- Coaching experience, number of individuals coached, years of experience, types of situations, why they chose to be a coach.
- Specific coach training, skills, experience, certifications, additional training and ongoing learning.
- Coaching specialties or type of clients they work with.
- General philosophy and style of coaching.
- The coach’s ability to listen to the underlying story and address in a variety of ways to meet your learning style.
- The manner is which they create a plan of action that will help you get to your desired outcome.
- Their coaching model, assessments they use and or process that will guide you through the process. Look for specific answers not vague generalities.
- Request coaching success stories, specific examples of individuals who have done well and examples of how they added value to their clients.=
- Assess their ability to listen and ask thought provoking questions that make you think and may even make you uncomfortable.
- Watch for the manner in which they hold congruency in their life. Do they walk their talk-how do they follow through, what is the “extra they provide”.
- Ask what professional resources and materials that they could include networking and research resources.
- Ask for references of other clients they worked with, listen to what others say regarding their reputation.
- Look for stylistic similarities and differences between the coach and you and how they might support your growth as an individual or the growth of your business.
- Discuss your goals for coaching within the context of the coach’s specialty or the coach’s preferred way of working with an individual or team.
- Have a personal interview with one or more coaches to determine “what feels right” in terms of the chemistry.
- Find out what how the sessions are conducted, the frequency and cost.
- Talk with the coach about what to do if you ever feel things are not going well; make some agreements up front on how to handle questions or problems.
- Remember that coaching is a partnership; so be assertive about talking with the coach about anything that is of concern at any time.
Showing posts with label career coaching. Show all posts
Showing posts with label career coaching. Show all posts
Wednesday, February 23, 2011
What should one look for when hiring a Career Coach?
Labels:
Career Coach,
career coaching,
Career Transition
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