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Do you know any coaching patterns?

January 2, 2018

Do you ever influence or coach people?  How?  Do you use a gut feel approach or do you have coaching patterns that you use?  I have several coaching patterns that I step through when trying to influence people.  I also have a strategy for using these patterns.  Let me share with you with an example of stepping through some patterns.

By default, my go to pattern is based on The Socratic Method: I ask a lot of questions and try to stimulate critical thinking. Hopefully these questions help lead my client to an answer that works far better than anything I would have come up with. 

 

Imagine you have a kid who hasn’t showered in a long time. You ask him “wouldn’t it be nice if you smelled better? Don’t you think you have more friends if you weren’t so grungy? Wouldn’t it be wonderful if you didn’t get teased all day for looking so dirty?”  Hopefully this leads your kid to making the decision that a shower is a good idea.  I tried this with my clients once and I kept asking questions. She eventually said, “Chuck, all you ever do is ask questions.  I want you to coach me.”

 

So I tried a different pattern: The dictatorial pattern. You literally dictate a solution.  Imagine again that you kid still hasn’t showered.  You say, “every day I want to see the towel wet and your hair wet to prove that you’re taking a shower”.  What does your kid do? Wet the towel and his head of course.   That’s eventually what happened at my client’s shop.  The client said, “Chuck you are so bossy. I just want you to coach me”.

 

Time for another pattern: The mirroring pattern.   Imagine now that your kid is really smelling ripe. You take a shower and then walk around saying, “Ooo I’m so clean.  I smell like a rose.  I look bright and shiny.  It feels so nice to be clean.”   Hopefully your kid gets the idea and thinks “Boy I want some of that cleanliness too”.  I tried this with my client, writing stories and delving out requirements and then trumpeting about how proud I was of them.  After a time the client said “Chuck all you ever do is work. I want you to coach me”.

 

It was time for another pattern: Swarming.  Imagine you tell all of your kid’s friends to say he’s dirty as a rag, he smells like an old shoe, he should shower more frequently.  Hopefully, after hearing the same message from his friends, he gets the idea that it’s time take a shower.  I tried this with my client telling all of my consulting colleagues “Why don’t you tell her this? Can you tell her that?” Eventually she began to listen to one of the consultants; the UI guy.   I would tell him what works well, he’d tell her, and she would listen. Problem solved! But I lost influence and power. She started to listen to the UI fellow and not to what I had to say even though the UI guy was saying roughly what I had been saying.  I was now only indirectly effective in my role.

 

Finally I moved on to another pattern: The voice from afar pattern.  We got a fellow from California who looked nice, wore great cologne, wore an expensive suit, and charged twice as much per hour as I did.  My client looked at him and said “Oooo, he’s impressive and expensive so I better listen to him.” and she did.   This was a win-win-win result.  She was happy since she had somebody that was directly helping her. The consulting company was happy because they were charging a higher rate. I was happy because I was able to work myself onto another client.  It’s like your kid being told by Taylor Swift that he should take a shower.  He’ll be in that shower in a jiffy!

 

The point:  don’t try to influence people just from a gut feel - that’s tough and it takes a lot of trial and error experience.  Each situation has a pattern or approach that is appropriate for what you and your client are trying to achieve. Learn them and how they can be applied.

 

 There are references for patterns on coaching which can help you create a concrete strategy of influencing people.  Some great references for patterns are:

 

  • “Fearless change” by Linda Rising and Mary Lunn Manns
  • “Agile Coaching” by Rachel Davies and Liz Sedley
  • “Coaching Agile Teams” by Lyssa Adkins. 

 

You can also look into the psychology of influence in:

 

  • “Drive” by Daniel Pink
  • “Switch” by Heath and Heath
  • “Influence” by Robert Cialdini.

 

I hope this approach has given you something to think about. What is your go to pattern? Please add it to the comments at the end of this post.  Meanwhile, I’ll be off trying another pattern.


What did you think about this post?

Comments (13)


Victor Egusquiza
12:55 am November 28, 2018

"It’s like your kid being told by Taylor Swift that he should take a shower." Lol! Great job!


Fritz Horsthemke
01:30 pm February 22, 2019

Perhaps you have read something from Steve DeShazer. He postulated a model of three types of coachees. Clients, visitor and complainers. You only can coach people with a purpose of a client. Don't coach without an order.


Saurabh Sharma
05:22 pm April 16, 2019

@chuck great write up. How swiftly you introduced 5 coaching patterns which 5 minutes prior I didn't even know existed! What's this pattern of coaching called :) thanks!!


Rochak Mehrotra
10:26 am May 24, 2019

socratic one..i think thats why my friends and colleagues always say to me.. "why do you ask so many questions?"... sometime i go overboard as per them :)


KLAUDIA SZANISZLO
09:04 pm May 21, 2020

Questions (the good ones) are worth more than dollars. You can know the person, show the way and learn yourself, all at the same time :) You are not giving fish, but teaching to fish.


mynzhassar
10:17 am December 19, 2021

Awesome, good examples


Paul Bomers
01:58 pm April 1, 2022

Telling the friends of your kid, to tell your kid he doesn't smell nice is not coaching but manipulating. Apparently it is not about what your kid wants but about what you want. Once your kid (or scrum team member) discovers this they very likely will not trust you anymore. Thus undermining everything you say in the future. If you feel your kid smells unpleasantly just tell him that you don't like that. That's honest feedback


Katrina Latyshava
03:23 pm April 6, 2022

Great article, thank you!


Christian Pisetta
01:11 pm July 28, 2022

Another great book on influence and leadership is "Influence Is Your Superpower" by Zoe Chance


Thomas Stehle
08:15 am September 19, 2022

Thanks for this post! I don't really understand why you chose the pattern name "mirroring" in your example above. In my understanding mirroring would be something like you stop showering yourself until your kid notices that you are becoming smelly. What you describe above is more like a "role model" pattern, right?


N Murali Mohan
04:50 pm December 4, 2022

I liked the way you gave so many examples, which made it an engaging read :-)


Jorge
09:36 am April 11, 2023

My experience tells me that this is a very nice tip specially if you have no idea to approach the customer and you are not working in the customer's company ( remote or physically ), but usually if you get a good understanding with your customer gut can also be a solution. So do never disregard gut, but try some documented approach if needed. This is actually giving names to gut experiences lived in the past and turned into a model so... not sure I agree with no gut.


SaintHax
04:01 pm September 20, 2024

I liked this, but I'm surprised by the Swarming example, as that is not what Swarming is. Swarming is getting everyone in the group to stop working on their work until you get a solution for one team member's problem, not telling the rest of the group the solution to tell the person with the problem. Much like a swarm of hornets, you all attack the problem till it's resolved.

To follow your stinky kid issue, it would be more accurate if the whole house is called in for a family meeting about the stinky kid. No one is allowed to go eat, do homework (yes, even the stuff we consider important), or watch TV until the stinky kid issue is resolved.