þri., 15. okt.
|Háskólinn í Reykjavík
Who is the Client When the Organization Pays?
When an individual engages a coach, they typically are the client. Easy. When a HR Director, line manager or someone else in the organization engages your services to coach an individual or team, there can easily be confusion as to who is the client and what your responsibilities are as a coach.
Tímasetning
15. okt. 2024, 15:00 – 16:00
Háskólinn í Reykjavík, Menntavegur 1, 102, 101 Reykjavík, Iceland
Um viðburð
In this workshop, together we will discuss:
1) How do you define who the client is?
• Is it the person paying the bill?
• Is it the person being coached?
• Is it the sponsor or direct manager?
• Is it any or all of the above?
2) How can you prepare each participant to understand the parameters and responsibilities of their role, and also your role as the coach?
• What is important for each of the roles to do and to not do?
• What will you as coach do and not do?
• How does each role contribute to the success of the coaching engagement and how will they know?
This practical workshop will equip you with the tools to use in your own coaching practice. The facilitator will share examples. Each coach will create their own process so come prepared to discuss and design yours based on the ideas presented.
Cheryl Smith
Pioneering; Visionary; Inspirational. In her 25+ years in leadership and coach training, Cheryl Smith has been called all of these. After a successful career with IBM in both Australia and the UK, she trained with the premier international coach training company CoachU. Later she rose to Vice-President of the corporate division with responsibility for global sales, program development and delivery. She facilitated successful coaching initiatives to more than a dozen English and non-English speaking countries on five continents. Cheryl has been facilitating coach training classes at Reykjavik University since 2005, and three days after the eruption of Eyjafjallajökull in April 2010, ran the pilot for the now established Executive Coaching Program. Cheryl was one of the first fifty coaches to earn the designation of Master Certified Coach. She has written several articles on coaching and leadership, co-authored the book: Dynamic Coaching to Build Dynamic Teams, and the very popular leader-as-coach training program called Navigational Coaching. Cheryl is a co-founder of the executive coach training program at Royal Roads University in British Columbia where she lives and also where she earned her Master’s degree in Leadership and Training.