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Catégorie : In English

Creating a Coaching Culture for Better Talent

Salvador DALI, Tristan Fou, art, insight, coaching, prism, award
Salvador DALI – Tristan Fou, 1944 – Rideau de scène – Techniques mixtes (tempera, pastel et huile) sur toiles jointes. 8.76 x 14.76 m

 

The International Coach Federation (ICF) awarded GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) headquartered in the United Kingdom the 2016 ICF International Prism Award.

The Prism Award program honors organizations that have achieved the highest standard of excellence in coaching programs that yield discernible and measurable positive impacts, fulfill rigorous professional standards, address key strategic goals, and shape organizational culture.  The organization has seen a $66 million USD return on investment from its coaching initiative.

Prior to 2010, GSK’s use of coaching was reactive, with spiraling costs and dispersed and limited accountability. Leaders realized they needed to make a change in order to attract, develop and retain talent that has the confidence and skills to challenge the status quo and make change happen. The organization reoriented coaching as a strategic tool in the transformation and success of its business. Coaching is now integral to GSK’s talent, leadership and organizational development strategy.

Since GSK wanted to make its coaching offering a truly global initiative, the organization looked to ICF as a model for consistent standards and ethics in coaching across all regions of the world. One of the first priorities was to build an internal coaching structure to ensure high standards across the global organization. The Coaching Centre of Excellence (CoE) was created. The CoE standardizes coaching globally throughout the organization by improving access, ensuring quality and efficiency, and creatively containing costs. It is a selffunded unit without a direct budget from GSK; rather, all coaching costs are charged to the business units using coaches’ services.

GSK’s coaching structure is a mixed-modality model, including more than 200 external coach practitioners, 1,000 internal coach practitioners and 16,000 managers/ leaders using coaching skills. All external and internal Executive Coaches are credentialed; most through ICF.

“There are a lot of huge ripple effects that happen as a result of coaching in terms of empowerment, in terms of satisfaction, but also in terms of leadership effectiveness,” Sally Bonneywell, vice president of coaching for GSK, explains. “I do recommend people to do it, with caution, making sure they use credible ICF Core Competencies, making sure they have credentialed coaches and set the standards, but also with the encouragement of senior leaders. The sponsorship of the very senior leaders and our corporate executive team is so very important.”

Source: coachfederation.org

 

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Insight #67

Pablo Picasso, Les noces de Pierrette, insight, art, coaching, bon goût
Pablo Picasso – Les noces de Pierrette, 1905 – Huile sur toile, 115 x 195 cm

 

“Ah, le bon goût! Quelle horreur. Le goût est l’ennemi de la créativité.

“Ah, good taste! What a dreadful thing! Taste is the enemy of creativeness.”

― Pablo Picasso

 

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Pre-Crastination or Hastening Subgoal Completion

Roy LIECHTENSTEIN - In the Car, art, insight, coaching
Roy LIECHTENSTEIN – In the Car, 1963 – Huile et magna sur toile, 172 cm × 203.5 cm

 

Getting tasks done. Fast, quickly, even if this this not mandatory such as answering emails the second they land in your inbox without taking time to put things into perspective, or paying bills when they arrive… without checking them. In one word: pre-crastination.

This tendency to delay initiating or completing tasks involves both practical and psychological implications like multitasking, unfinishing tasks, stress, tiredness and even the feeling to be ineffective. Mirroring pro-crastination, it is a reaction towards something that we dislike, something potentially generating anxiety. With a significant difference though: in a working environment it is commonly endorsed by hierarchy, which makes its negative consequences less visible.

For some it is the symptom of our harried lives, for others it simply is the search for efficacy.

For psychologists it is related with « Please Others » one of the five drivers originally identified in the field of Transactional Analysis by Taibi Kahler, inducing a confusion between the speed of execution and the quality of the output.

And what is researchers point of view? A study carried out in 2014 by David A. Rosenbaum ascribe pre-crastination to the desire to reduce working memory loads. A study from 2015 by Edward A. Wasserman shows pre-crastination in animals meaning that this behaviour would not be a kind of ‘human pathology’.

