Coaching World Issue 8: November 2013 | Page 29

The Request or Offer Some clients may be defensive when asked how well they manage commitment conversations. Careful inquiry is key. In Maria’s case, her coach started by asking specifically about how she would go about making a request: MARIA : I told my assistant VP to get the report to me ASAP. When I finally got it a week later, it was too late to include in my report to the CEO. The assistant VP dislikes me and wants me to fail. COACH: How did you ask him? What if your assistant VP can’t get that report to you by tomorrow at 5? COACH: He’s fired. Kidding. Um, I don’t know. I guess I would ask why. MARIAN (LAUGHING): COACH: What would that do? MARIA : Help me understand him. COACH: And then what? MARIA : If there were some compelling reason, we could look at alternatives. I probably wouldn’t get as upset with him. Are you going tell him the alternatives or ask him? COACH: I said, “You need to get that to me ASAP.” MARIA : How do you feel when people say things to you that begin with, “You need to do this…”? COACH: MARIA : COACH: MARIA : How’s that working? MARIA (THINKING): Huh. If he identifies alternatives, it might improve his buy-in. We all need to get things done. But how is it for you when you’re told, “You need to do this …?” COACH: MARIA (UNCOMFORTABLY) : seems … authoritarian. COACH: I’ve always just told people what to do. It What is an alternative? THE TAKEAWAY: Support your clients as they develop questions that will offer a better result during their negotiations. MARIA : I need the customer satisfaction report ASAP. Can you be more specific about when? COACH: MARIA : I need the customer satisfaction report tomorrow at 5 p.m. How does that differ from, “You need to get that to me ASAP”? COACH: THE TAKEAWAY: The more specifically your client can qualify expectations, the better. “I need the report error-free and ready by 5 p.m. tomorrow,” is preferable to “I need the report ASAP.” Negotiation Negotiation is called for when one party can’t accept a request. Here is how you can help Maria think about it: Acceptance Either the request is accepted or it isn’t. How a client closes the commitment conversation contributes enormously to how he or she is perceived. Maria, what do you want to be able to say about yourself after this conversation? COACH: MARIA : I want to be assertive, yet kind. What can you do to support that? COACH: THE TAKEAWAY: Clients are often surprised when they realize their behavior is at odds with their intentions. Helping to align intent with performance can transform difficult situations into successful interactions. Maria’s Insights Through coaching, Maria decided that she really didn’t want to resign and reaffirmed her commitment to being successful. She realized that she was neither skillful nor effective in coordinating with others, which directly contributed to her failures. Learning how to manage commitments helped her to gain insights about how and why she was failing. Besides learning new behaviors, she became more aware of herself and others. As the coaching engagement progressed, Maria realized that a fear of failure drove her ineffectiveness. The individuals who recruited Maria had made big promises about her intelligence and experience, and she put a great deal of pressure on her team in order to deliver the desired results. Instead of fueling productivity, however, this approach fueled resentment. Through coaching, Maria realized that the gift of fear is expecting to lose something valuable and therefore working to prevent or prepare for that loss. Maria learned that her fear, if managed wisely, could propel her to a better result. She saw that she needed others, and that awareness of interdependence inspired her to change how she managed her commitments. Ultimately, by better managing her commitment conversations and opening up to her colleagues, Maria engaged her team on a more personal level and gained their attention as she shared her vision. This enabled the team to work for the sake of the whole. Coaching World 29