Positive psychology leadership coaching experiences in a financial organisation

Orientation: Organisations are practising leadership coaching more and more from a positive psychology perspective, yielding positive results. The current qualitative research focused on this coaching using work engagement, learned resourcefulness, sense of coherence, selfactualisationand locus of c...

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Main Author: Frans Cilliers
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2011-10-01
Series:SA Journal of Industrial Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://sajip.co.za/index.php/sajip/article/view/933
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spelling doaj-057ba8177d184fffa8c476290f493a822020-11-25T00:18:40ZengAOSISSA Journal of Industrial Psychology0258-52002071-07632011-10-01371e1e1410.4102/sajip.v37i1.933838Positive psychology leadership coaching experiences in a financial organisationFrans Cilliers0University of South AfricaOrientation: Organisations are practising leadership coaching more and more from a positive psychology perspective, yielding positive results. The current qualitative research focused on this coaching using work engagement, learned resourcefulness, sense of coherence, selfactualisationand locus of control as constructs. Although the researcher could find no previous research on this combination of constructs, the findings did link to previous studies with other constructs and combinations. Research purpose: The purpose of this research was to describe the positive psychology leadership coaching experiences of leaders in a large financial organisation. Motivation for the study: The researcher addressed the organisation’s need to develop leadership by structuring and presenting a coaching programme. He chose positive psychology as the paradigm and experiential learning as the method to meet the organisation’s goal of enabling its leaders to take up their roles with self-awareness, internal motivation and effective interpersonal connections. Research design, approach and method: The researcher used a qualitative and descriptive research design with a case study. Leaders attended ten experiential leadership-coaching sessions over three months. The sessions focused on work engagement, learned resourcefulness, sense of coherence, self-actualisation values and locus of control. The data gathering consisted of the coach’s field notes and the participants’ reflective essays, which they wrote after the last coaching session. The researcher analysed the data using discourse analysis. Main findings: The manifesting themes were the coaching context, engagement in roles, understanding role complexity, emotional self-awareness and demands, self-authorisation and inability to facilitate the growth of others. Contribution/value-add: Although intrapersonal awareness increased significantly, leaders struggled with the interpersonal complexity of the leadership role. Positive psychology leadership coaching should refine the operationalisation of interpersonal effectiveness. Practical/managerial implications: Organisations should integrate the methodology of leadership coaching with leadership development interventions to expose leaders to better intrapersonal awareness and functioning.https://sajip.co.za/index.php/sajip/article/view/933Leadership coachingpositive psychologyengagementlearned resourcefulnesssense of coherence, self-actualisation valueslocus of control
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Frans Cilliers
spellingShingle Frans Cilliers
Positive psychology leadership coaching experiences in a financial organisation
SA Journal of Industrial Psychology
Leadership coaching
positive psychology
engagement
learned resourcefulness
sense of coherence, self-actualisation values
locus of control
author_facet Frans Cilliers
author_sort Frans Cilliers
title Positive psychology leadership coaching experiences in a financial organisation
title_short Positive psychology leadership coaching experiences in a financial organisation
title_full Positive psychology leadership coaching experiences in a financial organisation
title_fullStr Positive psychology leadership coaching experiences in a financial organisation
title_full_unstemmed Positive psychology leadership coaching experiences in a financial organisation
title_sort positive psychology leadership coaching experiences in a financial organisation
publisher AOSIS
series SA Journal of Industrial Psychology
issn 0258-5200
2071-0763
publishDate 2011-10-01
description Orientation: Organisations are practising leadership coaching more and more from a positive psychology perspective, yielding positive results. The current qualitative research focused on this coaching using work engagement, learned resourcefulness, sense of coherence, selfactualisationand locus of control as constructs. Although the researcher could find no previous research on this combination of constructs, the findings did link to previous studies with other constructs and combinations. Research purpose: The purpose of this research was to describe the positive psychology leadership coaching experiences of leaders in a large financial organisation. Motivation for the study: The researcher addressed the organisation’s need to develop leadership by structuring and presenting a coaching programme. He chose positive psychology as the paradigm and experiential learning as the method to meet the organisation’s goal of enabling its leaders to take up their roles with self-awareness, internal motivation and effective interpersonal connections. Research design, approach and method: The researcher used a qualitative and descriptive research design with a case study. Leaders attended ten experiential leadership-coaching sessions over three months. The sessions focused on work engagement, learned resourcefulness, sense of coherence, self-actualisation values and locus of control. The data gathering consisted of the coach’s field notes and the participants’ reflective essays, which they wrote after the last coaching session. The researcher analysed the data using discourse analysis. Main findings: The manifesting themes were the coaching context, engagement in roles, understanding role complexity, emotional self-awareness and demands, self-authorisation and inability to facilitate the growth of others. Contribution/value-add: Although intrapersonal awareness increased significantly, leaders struggled with the interpersonal complexity of the leadership role. Positive psychology leadership coaching should refine the operationalisation of interpersonal effectiveness. Practical/managerial implications: Organisations should integrate the methodology of leadership coaching with leadership development interventions to expose leaders to better intrapersonal awareness and functioning.
topic Leadership coaching
positive psychology
engagement
learned resourcefulness
sense of coherence, self-actualisation values
locus of control
url https://sajip.co.za/index.php/sajip/article/view/933
work_keys_str_mv AT franscilliers positivepsychologyleadershipcoachingexperiencesinafinancialorganisation
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