HRreview 20 Years
This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Subscribe for weekday HR news, opinion and advice.
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
Optin_date
This field is hidden when viewing the form

Training not really high on agenda

-

Despite claims to the contrary, new research has suggested that coaching is not high on the list of priorities for most employers in these difficult times. According to Henley Business School, while 61% of respondents said developing a coaching culture was one of their top five priorities, only 9% made it their first or second priority.

Henley has suggested this reflects an uncertainty about how to go about creating a coaching culture and concern as to whether the senior team will support the initiative. In addition, a quarter of respondents made ‘developing leadership coaching skills’ their first or second priority.

Patricia Bossons, director of coaching services at Henley Business School, said: “I am hearing from clients and students alike that coaching has never been more important since it helps maintain clarity and resourcefulness in people driving business recovery. The fact that so many in the survey recognise the importance of coaching yet few appear to make it a high priority may be because coaching is seen as a process, rather than a specific management development area, such as strategic thinking or managing change. It is also still perceived by many to be something that lies in the hands of HR, or external coaches, so coaching skills development can easily be seen as someone else’s responsibility.”

HRreview Logo

Get our essential weekday HR news and updates.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Keep up with the latest in HR...
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
Optin_date
This field is hidden when viewing the form

 

She added: “Coaching can be the oil that enables the rest of a management development agenda deliver tangible outcomes and results. A senior strategic leadership programme, for example, is going to have much longer lasting impact, and a much greater return on investment, if an independent coach supports each individual as they go through their programme.

“Individuals recognise this, which is why the statistics in the research show leadership coaching skills development as a high priority.”

Engineering company Atkins approached Henley Business School because it wanted to be able to have more open, adult and constructive conversations with its top 100 managers and an honest exchange of views about current performance and future potential. The senior team felt that understanding exactly where their leaders saw their own future and articulating how the organisation saw those leaders developing was critical in building a succession strategy that would deliver business goals.

The Dialogue Programme was created, which included a two-day workshop preceded by a detailed process of data-gathering and working to guidelines given by Henley. This included career history to date, current aspirations, psychometric and 360-degree feedback data. During the two-day workshop, there were self-awareness raising and skills development sessions facilitated by the tutor and two one-to-one sessions with a personal coach.

The coaching sessions were designed to help the individual reflect about the issues being raised by the programme.

Brian Fitzgerald, HR director, group talent management at Atkins, said: “For the company, an in-depth dialogue with top talent is now providing insights that didn’t previously exist on a consistent basis. This enhances knowledge of current capabilities and aids succession planning aligned with the company’s future strategy.”



Latest news

Rhiannon Barry: The rise of AI in Human Resources

With the potential to dramatically increase efficiency, productivity and accuracy, AI can revolutionise how organisations manage people operations.

HSBC weighs 20,000 job cuts as AI push puts thousands of roles at risk

HSBC is considering cutting up to 20,000 roles as it expands AI use, raising concerns about the future of operational jobs in banking.

Lorna Landells on the new workplace reality

“Office attendance is no longer in freefall nor in recovery mode."

Worker fired over toilet vape row wins £22,000 unfair dismissal payout

A Nestlé worker sacked after a vaping incident that triggered a factory alarm has won £22,000 after a tribunal ruled the dismissal was excessive.
- Advertisement -

Jonathan Attia: The new era of measured engagement

Measured engagement describes a way of working where employees choose to engage deliberately, landing in the sweet spot between ambition and balance

Hundreds of employers exposed for underpaying staff in £7.3m wage scandal

Nearly 60,000 staff repaid millions after widespread pay rule breaches, as regulators impose fines and ramp up enforcement.

Must read

Carl Jones: Can the UK become a centre of excellence for the IT industry?

The UK Tech industry is thriving and set to grow four times faster than GDP this year. A staggering 11 percent expected growth compared with 2.6 percent for the UK as a whole. This is undoubtedly excellent news for the UK economy, as well as firming up its position as a top world player. As a country with a deep pioneering history, could we go further and become a shining example of global IT excellence?

Michael Cole-Fontayn: Addressing mental health to retain the best financial services talent

Mental health challenges represent the largest single cause of disability in the UK with one in four people experiencing a mental health issue during their life.
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you