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    Mark Forster is the author of three books about time management and personal organisation. The most recent, Do It Tomorrow, was published by Hodder in 2006.

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    Tuesday
    Jul312007

    What It Takes to Be a Successful Coach

    I wrote this article several years ago about coaching. However most of what I said applies to other businesses too, and bears repeating.

    During the time I have been a coach, I have been regularly astonished by two things. The first is how little some quite well-known coaches are earning after years of being a coach. The second is how quickly some other people start earning large sums of money at coaching.

    I have noticed that it is frequently possible to identify the people who are going to “fly” the second they come onto the scene, well before they start being successful.

    So here is a list of things I think these people have in common. Not all of them of course will have all these qualities in equal measure, and I am sure there are other factors which I have omitted.

    * They see coaching as a business, and take a business attitude to it.

    * They are quite clear about what they want to achieve, and work to long-term (3-5 years) rather than short-term goals.

    * They know it takes time and effort to build a business, and they start putting that time and effort in straightaway.

    * They adequately fund their business.

    * They are confident in their own abilities, particularly their business abilities.

    * They concentrate more on improving their business than on improving their coaching (though obviously the two go hand-in-hand; it is a matter of emphasis).

    * They see marketing as their number one priority.

    * They find ways very early on of distinguishing themselves from the common herd.

    * And without any exception I can think of, they are excellent public speakers.

    It all goes back to what I’ve written before: our profession is coaching; our business is selling coaching services.

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    Reader Comments (2)

    As a senior manager who is planning to move from operations into organisational development (HR, facilitation, appreciative inquiry and coaching), this is timely and pertinent advice. Was this past of a longer article - if so, is it available to read on line?
    August 19, 2007 at 0:19 | Unregistered CommenterJon
    Thanks for the tips, Mark. I rated pretty good, but the reminders are welcome, esp. re: the business side.
    October 22, 2007 at 13:27 | Unregistered CommenterMatthew Cornell

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