
Wendy Thompson
Phone: 519-652-0146
Cell: 519-673-7011
E-mail: wendythompson@wjta.ca |
Professional Coaching
Simply put, coaching helps people make powerful choices. If you are one of the millions
of busy and over-extended managers left with little time to improve your leadership
competencies, then we can offer you a solution. W.J. Thompson & Associates can
help you achieve clarity, focus and power through designing a customized, proactive
alliance which focuses on serving you, the client.
Client Testimonials
Wendy's Coaching has helped me re-focus and strengthen both my career and personal
goals. Her open, relaxed and expert coaching style guided me to gather the right
information and make informed decisions regarding my professional and individual
objectives.
-Director, High Tech Sector
My time with Wendy has been worth its weight in gold. In a way, she has taken on
the role of an archaeologist, guiding me as I sift through the many layers of my
life, values and goals. Together, we've been digging for my personal truth and what
I've discovered will always be there to guide me.
-HR Professional
Tiger,Lance, and You
An executive coach may be your ticket to peak performance.
Theresa Sullivan Barger, CFO.com
February 21, 2007
Tiger Woods has one. So does Roger Federer. And Lance Armstrong. People in virtually
all walks of life, from sports to the performing arts to education, now have private
coaches to guide them toward their full potential. Lately CFOs have joined the party
as they, or their companies, realize that a demanding and multi-faceted job often
requires some external guidance. As a result, the field of executive coaching is
booming, with the ranks of practitioners swelling and companies in related fields
rushing to add coaching to their menu of services.
"Over the last five years, we have probably seen more people come in for coaching
who are in finance or information services parts of the business," says Bill McCarthy,
a coach with LeaderSource, an executive coaching firm recently acquired by executive
search company Korn/Ferry International. The reason: the technical expertise that
helps a CFO or CIO rise to the top is just one part of the skill set needed to succeed
in a C-suite position.
"Nobody has taken the time to train promising executives to be effective at strategy,"
says Melanie S. Robbins, a Boston-based executive coach whose clients include Fidelity
and Johnson & Johnson. "There's no formula for being a good manager. One of
the things a really good executive coach can do is help somebody find their style,
their voice, their process."
There was a time when coaching was positioned as a last-ditch effort to prop up
a failing manager, but these days executive coaches are usually called in to help
talented executives reach for the next rung on the corporate ladder. "Executive
coaching is widely accepted. Everybody either has a coach or wants a coach," said
Suzanne Bates, president of Bates Communications, a Wellesley, Mass. firm that specializes
in coaching communication skills. To be sure, if your company shells out for a coach
(and it isn't cheap?the average engagement can run $30,000) you should be flattered,
not insulted. "If you were that much of a train wreck, they'd get rid of you," says
Robbins.
Coaching is not therapy, although some coaches are psychologists who emphasize an
understanding of human behavior. Nor is a coach a mentor, but there are similarities.
"A mentor is someone who imparts experience, expertise and information," says Kevin
Cashman, president and founder of LeaderSource. "A coach tries to draw forth your
potential in the most effective way." Coaches often specialize in, for example,
communication skills or teamwork or making the transition to a new company or new
position. While good chemistry between a coach and coachee is desirable, don't expect
your coach to be your friend. Coaches may ask difficult questions and prod their
clients to address weaknesses or confront problems.
This can be helpful. When Mark Young, chief financial officer and senior counsel
at Personnel Decisions International, found himself with a new hire who was 15 years
his senior and had been a CFO, he found that he was apprehensive about the situation;
his coach helped him talk with the new hire so they could both adjust to this potentially
awkward relationship.
One of LeaderSource's clients, Thrivent Financial for Lutherans, provides executive
coaches for each member of the executive management team. Thrivent CFO Randy Boushek
says he considers his coach an "unbiased accountability partner": A coach is to
an individual what Weight Watchers is to a dieter, he says. "My coach can honestly
help me identify my own derailers and my own self-delusions," he says, and provide
encouragement at critical junctures, "especially when it comes to stepping out of
my comfort zone." The coach doesn?t tell him what he should or shouldn't do, Boushek
says, but asks a series of questions to help clarify and guide his thinking.
