No Time To Coach

“As a billing manager, I never seem to have the time to coach my people consistently, and they have such a limited attention span that I get the feeling, especially with my veterans, that they aren’t really into learning anyway. How do I find the balance and provide them what they need in a format that is of interest and relevant?”

This question ranks as number one among owners, billing managers, and even trainers trying to find the balance between their own workload and providing their recruiters with essential skills and knowledge. We are all experiencing work environments that are intensely more competitive and constantly changing with business goals and objectives that continue to escalate. And while there are still seven days in a week and 24 hours in a day, our challenge is to do more with those same seven days and 24 hours then we did just a year ago.

So how do we begin to find the gift of time to coach our people, and who is to say they are open to receiving it? It is one of the classic recruiting organizational dilemmas.

The truth is that most of us grew into our positions; we came up through the ranks and, when we became a manager, practice leader, trainer, or coach, nothing was taken off our plate in the transition!

For most of us, historically, the concept of coaching and learning comes from the perspective of “throwing them in the water to see if they can swim.” So naturally, the coaching goes something like this: “Hey, I just looked at your call report, and your dials are low…need to get ‘em up! You must have four hours of connect time to be successful in this business.”

This is certainly an understandable paradigm, as most of us were raised in results oriented, bottom line, do-ordie environments. And while these coaching statements are true, the problem is that these comments boil down to “work harder” which only helps if “work harder” is the right answer. The work harder response is about as effective as a football coach standing under the goal post and yelling out the score to his team.

Key point: If I’m going to position myself as your coach, I’ve got to watch you play the game. This means I have to coach to more than just results or the attempt at results. The scope of this conversation goes beyond this article, but one of the best resources for learning to coach in a meaningful and impactful way was created by Randall Murphy, founder of the Acclivus Corporation (www.Acclivus. com). Ask for their white paper called The Coaching Connection. For coaching and learning to be truly effective, it must be around more than just the results. It must be around skills, knowledge, effort and attitude on the work being done. You will spend less time on meaningless coaching and end up with a coaching message to your people that is both valuable and executable!

That brings us to the second challenge: your recruiter’s receptiveness toward being coached and learning from the experience. This is especially true with three generational groups working together in the same environment. So let’s just put this on the table right at the beginning. Even with the gift of time, assuming you have it and know how to use it effectively, not everyone is going to be open to learning. You will always have prisoners in your camp or perhaps perpetual self-absorbed individuals who already think they know everything. That is a fact of life.

Our focus, therefore, will be on the core of your office or team that is open to learning and being mentored if properly challenged. We just need to know how to better connect with them in the limited amount of time that we have.

Here’s the key. Most people are willing to learn if you know how to tap into their learning style. There is a real science to helping people learn, and we all learn and absorb information in different ways. By the way, this is true in communication with your clients and candidates as well!

Dr. Bernice McCarthy is a subject matter expert around learning styles. In her book, Hold On, You Lost Me! – Use Learning Styles to Create Training That Sticks, she discusses learning styles and the modeling around the styles to help ensure an effective coaching and learning opportunity for all. Your challenge is to develop your coaching style and your training curriculum so that it engages all four learning styles effectively.

For the time conscious manager, the best way to ensure the incorporation of all four learning styles into the training curriculum is through the process known as blended learning.

Unlike traditional education, corporate training exists primarily to improve business performance. We deal primarily with adults—people who want and need to learn just enough to become more effective at their jobs.

Blended learning allows for the consideration of each individual—the human factor. A study by Harvard Business School faculty found that providing several linked options for learners, in addition to classroom training, significantly increased what they learned. The report determined that students not only learned more when online sessions were added to traditional courses, but student interaction and satisfaction improved as well.

What’s in a blend? Blended learning includes face-to-face classroom training, videos, online training workshops, one-on-one coaching, as well as webinar guest speakers and literature. Often, for the time weary manager, utilizing outside resources helps to reinforce a message in a multitude of ways. It is typically the type of message that the manager “harps on” on a daily basis, but when the same message is delivered a different way, or by a different person, it is often at that point the learner suddenly “gets it”—to the obvious frustration of many managers who wondered why their people did not “listen” to them in the first place!

Blended learning is a living concept, not just terminology, a phrase, a DVD, or a series of webinars. Therefore, it is important that you have a variety of quality training/coaching options available to ensure the application of the right mix to any given business problem.

For more information on applications of coaching methodology or blended learning, contact Rob Mosley or Jeff Kaye via email at rob@nextlevelexchange. com, jeff@nextlevelexchange.com, or 214.556.8000.

About Jeff Kaye 1 Article
Jeff Kaye is the Co-Chief Executive Officer of Kaye/Bassman International and Next Level Recruiting Training. Jeff graduated from the University of Texas at Austin with a bachelor in Business and entered the search profession immediately. He has spent over two decades in search, migrating from being one of the nation’s leading search professionals at his current firm, to now the Co-CEO of the same firm, Kaye/Bassman International. He is considered an industry expert in executive, professional and technical search, has appeared on CNN, FOX, Bloomberg, NBC, and the like and is quoted regularly in publications including USA Today, The Wall Street Journal, Business Week, Time and Fortune. Kaye is also a frequent speaker around the globe within the staffing and human resources community and has been featured in dozens of international training meetings, articles, books and videos.