Today, coaching is less about intervention and more about facilitating effective individual business development. The problem: no research has followed coached lawyers over long periods. Regrettably most of the evidence around effectiveness remains anecdotal. Absent hard data, what are best practices firms should consider when evaluating existing coaching or beginning a program?
The three tenets below are based on my 30 years of experience, the 10 years my partner has spent coaching lawyers and the observations of several nationally recognized coaches who are licensed therapists. We all agree:
a. Advise lawyers, who are or will be firm leaders, about firm business matters
b. Involve management in goal-setting
c. Let lawyers discover their own path and pursue their own style of business development
d. Identify and tackle difficult issues, including both professional and personal pressures
e. Confront familiar behavior and the need for individual behavioral change
Following these guidelines will help you address a common concern expressed to us by managing partners, boards and executive committees. All ask us about the fuzziness around how coaches define their engagements, about how progress is measured and reported, and which person to select.
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