Now come up with one memory of them, fast.
(Got it?)
What’s your memory? Is it something your coach/teacher/mentor said? Something they did?
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When you look around today, a lot of coaches and teachers and bosses seem to be doing everything but connecting. Go to a soccer game, for instance, and you tend to see coaches on the sideline doing a lot of talking (shouting out mid-game advice, orchestrating the action), but not a lot of connecting. Certain CEOs and managers are similar, though perform do their sideline orchestrating via email. But is this wise? Is it useful?
I recently met a terrific soccer coach by the name of Iain Munro, who coaches at YSC Sports Academy in Philadelphia (a burgeoning soccer hotbed in its own right). Munro, who’s in his sixties, played and coached at the top level in England and his native Scotland (working with, among others, Alex Ferguson and Jock Stein). I put the question to Munro this way: if the average coach says 100 words to his players, how many words should a master coach say?
Munro looked into my eyes; he let me know he really heard the question and was giving it due consideration. He placed a friendly hand on my shoulder, and I got an ineffable feeling that I was about to hear something important. Then I did.
“Ten words,” he said. “Fewer, if possible.”
The truth is, great coaches and teachers don’t spend their time talking. They spend most of their time watching and listening. And when they communicate, they don’t just start talking. First they connect on an emotional level, to one individual at a time. They deliver concise, useful information, and they make that information stick. Kind of like Munro did when he communicated with me.
So with that in mind I’d like to offer the following checklist; a filter to use before you start talking.
· 1. Are you connected? Do you have the person’s complete and undivided attention?
· 2. Do you know — deeply understand — where that person is in their development right now, and what the next step is?
· 3. Can you, in five seconds or less, deliver a clear, memorable piece of useful information to help them take that step?
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Munro’s players, of course, will remember him for the rest of their lives. Not because he makes them better (which he does) or because he’s so entertaining (which he is, too) but for the same reason you remember your greatest coach: because he’s not about himself, he’s really about the people he’s trying to help.
1 comment:
The source:
http://thetalentcode.com/2011/11/08/a-word-of-coaching-advice-talk-less-matter-more/
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