean as an example, she identified the following landmarks in her life map: completing a bachelor’s degree in biology by the age of 21; completing medicine by the age of 27; earning her specialization in infectious diseases by the age of 30; getting deployed in local public hospitals of their town by the age of 32; and serving as doctor in war-torn areas by the age of 35.

Anticipate Turns, Detours, and Potholes

The purpose of your life map is to minimize hasty and spur-of-the-moment decisions that can make you lose your way. But oftentimes our plans are modified along the way due to some inconveniences, delays, and other situations beyond our control. Like in any path, there are turns, detours, and potholes thus; we must anticipate them and adjust accordingly.

I leave you with this… Your first step in changing is understanding you need to change.
The world is full of unconscience incompetents and educated derelicts, all which I have no use for. Ask yourself the tough questions! Are you happy with your Work-Life and the direction you and your business and famliy are going? What needs to change?

Once you reflect, Start!

As always… when problems come at you fast and furious… Smile and Move on!
-Paul

Business tips for 2009. How to kick start your small business

Posted in Business with tags , , , , on January 7, 2009 by Paul Conant

Here are some free business tips to increase sales. They may not all apply but maybe it will get your mind thinking of ways to apply it to your business! These tips are courtesy of CHRISTENSEN’S, San Jose, CA. Thanks for the info!!

OBTAINING FREE ADVERTISING!

1. Advertising Specials: If a magazine offers a “two for one”
deal, or a “pay for 3 and get a fourth ad free”, take advantage
of it; it’s Free Advertising!

2. Free Listings: Some publications offer to list your name and
address Free, if you have something that you offer “free for the
asking” to their readers. This can be a “free sample”, a free
list of customers; or whatever. Tell publishers what you have
to offer!

3. Print a Booklet Offering Tips: List tips or what-have-you, and
on the inside pages, or in the back, place some of your own Free
ads!!

4. The Piggy-Back Method: Every time you get ready to mail a
letter or fill an order, place other ads in the envelope; it
costs you no more and it’s like getting a free ad!!

5. Free “Give-Always”: These can be pens, rulers; key chains, etc.,
each with YOUR ad message and address on each one. Give them
away and your Free Ad rides along!

6. Your Own Advertiser/Newsletter: Issue it regularly; sell ad
space in it and subscriptions to it. They pay for the printing
and postage, and YOUR ads in it, too, at no cost to you!

7. Trade Products/Services for Ad Space: If you have something
which a publisher needs, trade what they want, for ad space!

8. Provide Commission Ads to Dealers: Your dealers place YOUR ads
over THEIR name! Free Ads for your products!

9. Columns; Releases, etc.: Publishers will often print these
free, if it’s NEWS, or interesting to their readers! Send
notices out to editors and get free ads in exchange!

10. Share Costs With Others: Get together with other dealers and
mailers. Split costs and quantities with others. Your ads go
FREE to HIS customers, and HIS go free to yours!

11. Offer Your Commission Ads to Publishers: They insert them as
“mailer/distributor” commission ads! They cost you nothing and
can get you lots of orders!

12. Your Product as a BONUS Item on Another’s Flyer: This can
increase the other person’s orders, and YOUR product gets
advertised on HIS fliers, etc!

13. Place PIM-50 Phrases in your Ads: This says to Publisher:
“Insert my ad in your publication and I’ll help distribute 50″
(or more) copies for you. It’s another kind of “trade deal”
with publishers.

14. Give a Talk or Seminar: Contact local clubs, and organizations.
They always seek outside speakers. After you talk about your
business or your product, hand out flyers, etc. It’s like
getting free advertising!

15. Ads on Bulletin Boards: Put up flyers on grocery, laundry
bulletin boards.

16. Make a Rubber Stamp of your Ad: Stamp it everywhere you can.
Stamp it on envelopes; flyers; etc.

17. Be Listed as a Source in Back of Books: Often writers will want
to list references and sources in their books. Get the work out
to authors! Look for ads offering Free Ads!!

18. Discount to “a Friend”: Tell your customers you will give
discounts to anyone they send your way! It’s Word of Mouth
advertising; the best you can get and it’s free!

Free advertising is any message that goes out to prospective
buyers without cost to you! There are lots of ways to get
others to spread the word about what you offer! Try these
methods; and you’ll get lot of free ads; which mean more
responses and more orders!

Good luck and feel free to comment or leave a few tips of your own.