Busy as they are, most CFOs who work with coaches make it a point to keep their
appointments and commit to their own development. "This is very time consuming,"
said Bruno Combe, CFO at performance management software company Cartesis. "You
need to prepare for your sessions, to digest the feedback and advice, and then to
implement it. It requires a significant share of mind if you want to go through
the experience seriously and profitably, but the outcome is well worth it."
Coaching sessions begin intensely with an evaluation of skills and weaknesses, and
typically include a 360-degree evaluation and a Myers Briggs Type Indicator assessment.
Usually the company hires the coach but allows a C-level executive to choose from
among a pool of vetted coaches. The employer, coachee, and coach should all be clear
on the expectations, goals, and measurable results. Most coaches insist on written
confidentiality agreements with the understanding that they'll only report general
progress to the employer as a way to foster trust with the coachee, but some coaches
do share details about a coachee's strengths and weaknesses with the employer.
Expect to hear more about executive coaching. The industry is mushrooming; the Wall
Street Journal reported that more than 60 percent of corporate executives at Fortune
500 companies now work or have worked with an executive coach. The International
Coach Federation, (ICF) the first global association to represent business and personal
coaches, reports more than 11,500 members in 80 countries. Kay Cannon, president
of the ICF, expects coaching to become a standard part of the benefits package offered
to C-level executives. Eventually, she predicts, universities will offer degree-based
coaching programs and companies will have in-house coaches to work with people at
virtually all positions.
David Peterson, senior vice president and practice leader of executive coaching
for Personnel Decisions International, said coaching has been more prevalent in
the financial services, high tech, pharmaceutical, and automotive industries but
expects it to spread to many other sectors. "Companies are beginning to realize
that if they can develop someone from within they can create a better performer
who can move up in the organization," said Gary Hourihan, executive vice president,
and president, Leadership Development Solutions for Korn/Ferry International.
In addition to its purchase of LeaderSource, Korn/Ferry recently acquired Lominger
International, a leadership development company. Heidrick & Struggles, another
recruitment firm, has expanded to offer leadership consulting. So if your golf or
tennis game gives you little in common with Tiger Woods or Roger Federer, consider
another source of commonality: a coach may be just what you need to rise to the
top.
Unlicensed and In Need of Vetting Executive coaching is an unlicensed, unregistered
industry, so buyer beware. With that in mind, it's best to understand some industry
basics before inking an agreement and doling out part of your bonus?or company funds?to
pay for sessions.
To start, executive coaches' fees vary, and a cursory look highlights
a sizeable difference in service levels and prices. Here's a sampling: $300 an hour;
$3,000 per month for four, one-hour phone calls, plus on-call service; $5,000 per
day for in-person coaching. For the average 6-month to one-year commitment, fees
range from $10,000 minimum for a mid-level manager up to $60,000 for a CEO, with
an average fee for an individual coaching commitment of $30,000. Some coaches offer
everything from resume writing to interview skills a la carte.
Some coaches insist
on a minimum relationship of three months or six months, and coaching partnerships
average six months to a year, followed up quarterly or annually with phone tune-ups
where the coachee can get guidance before a crucial board meeting or a new challenge.
While some coaches are psychologists who focus on human behavior, others are former
executives with MBAs who draw from personal experience. Some have been coaches for
20 years and are certified master coaches who have agreed to ethical standards in
order to attain membership in a professional organization.
The key to hiring a coach,
as is the case with other business relationships, is to check references carefully
because it is possible to be duped. Some businesses sell coaching certificates to
people who take a brief course, with no competency testing or related education
and experience required. When selecting a coach, ask friends and associates in other
businesses. Personal references are essential.
The presence of professional degrees,
high fees, and a website aren't enough, though. Kay Cannon, president of the International
Coach Federation, suggests working with coaches who have an understanding of the
position held by the coachee. Cannon is a former executive who coaches executives.
Finally, coachees should screen potential coaches and pick the one with whom they
have the best chemistry, say several coaches. While a masterful coach can work with
nearly anyone, coachees will see faster results if they're working with someone
with whom they're comfortable. --TSB
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