Let’s keep in mind that pre-crastination and pro-crastination are not exclusive. Indeed, a same individual can show one or both behavioural attitudes to varying degrees, with more or less control. And remedial action, deep reflection or simply awareness are the routes to follow as from the moment when anxiety, loss of balance or discomfort are felt.

By the way, do you pre-crastinate?

 

Sources: Psychological Science, Psychoomic Bulletin & Review, Scientific American

 

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Insight #66

gustav_klimt_adele_bloch_1907, art, insight, coaching, heeart, knowledge
Gustav KLIMT – Portrait d’Adele Bloch-Bauer, 1907 – Huile, or et argent sur toile, 138 x 138 cm

 

“Tout le savoir que je possède, chacun peut l’acquérir mais mon coeur est à moi seul.

“All the knowledge I possess everyone else can acquire, but my heart is all my own.”

― Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

 

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A Moderator Between Work Stress and Meaning in Life

Georgia O'Keeffe, Pelvis Series- Red With Yellow, Tony Vaccaro, art, insight, coaching, meaning life
Georgia O’Keeffe (1887 – 1986) stands at an easel outdoors, adjusting a canvas from her ‘Pelvis Series- Red With Yellow,’ Albuquerque, New Mexico, 1960. (Photo by Tony Vaccaro)

 

A study by Blake A. Allan for the University of Florida, USA, examined the relations between work stress and both the presence of and search for meaning in life.

Three components of meaningful work—positive meaning, meaning-making, and greater good motivations—were investigated as potential moderators. As hypothesized, work stress had a significant, negative relation with the presence of meaning in life, and a significant, positive relation with the search for meaning in life.

Furthermore, the meaning making component of meaningful work moderated the relation between work stress and the presence of meaning in life. Specifically, meaning making served as a buffer where greater meaning making at work was associated with weaker relations between work stress and the presence of meaning in life.

None of the three components of meaningful work moderated the relation between work stress and the search for meaning in life.

So, how meaningful is your own work?

 

Source : Journal of Career Assessment

 

georgia_o_keefe_pelvis_series_insight_coaching, meaning
Georgia O’KEEFE – Pelvis Series, Red with Yellow, 1945 – Oil on canvas, 91.8 x 122.2 cm

 

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Insight #65

Gérard GAROUSTE - Le puits, art, insight, coaching, madness, folie
Gérard GAROUSTE – Le puits, 2007 – Huile sur toile, 114 x 195 cm

 

“Il y a toujours un peu de folie dans l’amour.  Mais il y a aussi toujours un peu de raison dans la folie.

“There is always some madness in love. But there is also always some reason in madness.”

Friedrich Nietzsche

 

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Insight #64

William TURNER - The Slave Ship, love, sun, insight, coaching
William TURNER – The Slave Ship, 1840 – Huile sur toile, 91 x 123 cm

 

“Aimer et être aimé, c’est sentir le soleil des deux côtés.

“To love and to be loved is to feel the sun from both sides.”

― David Viscott

 

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Sympathy vs. Empathy, feeling with people

Gustav KLIMT – Seeufer Mit Birken, 1901 – Huile sur toile, 90 x 90 cm

 

What is the best way to ease someone’s pain and suffering?

In this beautifully short animation created by Gobblynne for the Royal Society for the Arts online lecture series, Dr Brené Brown reminds us that we can only create a genuine empathic connection if we are brave enough to really get in touch with our own fragilities.

Basically, qualities of empathy are perspective taking, staying out of judgment, recognising emotion in other people, then communicating that. Empathy is feeling WITH people. And keep in mind that rarely can an answer make something better. What makes something better is connection.

 

  

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Insight #63

Leonor Fini, la passagère, dreams, insight, coaching, dreams
Leonor FINI – La passagère, 1964 – Huile sur toile, 50 x 33 cm

 

“Je peins des tableaux qui n’existent pas et que je voudrais voir.

“I paint pictures which do not exist and which I would like to see.”

― Leonor Fini

 

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