Companies must adopt a growth mindset and build a coaching culture in order to thrive in today’s highly competitive and evolving markets.
In a coaching culture, everyone is encouraged to question their assumptions and seek out new ways of thinking and leading. Every success or failure is a chance to grow as individuals and as an organization.
We may live in a world of iPhones right now, but when the device debuted in 2007, it was BlackBerry that dominated the mobile market. Even with the iPhone available, BlackBerry’s sales kept trending upward for the four years that followed.
BlackBerry felt confident about the success of its model. Apple was doing things differently, for example by introducing a touchscreen. By the time BlackBerry knew what hit it, the iPhone had become ubiquitous. BlackBerry’s market share dwindled, and its stock dropped into the single digits.
BlackBerry’s mistake was being overconfident in its approach and not open to learning. It is just one example of why companies must adopt a growth mindset and build a learning culture to thrive in the contemporary market. Every success or failure is a chance for leaders to coach their employees to learn.
Bloom and grow
The only way for organizations to thrive is to continually learn and grow, and that doesn’t happen with a top-down leadership culture. Instead, managers and executives must become coaches enabling employees to continually develop their skills and professional knowledge. It’s good for the individual, and it’s good for the company.
Internal coaching increases retention, engagement, productivity, and performance. How much so? A Mabey and Ramirez study found that managers who are skilled at developing their people achieve a 25% uplift in employee performance, while a report by the International Coaching Federation revealed that 60% of companies with strong coaching cultures report above-average revenue.
It’s simple, if not always easy. There is a big difference between teaching a few leadership coaching skills and building a genuine coaching culture.
Learning to build a coaching culture
How can you tell whether your company has a strong culture of coaching? It’s not enough to run leadership training or to tweak the performance management process. Instead, a great business will weave the philosophy into the fabric of the entire business.
Three strategies that seem to have a disproportionate impact on creating a coaching culture are:
- To redefine coaching. Traditionally companies want to formalize coaching, creating a coaching “model,” giving it structure and a top-down focus. This may feel like progress, but employees rarely respond well to it. Instead, reframe coaching as a dynamic conversation and teach leaders to make every conversation a coaching conversation.
Many leaders think of coaching on a performance model: They have a template of what “good” looks like and give people feedback until they get there. This is an effective first step, but to create a true learning culture, your leaders will have to evolve their approach. They need to supplement performance coaching with person-centered coaching — helping people discover insight for and about themselves. In the process, you will both be able to challenge the way you think about your business.
- To build a growth mindset in every leader. Carol Dweck’s foundational work exposes the dangers of a fixed mindset. People who believe intelligence and talent are static focus on what they think they know about themselves instead of exploring ways to improve. In a coaching culture, leaders need to be aware that everyone has triggers that put them back into a fixed mindset. Leaders need to learn to notice and respond to these triggers in themselves and their teams in order to spark a learning environment.
- To challenge the feedback status quo. Many managers find it difficult to give constructive feedback because they worry about how it will be received. For this reason, they limit it to formal reviews. However, 72% of employees say they truly want corrective feedback. Knowing of this desire to improve, instill an “always on” feedback system within your company — one in which everyone gives and receives as much feedback as possible.
Feedback should be continuous and omnidirectional. Employees need to know it’s safe and even expected to ask for and receive it. Reimagining constructive criticism as an opportunity to improve will itself grow your learning culture.
Adult learning is less about acquiring new knowledge and more about challenging existing beliefs. For that reason, a culture of learning goes far beyond reading books or attending seminars. In a learning culture, everyone is encouraged to question their assumptions and seek out new ways of thinking. And, of course, the best way for leaders to create this is to model it themselves and coach others accordingly.