Which Coach Fits You?
Karen hired a "mentor" coach to help her business grow. The
coach applauded Karen's efforts to design her website. On a slow
week, the coach said, "Clear clutter and learn to dance." After
three months, Karen had a big coaching bill, a multicolored
website, an empty house and a sad little business. Karen wasn't
uncoachable. She chose the wrong coach. For instance, Western
medicine treats the body as a machine to be repaired; Chinese
medicine believes sickness is caused by imbalance that can be
corrected by herbs and diet. Both models have limits. If you
break your leg, the Western model makes most sense; if you
suffer from insomnia, you might favor the Chinese model. John's
business is hitting a rough patch. Coach X says, "Clear your
life of clutter energing-draining relationships." Coach Y says,
"I will teach you mental techniques to attract new business."
Coach Z says, "Maybe your business does not reflect your life
purpose." Coach Q offers, "I will teach you networking and sales
techniques." Only John knows what he needs. If your website
needs an overhaul, you can clear clutter till your house is bare
and nothing will happen. But if everyday hassles are draining
your energies, you can't focus clearly on the website. Let's
compare four best-selling books. Cheryl Richardson's Take Time
for Your Life exemplifies the "life space" model: people know
what they want and how to get there; they grow by self-care and
personal empowerment. Choose Coach X. Lynn Grabhorn's Excuse Me
Your Life is waiting, suggests that people will achieve goals
when they focus clearly on what they want. Her techniques can
help people change their thinking and feeling styles. Choose
Coach Y. Martha Beck's book, Finding your own true north, argues
that finding your essential self will bring fulfillment. Choose
Coach Z. Finally, a business book like Michael Gerber's E-Myth
series or Jay Levinson's Guerilla Marketing will assume you are
perfectly capable of applying sound sales techniques once you
learn what they are. Yes -- that's Coach Q. The key is to be
very clear on what you want and to decode what the coach offers
before you commit to long-term relationships. Karen got Coach X
when she needed Coach Q Read what the coach has written. Ask if
you can buy an hour or two of consultation. Ask directly, "What
types of people do you believe you can help -- and why?" You
don't have to be friends with your coach. You don't have to eat
lunch together or trade birthday gifts. But the coach's model of
human nature has to fit who you are.