Details
Much has been written about coaching individuals at work, but what about coaching teams at work?
Even in organizations that have made strides toward becoming coaching experts, the focus tends to be on the individual-not the team. In Coaching the Team at Work, David Clutterbuck bridges the gap between theory and practice. He combines the techniques of team coaching and learning with the practical experiences of managers and coaches. Clutterbuck also answers questions such as: how team coaching differs from individual coaching, what skills underpin effective team coaching, and how team coaching can be made into a sustainable, automatic process. This book is a must for professionals who want their staffs to work as seamlessly as possible.
Contents
Introduction
1 What is Coaching?
2 Defining the Team
3 Coaching the Team
4 Coaching the Learning Team
5 Managing Team Coaching
6 The Self-Coaching Team
Notes
Index
Dr. David Clutterbuck is senior partner at Clutterbuck Associates, a leading international consultancy in coaching and mentoring. Co-founder of the European Mentoring Center (now the European Mentoring and Coaching Council), he is visiting professor at Sheffield Hallam University's Mentoring and Coaching Research Group. He is the author or co-author of nearly 50 books, including The Winning Streak, Techniques in Coaching and Mentoring, The Power of Empowerment, Learning Alliances and Inspired Customer Service.
"I thoroughly recommend Coaching the Team at Work to all those interested in individual and organizational development, improving working relationships and above all improving their own capabilities as a learning practitioner. The style is clear and direct, packed with useful and practical advice on how to develop coaching processes to ensure increased effectiveness, whether as a coach, a manager or a member of the board. Coaching the Team at Work ranges across a comprehensive range of coaching issues, from the individual to the team, from the strategic to the operational. David Clutterbuck helps to clarify this critical area of organizational learning by providing a plethora of examples and mini case studies, backed up by rigorous research."
-Jan Kingsley, Director of Corporate Services at European Foundation for Management Development (EFMC)


