Articles
Personal Coaches Bring Goals
Into Focus
by Marian Green, Las
Vegas Review-Journal, 3/18/96
Each week, Betty Mahalik makes a 30-minute phone call to her "reality
checkpoint" - a professional coach who helps her balance competing interests
to keep her life on track. A successful independent image consultant,
Mahalik said she sought out her coach, Laura Hess, a year ago after
feeling her life was growing out of control.
"It was
just a general sense of there's got to be more than this," she said.
She was constantly racing to get from appointment to appointment, always
feeling like she was behind the curve and never caught up, Mahalik said.
"What this has enabled me to do is enjoy the journey and reach for new
heights and destinations I wanted to pursue," said Mahalik, who calls
herself a "recovering workaholic perfectionist."
Thomas
Leonard, one of the founders of the coaching movement and president
of a virtual coach training school called Coach University, has predicted
the number of coaches will double this year. By the year 2000, coaches
will be as common as personal fitness trainers, he said in a press release.
Leonard,
who now coaches via a personal computer from his recreational vehicle,
is a former accountant and financial planner who said he fell into coaching
because his financial clients came to him for help defining their life
goals. Hess like other professional coaches, helps her clients in both
the business and personal arenas of their lives.
Coaching
is "the profession of the '9Os," Hess said born out of the frenzied
pace of modern life and increased competitive economic pressures. "People
are more willing to make change. People are facing decisions they've
never faced before," said Hess, whose husband, Philip Cohen, also is
a coach.
Hess and
Cohen are both former certified public accountants who turned to coaching
two years ago after attending a seminar. They both came away feeling
this is who we are. "What we were doing was coaching already, and that
was the part of our business we loved," Cohen said.
They now
have about 40 clients between them whom they counsel over the telephone
through weekly half-hour sessions. Some clients are in Las Vegas, but
others live in Massachusetts, Connecticut, Utah, Texas, Colorado and
Idaho. As coaches, the goal is not to "be someone's best friend, but
to be honest," Cohen said.
Their job
is to help clients define their goals, establish an action plan, and
then aid them in achieving their objectives by providing constructive
feedback and structure, Cohen said. "It's helping them see blind spots.
It's illuminating behaviors that are holding them back," he added. "For
many people, they've got a dream, but they've never written it down
or defined it," Cohen said. "The goal might be "I want to be successful".
A coach can help a client bring the goal into focus by asking questions
such as: :What does being successful mean to you and how will you know
when you've reached your objective?
Clients,
who pay $250 a month for the weekly sessions, cut across all lines,
from company executives to professionals to small-business owners, Hess
said. They are generally successful, she said. "Out clients don't need
us, they want us." While many people are open to coaching, Cohen said
others suffer from "the- Lone Ranger mentality." "The 'I can do it myself,
I don't need anybody else (mentality),' and yet all of us have blind
spots," he said.
Cohen also
notes top actors, musicians and sports figures have coaches who helped
them get where they are today. Mahalik said explaining challenges and
problems to Hess is different than telling a friend. "She is listening
as someone with a different perspective of the big picture, when you
can't see the forest for the trees," Mahalik said.
Working
with Hess has brought tangible results, Mahalik said. Her business is
growing and yet she says she has found more time for her husband and
4year-old son, without feeling as if she is having to schedule them
in. "I'm enjoying life more. I always was thinking about work, worrying
about it, stressing over it." Now, Mahalik said, "I have gained a sense
of balance and peace of mind that I just didn't have." Her offfice is
much more organized, and she has hired a bookkeeper, she adds. "I've
got a much better handle on my business and personal finances. Before,
the money would come in, money could go out, and I didn't have any "real
clear idea of how much I was generating on a monthly basis."'
Hess and
Cohen ask their new clients to complete a questionnaire taking stock
of their physical environment, well being, financial situation and relationships.
The questionnaire provides a starting point for clients to make changes,
and lists simple things, such as making the beds and flossing their
teeth, as well as the major goals, such as reaching career objectives.
"It's cleaning up the clutter," Cohen said, "cleaning up all the things
in their lives that are getting in their way." "Every one of our clients
talks about making the beds," Hess notes.
When financial
planner Amy Ayoub first learned about professional coaches at a Las
Vegas Chamber of Commerce event a year ago, something clicked. "I thought,
'That's what I need,'" Ayoub said. "I just felt like I really needed
some time management and organizational skills."
Hess has
provided positive feedback and motivation, Ayoub said. "You need someone
who's removed from your business to see some of the things that can
be improved. She just provided some order to my life, and there were
immediate rewards." Ayoub said working with a coach has enabled her
to place priorities on her business and community service demands.
"I discovered
I was doing more for other people than I was willing to do for myself,
and that it didn't have to-be an either-or," said Ayoub, who serves
on the executive board of the National Conference, and is a member of
Las Vegas Chamber of Commerce and the Nevada Democratic Leadership Coalition.
Now, Ayoub
said, she makes sure to take care of business in the morning in order
to ensure time for her community service activities. As a result, she
said, "There aren't things hanging over my Ayoub said anyone can benefit
from working with a professional coach.
She said
the coaches' questionnaire helped give her a jumping-off point. "You
have to know where you are before you can figure out where you are going,"
Ayoub said. "These tools show you maybe you're doing a lot better than
you thought you were - that gives you hope."
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