
592: Ed Batista - How To Give Useful Feedback, What Great Leaders Do, and Why We All Need An Executive Coach
from The Learning Leader Show With Ryan Hawk
by Ryan Hawk
Published: Sun Jul 21 2024
Show Notes
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Full show notes at www.LearningLeader.com
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Notes:
- Commonalities of excellent coaches: 
- Not defensive
 - Respond well to feedback
 - Ability to learn
 
 - "Leadership can't be taught but it can be learned."
 - Coaching is not therapy, but it can be therapy-adjacent. 
- It's not telling people what to do and it's not just asking questions. It's a combination of all of them.
 
 - There is ample research on the benefits of writing. It clarifies your thinking.
 - The questions to ask someone who might need an executive coach: 
- Why do you want a coach?
 - Why now?
 - What do you hope to get out of it?
 
 - What do great leaders do? 
- First, do no harm.
 - Walk the talk.
 - Be an embodiment of the culture.
 - Have high standards 
- Take risks
 - Coach people up
 - Train people
 
 - "Coaching is accomplishment through others."
 
 - "Feedback is not a gift." 
- Feedback is data. Signal and noise. 
- Signal - Important and good.
 - Noise - Byproduct of someone's distorted lens.
 
 
 - Feedback is data. Signal and noise. 
 - "Praise, Criticism, Praise (PCP) is terrible." Don't give the compliment sandwich. It's disingenuous.
 - How leaders best overcome adversity – The most critical skill is "adaptive capacity..." It's composed of two primary qualities: the ability to grasp context, and hardiness.
 - Coaching - Asking evocative questions, ensuring the other person feels heard, and actively conveying empathy remain the foundations of coaching. 
- Connect: Establish and renew the interpersonal connection, followed by an open-ended question.
 - Reflect: Having elicited a response, reflect back the essence of the other person's comments.
 - Direct: Focus their attention on a particular aspect of their response that invites further exploration.
 
 - Support and Challenge - A client once said, "It feels like you're always in my corner, but you never hesitate to challenge me."
 - Master the Playbook, Throw it Away - Coaching involves a continuous and cyclical process of learning, unlearning, and relearning.
 - Power Dynamics - The longer I coach, the more I appreciate and value the work of Jeff Pfeffer, a leading scholar on power. philosopher Ernest Becker: "If you are wrong about power, you don't get a chance to be right about anything else."
 - "Meaningful coaching is always an emotionally intimate experience, no matter what's being discussed. In part this is a function of the context: two people talking directly to each other with no distractions... Intimacy in a coaching relationship also results from a willingness to 'make the private public'--to share with another person the thoughts and feelings that we usually keep to ourselves... And yet an essential factor that makes such intimacy possible is a clear set of boundaries defining the relationship, which creates an inevitable and necessary sense of distance..."