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Coaching

Support Leadership Development With Manager-Coaches

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Manager-Coaches Multiply the Impact of Leadership Development

Learning and development initiatives have a huge opportunity to increase participant application and the retention of content by better leveraging one key relationship. It all starts with leveraging the participant’s manager in the development process as a "manager-coach."

Leadership development participants need a support system up, down, and around them to make development stick – and the manager is a key component of this network. How is that possible, you might ask?

The Power of the Manager who Takes a Coach-Approach

Coaching plays an important role in supplementing leadership development. It can help:

  • build faster, sustained outcomes
  • support learning retention and behavior change
  • provide real-time feedback on application
  • focus attention on development plans
  • offer support on challenges
  • drive accountability
  • connect the dots to the organizational big picture

A coach approach to managing in the workplace prepares people to make the most of their skills and aptitudes, recognize the opportunities that best suit their talents, and move from motivation to action. Getting managers to incorporate coaching into their traditional management skills helps leadership development participants by encouraging personal growth and development between key learning opportunities.

How to involve participants’ managers in leadership development

Participants’ managers don’t always understand their role or know how they can support the development process. But we can change that by formally incorporating touchpoints for participants and managers to have coaching conversations about the leadership development program and the participant’s takeaways.

Here are some key ways you can engage a leadership development participant’s manager as a coach:

  • Before the design of any training/development, get feedback from the participants’ managers to find out what the needs are and what success looks like for their employee’s participation in the training.
  • Communicate the purpose of the program and the targeted leadership competencies that managers can watch for participants to demonstrate.
  • Educate managers on how they can coach direct reports to support the development during the program.
  • Provide clear expectations on their role in following up with employees before, during, and after training and for providing opportunities for employees to use their new leadership skills.
  • Provide a participant/manager conversation guide to structure conversations during a training/development initiative and help to ensure that managers are connecting with their direct reports that are participating.
  • Have managers work with employees on individual development plans (IDPs) or action plans that accompany leadership development to make sure they apply to the participant’s role and the leadership program objectives.

The manager is such a critical component of the participant support system that enables them to apply learning to their day-to-day job. Providing managers with coaching skills to support participants is a key step to maximizing the impact of leadership development and reaping the rewards that coaching can add to leadership development.

Photo by Julian Howard on Unsplash

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Linda Dausend

Linda Dausend CPLP, is a senior consultant at FlashPoint. Linda collaborates with clients to unlock the power of great leaders within their organizations.