The Denver Post

Turn good managers into great coaches

- By ENERGAGE

In traditiona­l organizati­ons, managers ensure compliance and track employee performanc­e through assessment­s and ratings. We know those approaches can kill commitment and drop productivi­ty.

Today’s best managers have a better way to help their teams succeed. Rather than managing performanc­e, they develop it through open communicat­ion, trust, and coaching.

Adopting this new approach starts with removing the emphasis on annual reviews. To become coaches, managers should provide employees regular, personaliz­ed feedback that encourages continual learning and growth.

So how does coaching work? Here’s the basic philosophy: Mutual respect creates genuine connection­s that reveal a path to shared success. To understand what that really means, let’s pull it apart.

Mutual respect

A manager is an employee’s boss. A coach is an employee’s guide. Instead of giving orders and focusing on past mistakes, coaches focus on strengths and encourage growth. They build a relationsh­ip as equal partners so the employee feels safe to take risks and find their own answers.

Genuine connection

Effective coaches see their employees as whole people and get to know them personally. With a candid, human connection, the employee is safe to share their unique motivation­s, skills, and interests. Only then can the manager see where those align with organizati­onal needs.

Shared success

This phrase might ring a bell — it’s part of our definition of engagement, too. This kind of win-win thinking is achievable only when there’s complete clarity on what the organizati­on and the employee need. Then, the coach and employee can work together to develop an aligned growth plan.

Through ongoing coaching, your employees can identify and recognize:

• Individual interests • Skills they bring to the table

• Organizati­onal needs

For open communicat­ion to truly flourish, the old ways of performanc­e reviews, emails, and focus groups have got to go. To create the right conditions for high employee engagement, give managers and employees an easy way to communicat­e openly, effectivel­y, and continuall­y. Energage is a Philadelph­iabased research and consulting firm that surveyed more than 2.5 million employees at more than 7,000 organizati­ons in 2018. Energage is The Denver Post’s research partner for Top Workplaces.

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