WebsiteAlways.com


Who Do You Talk To?


Many of you reading this will be running businesses, or parts of, whether they are your own or not. This means that you have many things to deal with on a day to day basis plus trying to do the long-term thinking needed to lead and run the business. You probably find yourself being very busy, possibly working long hours and, if you are honest, being reactive most of the time. When do you get (or make!) time to really think about your business or the way you are operating personally? (Working on the business rather than in it!) Among the dilemmas you face are; making time to tune out and relax, time think about the business, and finding time talk to about the issues and frustrations.

When you are a leader in a business you face a number of challenges at different levels. Ask yourself how much focus you put on to these:

Strategic issues:

  • Assessing the market and what is happening?
  • Who are your main competition - and what are they doing?
  • Medium and long-range goals and aims - and planning?
  • What direction do you want to go in, why and how?
  • Implications?

Tactical issues

  • Day to day challenges
  • Financial aspects, especially cash flow
  • Monitoring and control of your business and the activity
  • Sales and service
  • Personal management style and effectiveness

People issues

  • Staff - numbers, performance, motivation, development
  • Customers and suppliers
  • Colleagues and working relations

As we said earlier, many in your position are so busy dealing with the running of the operation they rarely take time to think about these things in a more detached way. Does this apply to you? This is often compounded by a sense of isolation, brought about by their position too. (Is this familiar?) Who do you talk to about your own style of running the business or handling your people? Who can you share concerns with, without feeling you are weakening your position?

This inability to spend time, or the right amount of time, on these vital areas of your business carries risks! Also, what do you do about your own, personal challenges and concerns? Any sense of isolation and not being able to talk to the appropriate people also has risks. Not many set out to fail in their business lives. Why do they? Often, because the avoid dealing with these risks (possibly even denying them until it is too late.). Sometimes, there may be a combination of circumstances which mean that it cannot be stopped. However, often, disasters can be prevented with the right degree of warning or the right type of support. Many people running businesses, or organisations, are too close to them. They do not have time to work out what they are doing well and to arrange to do more of these things. When things may not be going the right way, they do not consider things objectively. The pressures might build to stress and it seems even harder to share concerns with a third party. This can lead to a downward spiral towards who knows where!

The risks to the business can affect any aspect of it - and the people involved. Beyond that, there are also risks to other areas of your life. If things are going awry, the other part to suffer may be your family or friends. If you are using them as your sounding board, or just carrying bad news or discussing concerns with them it may not help those relationships! (Nor does hiding these things from them either!)

So what can you do if you feel you do want someone to talk to? You can use friends or family, but they do not necessarily provide the encouragement for you to step away and look at things in an objective way. There are various options which you can consider. There is no one "right" approach. You need to consider which seems to be the most suitable for you at the time, given the circumstances.

Advisors: This might be your accountant, someone from your bank or a person you know with a specific "technical" competence who you can turn to. Think about them as someone you can present your situation to and ask for their ideas, or suggestions, about what you could, or should, do. They can be very useful when you need the particular expertise.

Network: Depending on how you operate, you will probably have some sort of network of contacts, whether part of a formal set-up or not. Think about who you know, who has what qualities or skills you can respect or admire and then approach them. (If you are in an organisation, consider colleagues or bosses.) If you have a few friends or acquaintances who are also running businesses, or are people you respect in their field, you may want to consider initiating a support network for you all. (Or create a "mastermind" group.) Arrange to meet at a regular time with the aim of having a short, focused meeting to address specific issues and goals - using your colleagues as a sounding board, and for challenge and support. Do not slide out to a purely social gathering, that can come later!! Be disciplined in the way you work and you will all benefit.

Mentors: A mentor is somewhat different to a coach, though we could go into a long debate about where the differences lie. Typically, a mentor is someone who has relevant experience and expertise to share with you, though they do not necessarily give specific advice. Many of us use mentors at times in our lives, often without knowing it. We find the person we respect and start to talk to them! A number of large organisations have set up formal mentoring schemes and you may have experienced this. There are many mentoring options available through professional bodies or on a local level, although many of these are focussed on helping you to achieve professional qualifications or maintaining CPD criteria. If you want to look for a mentor, you might want to approach your networks and even family and ask for their ideas or recommendations. You want somebody who will be a good listener to act as a sounding board, who can then share ideas from their own experiences about what pitfalls to consider and what options you may want to pursue. The mentoring relationship can be formal, informal or a combination - with a frequency to suit you.

Coaches: This can be an emotive subject these days! The world seems to be filling with "executive" and "life" coaches. Fundamentally, executive coaches will work with you on business and career issues, life coaches work with you on what you want, which may span both work and home. However, the boundaries are often more blurred than that and good executive coaches (who probably have more business experience than many life coaches) will frequently work with you on both aspects.

Coaches will work differently to mentors in that they rarely offer advice. A good coach will support and challenge you on your issues and help you to focus on what you want to achieve. When that is defined they will help you to develop action plans and support you through these, whether by phone, email or face to face sessions. To get good value from a coach, decide what you want to achieve and have some idea of the timescale for this. Although the relationship can go on beyond this, consider the coach as someone to help you achieve specific aims and who will keep you moving forward - as many sports people, musicians and actors do amongst others.

