Title: Bernadette M' Crompton, B'BusMgmt, M'B'A'
1Business Management Discipline A Basis for
Business and Executive Coaching Practice
- Bernadette M. Crompton, B.Bus(Mgmt), M.B.A.
- RMIT University, School of Management
-
- Kosmas X. Smyrnios, PhD, MAPS
- RMIT University, School of Management
- Evidenced-based coaching A cross disciplinary
perspective - Sydney Australia, 8-9 October 2005
2Outline of Presentation
- Introduction
- Aim of Presentation
- Business Management Evolution to a Discipline
- Coaching A Framework
- Organisational Growth, Leadership, Coaching
- Co-Dependent Functions of Organisations
- Theory to Practice Case Vignettes
- Coaching and its Future Survival
3Introduction
- Organisations from authoritarian, rule based, to
collaborative management, knowledge economy - Todays environment competitiveness,
globalisation, technology, economic upheaval
(Delmar, Davidsson, Gartner, 2003) - Organisational pressures on strategy, leadership
- Executives looking for faster ways to innovate,
keep pace no time for traditional training - Theoretical programs rejected by executives in
favour of short relevant learning (Bennis
OToole, 2005)
4Introduction cont..
- Coaching emerged as alternative to training
- Coaches from business, consulting, mentoring,
counselling, psychology, etc. (Greene Grant,
2003) - However, coaching not a regulated profession
- Numerous coaching articles/mainstream books
- Few empirically based texts, usually from authors
with psychology background (e.g. Kilburg, 2000) - Should coaches have background in business to
practice business and executive coaching?
5Aim of Presentation
- Outlines classic and contemporary business
management theories, some lacking empirical
rigour, adopted by coaching - We posit that business/executive coaches should
have a solid understanding of business management
discipline, and consulting and mentoring
frameworks - Aim of paper to demonstrate how business
management discipline underpins coaching practice
within business organisations
6Business Management Evolution
- What is the purpose of business organisations?
- To produce/sell goods/services for customer
wants/needs (Porter, 1980) - Business management discipline founded in 70s
- Many well known business theories not empirical,
but building blocks for later research (e.g.
Alderfer, 1969) - 1950s quality movement improved performance
- Systemic thinking view of internal management
and external environment (Porter, 1980 Ohmae
1982)
7Evolution and Learning
- Consultants filled economic shortages but
short-term and not learning focused (Block, 2000) - Authoritarian rule still prevalent in 70s
- Worker dissatisfaction not addressed and needs
understood until double loop learning and
learning organisation (Agyris, 1976 Senge, 1992) - Mentoring resulted in positive outcome for
productivity, performance, career (Kram, 1988) - Coaching emphasis on goal setting, learning,
development, performance, skill enhancement
(Witherspoon White, 1997 Zeus Skiffington,
2000)
8Coaching A Business Framework
- Many proprietary models used in coaching (Grant,
2005) - Coaches using business discipline as a basis with
consulting skill and mentoring experience, better
able to diagnose issues, situations and impacts
9Stages of Growth/Influencing Factors
(Delmar et al., 2003 Sperry, 1994)
10Coaching in Organisations
- To be effective, coaches need to understand the
business environment and impacts - Appropriate questions will unearth executive and
organisational gap between reality and desires
(Porter, 1980 Ohmae 1982) - Organisations seize opportunities to satisfy
customer wants/needs within external context and
internal constraints - Success is dependent on production outcomes,
process driven techniques, peoples behaviour
11Organisations Co-dependency
12Co-dependency Context
13Context Establishing Goals
- Mnemonic GROW (goals, reality, options, when)
used by coaches, however no measure (Whitmore,
1996) - Many business models identify goals, strategy
- Goal setting fundamental to business, ubiquitous
with highly motivated individuals with
self-confidence built on goal progress (Locke,
1996) - SWOT (strengths, weaknesses, opportunities,
threats) for assessment (Stanford Research
Institute) - Five-forces (suppliers, substitutes, buyers,
entrants, competitors) identifying opportunities
(Porter, 1980)
14Case Vignette 1 Context
- P.G. was owner of start-up business
