Blog posts for coaches from around the web – 1st June 2014
Welcome to this weeks recap of blog posts for coaches from around the web. Each Monday on this blogs Facebook page I usually issue the following question and invitation:
“Have you written/seen a blog post in the past week that you’d think is of interest to coaches and that you’d like to share?”
You’ll notice that the recap today is broken down into two lists – one of posts shared via our Facebook page from the Monday invite and one of other posts from around the web.
Posts shared last week on our Facebook page:
- “WHAT WOULD YOU TELL YOUR ATHLETIC DIRECTOR?” by Sports leadership Coach DeAngelo Wiser
- “Active Listening Techniques” by Jonathan Elston
- “THE ‘GOOSEBUMP’ TEAM TALK” by cricket coach Matt Thompson
These are a few posts that also attracted my attention either personally or because of readers requests to read more on a particular subject…
Other posts for coaches from around the web:
- “Creating VS Letting It Happen” by Jamie Smart
- “What are you devoted to?” by Jennifer Louden
- “How to convert prospects who sign up for preview calls but not the programs” by Fabienne Fredrickson
- “53+ Free Image Sources For Your Blog and Social Media Posts” by Courtney Seiter
- “What Neuroscience Can Teach Us About Compassion” by Carolyn Gregoire
- “Escaping the Time-Scarcity Trap” by Janet Choi
- “Questions In Coaching (4): ‘Chunking’ Up Or Down” by Andy Smith
- “O-oh oh no no! What to do when you’re not yourself!” by Véronique Pivetta
- “Study: People attribute free will to the mind, not the soul” by BROWN UNIVERSITY
- “61 Productivity Experts Reveal Their 3 Favorite Productivity Tools” by Kosio Angelov
Want your post included next week? If you have a post that you think will be of interest to coaches do take part in tomorrow’s Monday invite and leave the details on our Facebook page. Whilst it’s lovely for posts to be sent to me via twitter, the nature of a tweet means that it can easily be overlooked when this post is being compiled at a later time. Please leave links in one place, ie the thread on our Facebook page so they can be easily shared.