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    May 16, 2018    |   Psychometrics Canada

Top Tips for Increasing the Impact of Your Team Coaching – Part 1

Original Post by Katy Lyne, OPP. 

As a consultant, I work with many teams across a wide variety of sectors and industries. I was recently talking to a client, herself an L&D practitioner, who asked me about my approach to team coaching – in particular what my ‘top tips’ were for ensuring that the work had impact and made a real difference to how the team functions. This got me thinking about the key elements involved.

Classroom Chalkboard (4)1. Work with a pressing and important agenda

Team coaching varies hugely in length, complexity and content; but it is those teams that have a pressing and important agenda to address that are likely to grow and change the most. There may be a ‘burning platform’ they want to address such as team conflict or difficult decision-making. Some teams may be functioning well, but realize that the challenges ahead require radical change. Others may want to realize their potential and become a high performing team rather than just a group of individuals. By ensuring that all team members are working with something that matters to them as individuals and as a team, you are most likely to gain the commitment and engagement needed for meaningful and sustained change.

2. Understand your starting point 

Like Gok Wan making his clients gaze into a 360° mirror, starting a team coaching program with an honest, supportive look at how the team is working together provides focus and clarity. Gathering views through interviews or team performance tools and models is one way of doing this. It can also be helpful to perform a ‘team 360°’ to gather the views of significant stakeholders. Culture surveys, sales figures or other ‘hard data’ will provide information to help the team focus. It can also be helpful to gather individual 360° data so that individuals are aware of the strengths and challenges they bring to the team dynamic. Starting the program this way enables you to make meaningful comparisons and measure progress later.

3. Focus on ‘how’ as well as ‘what’ – explore team dynamics thinker-28741_1280 (2)

Many teams are good at focusing on the what, i.e. tasks and challenges, but take little time to consider how – the patterns and themes playing out within their team dynamic. This is often about permission (e.g. ‘I’m not sure it’s OK to let Tom know that his last-minute approach is making my life difficult….’), as well as having a language and framework to safely explore interactions and relationships (e.g. ‘Not sure why I find Matt so much easier to work with than Becky…’). Using tools such as the MBTI® assessment with teams allows individuals to understand each other better and provides a basis for constructive conversations about patterns of behaving within the team. Understanding different approaches and styles gives the opportunity to develop behaviour and adapt to the needs of colleagues.

4. Face the difficulties and lean into the challenges 

Difficult issues and challenges are inevitable in ambitious teams. An atmosphere where people are able to talk about disagreements and conflicts is vital to developing accountability for the things the team is working on together. Building an environment of honesty and vulnerability within the team can take time, and requires a skilled team coach; but where this is achieved, the ‘real issues’ of personality differences, conflicts and fears are surfaced. Some individuals will want to back away from these real issues in order to maintain ‘easy’ (if sometimes superficial) relationships. Real change can be painful. Only teams that are able to ‘lean into’ the real difficulties and have the courage to face what is genuinely limiting their relationships will be able to achieve long term meaningful change to high performance.

handshake5. Work closely with the team leader in order to ensure role-modelling and personal change

Impactful team coaching means addressing difficult and potentially painful barriers, so the team leader is key to making this happen in a constructive way. Ensuring close communication between team coach and team leader is vital for setting expectations and modelling changes and positive behaviour. What happens outside the coaching sessions can be as important as what happens during them; so having an open and honest relationship with the team leader will ensure that sessions focus on timely issues. This is most important when the team really engages with what’s holding them back and begins to change. A team leader who is open to change will help ensure each individual is supported through their personal journey within the team dynamic so that real growth is sustained.


If you coach teams, then you won’t want to miss our upcoming complimentary webinar, When the Going Gets Tough: Challenging MBTI Team-Building Workshop Situations and How to Handle Them, which describes difficult scenarios you might encounter during team-building workshops, and how best to manage them. It is being run by MBTI Master Practitioner Patrick Kerwin on Wednesday May 30th. Click here to register.