Coaching Quote of the Day 26th July 2014
“In Silence there is eloquence. Stop weaving, and watch how the pattern improves.”
(Rumi)
“In Silence there is eloquence. Stop weaving, and watch how the pattern improves.”
(Rumi)
In today’s guest post Coach Diane Dutchin shares her expertise and knowledge to benefit both you and your clients.
by Diane Dutchin
“Sleeping never moves you forward, it’s the awakening process that stirs you to action”
(DianeD)
I know, the title to this topic is not the usual you come across in your mail box like “how to uncover and tap into your niche”, or “how to attract more clients”. However, stay with me, this is an appropriate fit because it’s about you the coach and your client.
My intent is to deliver a one two punch of relevant information to empower you to reflect, to reapply methods of being and doing in your journey as a coach, and hopefully lead to a revival, renewal/refreshing to both you and your clients.
Reflect: when you first started your practice what was your attitude like? Aside from the excitement of finally doing what I felt I was created to do, I was focused on uncovering what areas of life I was deeply passionate about and connected to.
Forget about what the experts are saying you should or shouldn’t do, and what the latest niche is. What fired you up and awakened your spirit? Is that fire still there or is it a dying ember? Or, are you more motivated by external realities than your internal convictions? Stay consistent to your internal convictions. Here are some steps I follow to help me awaken sleeping giants in my journey
Revisit/Reapply: your core values and your personal beliefs. Revisiting my values gives me the opportunity to assess my present state, and how much of my values/beliefs are still in line with my living, and make adjustments where needed. By doing that you sharpen:
By incorporating your basic style of coaching with fresh ideas, tips and tools you can strengthen your practice, and find yourself at the advantage of serving with excellence.
Revive: your truth, your internal realities, and your purpose – not someone else! It’s easy to place too much emphasis on what others are doing, and dismiss what convicts and motivates your particular style. Yes, it takes someone with courage to stay consistent, recognize opportunities, and accept the calling to be a coach of positive change. I am not saying to ignore growth, but don’t throw out the baby with the bath water by neglecting the fundamentals you established your practice on.
Renew/Refresh: your life, your vision, your focus, your practice and your delivery. By taking the time to reflect, revisit/reapply and revive areas, thoughts, actions or saying about your life and practice, you could experience a welcomed renewal that can improve your delivery add deep refreshing to you and your practice.
Seeing that you’re in the coaching profession, I am going to automatically assume part of your focus when working with your client, is to:
So, why is it some coaches overcomplicate this process? As a coach you want to remain mindful of lining up your words with your actions. I would rather have someone under promise with their words and over deliver with their actions, instead of over promising and under delivering.
Clients come to you because they have a need, and are drawn to you based on a number of factors:
In my experience I’ve found my most effective encounters and results came when I avoided the flashy and fancy approach. People aren’t looking necessarily for how much credentials are behind your name, or how many hundreds of clients you’ve served – all they care about is “can you help me with______?”
The basic foundational questions still works and can be extremely effective to get the journey of awareness, and empowerment to change started:
You still have opportunity to ask other questions like:
My experience is that this way such questions will automatically fall into place!
There should be a natural flow when serving your clients. Be cautious of “trying” a new thing you read about, or what happens to be the “new style of coaching”. If not, it could show up during the session and mat be the last one with the client.
As a coach you can awaken and elevate areas of your personal and professional life to higher levels of fulfillment, and stir your clients forward to have a more impactful, and life transforming experience.
How do you know when an area in your life needs to be awaken, and what action do you take to revive it?
You are your Greatest Investment!
“Diane – life coach with a passion for living her best life and motivating others to do the same. I provide quality coaching and facilitating services to clients and coaches on a personal and professional level. I work with people to improve the quality of their lives on a personal and professional level.
Check out my site at www.makethemovecoaching.com and connect for a free 1 hour strategy session.”
“The wise man doesn’t give the right answers, he poses the right questions.”
(Claude Levi-Strauss)
Each Thursday I share the most RT’d quote(s) from the blogs twitter account over the previous week. Last week the most RT’d tweet was:
“Do what you can, with what you have, where you are.”
(Theodore Roosevelt)
Tweeted on 14th July
The next most popular quote to be RT’d was a tie between:
“Do one thing every day that scares you.”
(Eleanor Roosevelt)
Tweeted on 14th July
“The more you know who you are, and what you want, the less you let things upset you.”
(Stephanie Perkins, Anna and the French Kiss)
Tweeted on 19th July
and
“Life has become immeasurably better since I have been forced to stop taking it seriously.”
(Hunter S. Thompson)
Tweeted on 20th July
Many thanks to everyone who shared the quotes above and the other quotes from last week. I know that there are various aspects that can influence if a quote attracts your attention – if you saw the tweet, personal style, if it speaks to something happening in your life at that moment etc.
(For those of you as geeky as I am and wondering what tool I’m using to measure individual RT’s this week I’ve been playing with www.twitonomy.com)
“He that would be a leader must be a bridge.”
(Welsh proverb)
“Believe and act as if it were impossible to fail.”
(Charles Kettering)
This week’s TED Talk clip is from an independent TEDx event:
How to build a superhero in 5 easy steps | Michelle Dickinson | TEDxWanaka
Clip length: 13 mins 22 secs
Prefer to watch on TED.com? In that case you’ll need to click here.
“You may be disappointed if you fail, but you are doomed if you don’t try.”
(Beverly Sills)