Global

EN

A challenge too far? Who says?

JUMP TO SECTION

In this guest post, Fi Macmillan looks at challenge – the ‘door of possibility’ – in the coaching relationship.

Enough nicely, nicely. It’s time for coaches to challenge more, and challenge hard. So say some within the coaching profession currently.

In the dance between coach and coachee, challenge is a key to the ‘door of possibility’ for the coachee. The right challenge can deepen trust. Yet, as coaches, one of our greatest fears is that it knocks the relationship off-course. An intrinsically authoritative intervention, how do we engage our coachee to create the right challenge for them?

To draw the map, three considerations for the coach in preparing to contract around challenge might be:

  • What is the coachee’s current capacity for learning and change?
  • What challenge are they currently experiencing in their wider system?
  • What is their previous experience of effective challenge and support?

Coachees may struggle with the abstract concept of challenge. To bring it to life, three contracting resources to help the coachee to scale their challenge:

Challenge and support matrix

As a coach, primarily I work in this area [of the matrix].  Where would you like our work to be within that?
Big challenge usually requires big support. What does that look like for the coachee?

Yerkes Dodson curve

Research shows that optimum performance happens here [top of the curve].  Where do you want to work?  What questions will I be asking you if we are working there?

To explore the limits of challenge

Some argue that an element of surprise and disruption are a necessary part of effective challenge.  An experience of this, and ‘fearless speech’ , may be part of creating the contract.

However research suggests that a coach does powerful work when they take their coachee to an edge between awareness and exposure. The coach invites them to choose their own way forward.  A hybrid of strong support and ‘spot’ contracting keeps the coach firmly alongside their coachee at this point, asking what is happening for them.

There are three positions from which challenge is offered and this may affect how the coachee experiences support.

  • Reporting from an observational ‘high ground’.
  • Standing ‘shoulder to shoulder’.  Empathetic and parental.
  • Standing ‘shoulder to shoulder’ in a spirit of adventure.  Equal and ‘thought-partner’.

At this point, the coach may be challenging hard. The world has become more challenging. The work of coaching is to develop new frontiers within the coachee work with this. However, whatever the level of challenge, this is not something to be imposed on the coachee. Rather to honour their choice and stand alongside, their equal, in a spirit of adventure.

Share this article:

Tagged:

Read Next

How do you measure the success of a leader?

State of the Heart: Burnout, resilience and the importance of truly sustainable leadership In their 2024 State of the Heart report, Six Seconds revealed a sobering picture of the global

Is connecting more via technology harming our emotional resilience?

State of the Heart: Is connecting more via technology harming our emotional resilience? In their 2024 State of the Heart report, Six Seconds revealed a sharp decline in global emotional

Select Your Location and Language

Use our site switcher to easily navigate between our different offices (in your preferred language where available), or select “Global” for our head office.

Privacy Overview
TPC Leadership - Global

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.

Strictly Necessary Cookies

Strictly Necessary Cookie should be enabled at all times so that we can save your preferences for cookie settings.

3rd Party Cookies

This website uses Google Analytics to collect anonymous information such as the number of visitors to the site, and the most popular pages.

Keeping this cookie enabled helps us to improve our website.