Having a coach may seem something of a luxury or self-indulgence. However, what is the cost of things going wrong or not working the way you want? Coaching can be shown to have a significant ROI and could be one of the best investments you make for you and your business. You want to make sure that you feel a good "fit" with a coach, so look at a few before deciding on who you want to work with and check some of the following:

  • Formal coaching qualifications may help, but they do not guarantee that the coach will be right for you and your issue.
  • What is their experience, their style and the way they would work with you.
  • Do you want all the sessions face to face or do you also want some support by phone and email? What will be most suitable for you?
  • What is their approach to coaching? Do they have particular models or approaches?
  • How flexible are they?
You always have the option of doing nothing!! However, there are risks as we have said and these can creep up on you. You do not have to formally get a mentor or coach, but just talking things over with friends at the gym or the golf club might not help too much. Your family and friends may seem very encouraging. Is that what you need? Sometimes, it is someone who can listen in a slightly more detached way, question and challenge you whilst wanting you to succeed in your career or your business. So it might be worth finding someone to talk to!!! After all, no man (or woman) is an island!

Graham Yemm a founding partner of Solutions 4 Training Ltd. During his years as a consultant he has worked with a variety of major companies in the U.K., Europe, USA, the Middle East and Russia in Sales, People and Management Skills. He has had many years of experience tailoring programmes to address organisational issues around sales, account management, negotiations, sales management and customer service - especially focusing on the communication and personal skills aspects. Graham is a Master Practitioner of NLP and was involved with setting up and running "The Business Group", which promotes uses of NLP in organisations. He is an accredited trainer for the LAB profile programme - "Words that Change Minds". His personal enjoyment comes from helping individuals to take more responsibility for their own actions- freeing them to feel they can make more choices about their lives. Contact, http://solutions4training.com or +1483 480656


MORE RESOURCES:

Seattle Times

Oregon, UCLA: A coaching soap opera
Los Angeles Times, CA - 20 hours ago
There was no secret that those in the Bruins chain of command, right up to the very top, coveted Ducks Coach Mike Bellotti last December. ...
Moving On Is the Best Cure Dawgman.com
Some Changes Could Occur this Week eDucks.com (subscription)
Press Conference, 10/6 The UCLA Daily Bruin
GoDucks.com
all 52 news articles


Britain faces coaching crunch as overtures from overseas mount
Times Online, UK - 1 hour ago
Foley is not alone in having left to work abroad; Shaun Caven, the head canoeing coach, has gone to work in the United States too. ...


Stuff.co.nz

Battle of the bridge over coaching jobs
Stuff.co.nz, New Zealand - 5 hours ago
Either way you look at it, someone has got to pull Auckland and North Harbour out of their mire and there doesn't appear to be a shortage of coaching ...
Olympians take top sports Blues Massey News
all 9 news articles


MLB.com

Rox make changes to coaching staff
MLB.com - 14 minutes ago
By Thomas Harding / MLB.com First-base coach Glenallen Hill has been with the organization for five years. (David Zalubowski/AP) DENVER -- Rockies pitching ...


SkySports

Gerry Francis jumps the queue for coaching jobs as Stoke and ...
Telegraph.co.uk, United Kingdom - 16 hours ago
Like a proverbial London bus, Gerry Francis could have been waiting ages for a front-line job in football and then suddenly two arrive at once. ...
Kinnear to offer coaching role to Francis ESPN
Former Spurs boss offered coaching role Shields Gazette
Gerry Francis "offered" NUFC coaching role ChronicleLive
SkySports - Telegraph.co.uk
all 44 news articles


Kiffin could be hot coaching commodity
GatorBait.net (subscription), FL - 10 hours ago
The coaching landscape soon will begin shifting - as coaches leave, get fired, resign or quit - and one name to remember when it comes to filling jobs is ...
Al Davis Needs a Lesson on Coaching Continuity Bleacher Report
Handicapping Coaching Changes Doc's Sports Service
Hurt by sack attack Boston Herald
The Grand Rapids Press - MLive.com - USA Today
all 378 news articles


AFL

Rock back at Kangaroos in coaching role
The Age, Australia - 16 hours ago
Former North Melbourne premiership player Anthony Rock is set to join the club as an assistant coach. St Kilda said Rock, who has spent two years on the ...
Rock heads back to North Melbourne AFL
Rock leaves Saints for Kangaroos The West Australian
all 10 news articles


Rockies shake up coaching staff
9NEWS.com, CO - 1 hour ago
Pitching Coach Bob Apodaca and First Base Coach Glenallen Hill will be the only two coaches who will return under Manager Clint Hurdle in 2009. ...
Rockies fire Quirk, Gallego, Cockrell Rocky Mountain News
Rox: Hurdle rids three coaches Denver Post
all 4 news articles


Katsaros, Bergey Join Buckeye Lacrosse Coaching Staff
LaxPower, PA - 2 hours ago
COLUMBUS, Ohio – Bill Katsaros will join the Ohio State men's lacrosse team as an assistant coach and Mark Bergey will serve as the team's volunteer ...


BBC News

Young considers future over Blues coaching role
WalesOnline, United Kingdom - 12 hours ago
DAVID YOUNG has dropped a pre-Heineken Cup bombshell by revealing he is considering his future as coach of Cardiff Blues. The former Wales captain has a ...
Blues boss Young angry over EDF Cup display WalesOnline
all 14 news articles

Coaching - Google News

Interesting articles | Home | site map | Link
© 2006
Thailand Tourism Breast enlargement Jobs Mahoubi.net Free Online Dating | Free personals | Married personals | Totally free personals | Dating online lakeland fl | Free dating sites | Travel Vacations | Multiple listing service real estate