- 2 years developing integrated database management
software application - Keen interest from 3rd party vendors, but none
purchased software application - P.G. had been offered consultancy job
- tempted as funds running low but taking job would
allow less time for software development - Sought coaching to work through direction
15Coaching for Context
- Coach encouraged P.G. to think about vision for
future, commitment to personal/business goals - SWOT analysis gt P.G. technician, perfectionist
- Five-forces gt 6 month opportunity for application
in marketplace before competitors - P.G. approached 3rd party vendor as free test
site - Financial questioning, P.G. took 3 days
consulting - Milestone agreement, met twice month x 6 mths
- After 6 mths P.G. had taken on equity partner
with funding allowing P.G. full time in business
16Co-dependency Production Process
17Production and Process Outcomes
- Manufacturing, packaging, delivery to be done
cost effectively for organisation to make profit - Processes with systems, models, procedures, help
people understand/carry out expectations - Balanced scorecard (financial, customer,
processes, leaning) outcome based framework
(Kaplan Norton, 1996) - Operational effectiveness achieved when
activities integrated, linked synergistically,
and consistent with strategy (Kaplan Norton,
1996 Porter 1996)
18Case Vignette 2 Production/Process
- D.W. owned successful packaging/distribution
business with line of 120 products - 26 employees most were loyal, well trained
- Business grown slowly over 10 years
- D.Ws vision to double sales revenue
- D.W. not sure on strategy to take
- e.g. increase prices, product range or volume?
- Vision not communicated to employees
- Sought coaching to help achieve vision
19Coaching for Production Process
- Coach helped D.W. realise awareness of which
products were profitable/not-profitable - D.W. had no business plan, nor customer profiles
- Agreement meet for 12 mths, fortnightlygtmthly
- Ohmaes strategic framework, balanced scorecard
- D.W. engaged employees to map chain of events and
log service calls to identify customer demand - D.W decided on combination strategy to increase
prices, eliminate non-profitable, service to
spend - Introduced new products gt12 mths 50 profit
20Co-dependency People
21People Culture and Leadership
- Organisational culture is set by the
characteristics of the founder with leaders
having different styles (Covey, 1989 Drucker,
2005 Tannenbaum Schmidt, 1973) - Organisations consist of three communities
executives, technicians, operators (Schein, 1996) - Communication, open/closed relationships,
different ways people learn is fundamental to
organisational success (Luft, 1961 Mumford,
1995 Senge) - Coaching can allow executives to engage in
personal reflective space (Block, 2000
Clutterbuck Megginson,1999) - Disturbed personality psychologist better
(Arnaud, 2003)
22Case Vignette 3 People
- K.R. newly appointed Director of Operations for
3rd party supplier organisation - Organisation quick growth over 5 years via
acquisitions gt cultural discord undercurrents - K.R. responsible for Customer Service area
- K.Rs. previous role Manager Information
Technology - tensions between IT customer service
- K.R. articulate, efficient and task orientated
- Requested coaching to improve leadership
capabilities, and manage people
23Coaching for People Behaviour
- Coach and K.R. agreed to work on leadership/
management capabilities, and items as they arose - K.R. had homework/or reading after each session
- Sessions focused on K.Rs. values, strengths, fit
with organisation, leadership and learning styles
(Cover, 1989 Drucker, 2005 Mumford, 1995
Tannenbaum Schmidt, 1973) - Coach helped K.R. understand dynamics between
Customer Service and IT areas (Luft, 1961
Schein, 1996) - At sessions K.R. talked through issues, role
played with coach, or engaged in reflective space
24Coaching and Future Survival
- Paper reviewed established business management
theories and research - Proposed coaches be grounded in business
discipline, consulting and mentoring frameworks - Vignettes business theory to coaching practice
- In some cases coach with psychology background
better suited to executive - Opportunity for researchers to take hold of
theories from business management field - Coaching will only become a profession and
credible if grounded on investigatory research