Everyone's a Coach: Five Business Secrets for High-Performance Coaching
A**A
Informational and Useful
It is quite impossible to inspire someone else if we are not inspired ourselves. That is pretty obvious. And as the master painter and draftsman once noted, "Wisdom is the daughter of experience." The book is authored by NFL coaching legend Don Shula, and Ken Blanchard, a prominent businessman. The authors derive the many anecdotes for this book from their own success. Basically, the book is composed of the following useful information: advice, strategies, summaries, key points, varying points-of-view, and so forth. I found the book to be a good, thorough read. Sometimes, what I need is concise, well-organized reminders of what works and does not work for someone who wishes to be at the top of their game. The book is not a magical pill. Besides, why should it even be that easy? Perhaps there is another coaching book out there that offers more inspiration. Who knows? It is really a matter of taste or preference. Nonetheless, Shula and Blanchard's book is informational and all information is useful, especially if it comes fairly cheap. Just layer it on if you must have more. Otherwise, this is a good, useful read.
A**R
Very easy to read and a great book...
It is well written and has kept me interested and being a female who is not a big sports fan...I still enjoyed the book!
J**O
good book
love Don Shula
M**T
Good book on how to coach
I bought this audio book to learn to coach - I dont do sports so I did not have a reference to use to learn to coach sales people - This Audio book was helpful giving me some tips.
B**B
... a timeless book for anyone wanting to become a better manager of people
This is a timeless book for anyone wanting to become a better manager of people. Great managers are great "Coaches" and want their teams to succeed. You also can't manage effectively from afar. This book will teach you how to get the best from your people and when that happens, everyone is successful.
C**E
Great book for all Management
I keep going back to this book every time I get stuck on a given situation, it truly is worth the buy...CjMidlothian, Va.
J**.
Five Stars
The best book on leadership on the market!
M**D
A Coaching Legend's Leadership Lessons
Don Shula, the National Football League's all-time winningest coach, teamed up with Ken Blanchard, the internationally known and multiple award-winning author, educator, and management and leadership consultant, and together they co-wrote an outstanding book about leaders getting the best performance from the individuals and organizations they are privileged to lead. Whether you are responsible for the performance of multiple organizations, or for just one other individual, the leadership wisdom and insights in this book can help you maximize your coaching and leadership effectiveness.The winning combination of the two separately distinguished leaders in their respective fields, and the complementary structure of the book were brilliant. Organized around the acronym C.O.A.C.H., the five coaching "secrets" that Shula had practiced and Blanchard has been teaching for over 30 years, the book alternated synergistic passages from Shula then Blanchard to explore and explain the acronym in theory and practice from the football gridiron to modern business situations, and ultimately to the game of life.Here's how Shula and Blanchard define and think about the acronym C.O.A.C.H.:Conviction-Driven: Effective leaders stand for something.Overlearning: Effective leaders help their teams achieve practice perfection.Audible-Ready: Effective leaders, and the people and teams they coach, are ready to change their game plan when the situation demands it.Consistency: Effective leaders are predictable in their response to performance.Honesty-Based: Effective leaders have high integrity and are clear and straightforward in their interactions with others.Conviction-Driven: "Someone has said that a river without banks is a puddle. When I apply that saying to human interactions, it reminds me of the job of a coach. Like those river-banks, a good coach provides the direction and concentration for performers' energies, helping channel all their efforts toward a single desired outcome. Without that critical influence, the best achievements of the most talented performers can lack the momentum and drive that make a group of individuals into champions."Overlearning: "To me a game doesn't end when the clock finally runs out. It ends on Monday, after we've analyzed every play and learned all we can from it...Failure is successfully finding out what you don't want to repeat...Learning is defined as a change in behavior. You haven't learned a thing until you can take action and use it."Audible-Ready: "Preparation means everything to me. I'm passionate about my players being ready for anything. Now, part of being ready is being able to shift your game plan at will. I see myself as a battlefield commander who has the guts to make the right moves to win. I want to be prepared with a plan - and then to expect the unexpected and be ready to change this plan. I must preserve the right to change - even to change at the last moment - as circumstances demand...Audibles aren't surprises - just new ways of doing what you already know how to do. Business people need to learn to call audibles, because in today's world, nothing stays the same."Consistency: "Your team will soon learn what your standards are and perform accordingly. I not only insist on practice perfection, I'm there to see that it takes place. I don't miss practices. I need to be out there smelling out whatever isn't working. Even the slightest deviation from perfection needs to be noticed and corrected on the spot. Correcting and redirecting performance is strategically important - it's where we outstrip the competition. Some coaches will let little things go. Right there is where the difference is made. To me, it's not a matter of how many times we've done it or how late it is or how tired the players are. We'll do it until we get it right. Then we won't deviate from it in the game. I'd rather throw out a play or formation during practice than find out it can't be done correctly in the ball game. We seldom try anything on game day that we haven't been able to perfect in practice. If I'm asking our players to do something they can't do, I want to know about it now."Honesty-Based: "I have a straight-up approach. I don't know how to go around corners or how to finesse. My players know this and they expect candor from me. Congruence is important to me. What you see with Don Shula is what you get. I don't play games. Effective coaches confront their people, praise them sincerely, redirect or reprimand them without apology, and above all are honest with them. Integrity pays, and integrity means being honest with yourself and others. This is a key ingredient in my coaching philosophy."In his introduction to the book, Blanchard stated that he is on a search for simple truths to help leaders and managers be their best. With Shula's proven long-term coaching effectiveness as the foundation for this book, Blanchard has found and shared many simple leadership truths and complexities. This book would be a welcome addition to anyone's coaching or leadership collection.
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