Enhance Consulting

COACHING

By NINA CHATRATH

1st October 2019

Story 2
Conundrum of Good Performance with Bad Behavior

Does your brilliant performance mask your bad behaviors?

Are you being able to your ‘bad behavior?

And is the Organization taking a strong view of it? Is it acceptable?

Are you motivated at all to change your behaviors for the better?  

Is it masked under pressure?

Coaching Debacles

In the world of coaching, one is faced with the strangest of situations. If I were to stay true to ‘being a coach to the person whom I am coaching’, notwithstanding the fact that the organization has retained me, albeit with the best of intentions, at times it seems like the most difficult thing to do.

Perhaps it is best explained through the lens of the actual ‘journey of coaching’ where I was the coach, and where I am not sure I succeeded! That’s the way I would judge it. Having said that, whatever be the outcome of the coaching journey, it was ‘the best’ from the organizational lens. So, the jury is out there on my success as a consultant, and my failure as a coach.

Coaching Journey

  • A young brash aggressive CEO of an IT firm, who was making great business numbers happen, but also had a serious retention issue at the senior management level.

Context & Background

There were two realities that co-existed-while the boss had a mild conversation about him displaying the wrong set of behaviors, he was continuing to reward him on business achievements. Therefore, the CEO’s interpretation of the situation was that so long as he is achieving the business numbers, the rest is acceptable to the organization.

I was called in to address the issue completely from the outside, was given a much-diluted brief of the issues /challenges that his direct reports were having with him, basically a toned-down communication of his de-railers. He clearly did not see a problem, because he was being recognized at the highest levels for his contribution to the business. He felt the real issue was about getting him to perform even more, rather than un-do the wrong he was doing. 

It was a very typical situation, yet the question that presented itself was whether it was redeemable situation. He was intellectually superior than most, was overdoing the Intellectual Horsepower. He had good decision-making and problem-solving skills and would willingly take on a lot of others’ work, with little or no regard to any aspect of delegation or empowerment. This was leading to a lot of disenchantment at the senior management level.

The CEO had a huge drive for results which got highlighted as it came with command skills which proclaimed in no uncertain terms who is leading the pack, albeit dictatorially.  Who would be comfortable working with someone who called most of the shots? He was low on most of the relationship skills-clearly insensitive to others, arrogant beyond words, and defensive (with an aggressive note), and had every defensive script one might imagine. I played back some of the experiences his direct reports had with him and shared with me: though it made him decidedly uncomfortable, but as he heard these out, he was unlikely to figure ‘the real feedback’ and consequently least inclined or motivated to act.

I drew parallels between his professional and personal life. I embarked upon a dialogue on his children, and how would he describe his relationship with them. He struggled to communicate that his relationship was strained, and he considered his son to be a complete wastrel. They were unable to talk to each other and were seeking help from a counselor but with no results. As I harked back to some of the conversations that I had with his colleagues, which clearly talked of his disregard of people, their feelings, his obnoxious comments to them…all in all spelling out a strong case for him to change, he was unable to see a mirror.  

While intellectually he bought the argument, not sure whether he indeed fathomed on a pure humane angle, the damage he had done and was continuing to do. Also, this is anything but an intellectual argument, it is coming straight from the heart.

And Reality Bites

Success is heady they say, and how true is that. So heady that it makes you walk the path of achieving the ‘what’ somewhat mindlessly without realizing the ‘how’ part of it. And then comes a time that you are unable to fathom the cost that people around you are paying for your successful deliverables.  Maybe it’s too late to do a ‘U-turn’-you are already a legacy in your own mind, and does a winner really needs to make any changes to his behaviors at all. And equally importantly, is he being told (from the people that matter) that he needs to course correct. But there also comes a time, when voices of dissent go beyond just giving a structured feedback to a coach but reach a crescendo that the organization has to take notice of it. That is exactly what happened…too many conversations, too much download, and all not in favor of the CEO. He was pushed to a corner, made to explain which also was something he was not used, thus giving the senior management a first-hand experience of his negative behaviors. The rest is history, as in no time a tough decision was taken.

Would he be willing to explore the benefits of doing something at the personal level, and how personal growth would make a difference at home as well as at work?

So, where do I as a coach go from here?

If coaching has to be successful or make realization happen, it needs to go over to the personal space too. And if so, it has to be handled very carefully. If you as a Coach open some issue, you need to have the skill to close it too.

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