Perceived Effectiveness of Internal Executive Coaching Engagements by Participants in a High Potential Leadership Development Program

The field of executive coaching has grown in popularity as a developmental tool for leaders. With the potential for a leadership continuity gap and the desire for organizations to strengthen leadership talent pools to prepare for succession planning, there is a need for empirical research regarding...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Figlar, Marilyn K.
Other Authors: Human Development
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/64328
id ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-64328
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-643282020-09-29T05:35:07Z Perceived Effectiveness of Internal Executive Coaching Engagements by Participants in a High Potential Leadership Development Program Figlar, Marilyn K. Human Development Klunk, Clare D. Boucouvalas, Marcie Renard, Paul D. Morris, Linda E. executive coaching leadership development internal coaching adult learning human resources organizational development The field of executive coaching has grown in popularity as a developmental tool for leaders. With the potential for a leadership continuity gap and the desire for organizations to strengthen leadership talent pools to prepare for succession planning, there is a need for empirical research regarding the effectiveness of executive coaching. The aim of this mixed method study was to explore the factors that contribute to successful coaching outcomes. The combination of an online survey of 68 high potential leaders and follow up interviews with 40 of those same leaders yielded information about the coaching experience. The results showed a correlation between the number of years a leader was with the company and his or her perception of a positive coaching experience. In addition, the total amount of time the coach and the leader spent together was correlated with the perception of a positive coaching experience. Finally, most leaders noted that exceptional coaches demonstrated professionalism in several ways, such as listening to the client, showing an interest in the client and their development, and providing advice and helpful suggestions. A better understanding of the factors that promote successful outcomes for high potential leaders will assist coaches in having positive impact on client and organizational performance. This study is unique in that it examines coaching in the context of a larger intervention, a leadership development program, using HR professionals as internal coaches with high potential leaders. For organizations using coaching in this fashion, this study addresses gaps in the literature, which was an impetus for this research. Additional research might be valuable on how coaching clients define a successful coaching outcome, a client's readiness to change, the coach-client relationship, and factors that promote sustained behavior change in a leader. Ph. D. 2015-12-18T07:00:32Z 2015-12-18T07:00:32Z 2014-06-25 Dissertation vt_gsexam:3276 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/64328 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic executive coaching
leadership development
internal coaching
adult learning
human resources
organizational development
spellingShingle executive coaching
leadership development
internal coaching
adult learning
human resources
organizational development
Figlar, Marilyn K.
Perceived Effectiveness of Internal Executive Coaching Engagements by Participants in a High Potential Leadership Development Program
description The field of executive coaching has grown in popularity as a developmental tool for leaders. With the potential for a leadership continuity gap and the desire for organizations to strengthen leadership talent pools to prepare for succession planning, there is a need for empirical research regarding the effectiveness of executive coaching. The aim of this mixed method study was to explore the factors that contribute to successful coaching outcomes. The combination of an online survey of 68 high potential leaders and follow up interviews with 40 of those same leaders yielded information about the coaching experience. The results showed a correlation between the number of years a leader was with the company and his or her perception of a positive coaching experience. In addition, the total amount of time the coach and the leader spent together was correlated with the perception of a positive coaching experience. Finally, most leaders noted that exceptional coaches demonstrated professionalism in several ways, such as listening to the client, showing an interest in the client and their development, and providing advice and helpful suggestions. A better understanding of the factors that promote successful outcomes for high potential leaders will assist coaches in having positive impact on client and organizational performance. This study is unique in that it examines coaching in the context of a larger intervention, a leadership development program, using HR professionals as internal coaches with high potential leaders. For organizations using coaching in this fashion, this study addresses gaps in the literature, which was an impetus for this research. Additional research might be valuable on how coaching clients define a successful coaching outcome, a client's readiness to change, the coach-client relationship, and factors that promote sustained behavior change in a leader. === Ph. D.
author2 Human Development
author_facet Human Development
Figlar, Marilyn K.
author Figlar, Marilyn K.
author_sort Figlar, Marilyn K.
title Perceived Effectiveness of Internal Executive Coaching Engagements by Participants in a High Potential Leadership Development Program
title_short Perceived Effectiveness of Internal Executive Coaching Engagements by Participants in a High Potential Leadership Development Program
title_full Perceived Effectiveness of Internal Executive Coaching Engagements by Participants in a High Potential Leadership Development Program
title_fullStr Perceived Effectiveness of Internal Executive Coaching Engagements by Participants in a High Potential Leadership Development Program
title_full_unstemmed Perceived Effectiveness of Internal Executive Coaching Engagements by Participants in a High Potential Leadership Development Program
title_sort perceived effectiveness of internal executive coaching engagements by participants in a high potential leadership development program
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/64328
work_keys_str_mv AT figlarmarilynk perceivedeffectivenessofinternalexecutivecoachingengagementsbyparticipantsinahighpotentialleadershipdevelopmentprogram
_version_ 1719343798979395584