Corporate Rejuvenation: It’s Not Business, It’s Personal
by Shawn Miller
A year ago at this time, on the verge
of 2004, I was working on an article on how to make — and
keep — New Year’s resolutions. Among the many suggestions
from area experts whose advice I solicited was one to work
with a life coach, a strategist who helps devise a plan to
achieve life objectives, then provides a framework of accountability
under which to accomplish these goals. Unlike therapy, which
focuses backwards in time to repair past damage to the psyche,
life coaching shifts focus forward by proactively removing
obstacles in the path of future achievement.
This article got
me thinking about my own resolutions, one in particular — to
write a book — that has found
its way on my list each New Year, only to reappear again
the following with little — okay I’ll admit it,
as of January 2004 absolutely no — progress made. In
my early 20s, I had the age of 25 as the milestone by which
I
wanted to achieve this goal. That got bumped up to age 30;
the latest milestone is one I won’t divulge in print.
So on the brink of 2004, I decided to take my own advice
and enlist the support of a life coach.
I embarked on a search
that ultimately led to Laura Hendershot
of Consummate Coaching. Not only did her Web site identify
her as protégé of one of the early pioneers
in the field, but it also revealed that perhaps more importantly,
she, like me, is the mother of three kids.
What surprised
me most about the early stages of this process was that very
little time was spent directly on book writing.
Instead, Hendershot’s questions focused on my values,
passions, what motivates me (obviously not arbitrary self-proclaimed
deadlines related to aging), other facets of my life — over-involvement
in kid-related activities, weight-management, disorganization — that
seemed out of whack. Eventually, we got down to developing
book-related targets, but only after we made successful achievement
manageable.
A year later, I have countless hours of interviews
on tape, an outline of my story, and two chapters actually
written.
One thing I know for sure is that none of this would have
been accomplished without life coaching. It seems infinite
the number
of times that the only thing driving me to complete tasks
was a looming appointment with Hendershot. And on those occasions
when I failed to meet objectives, my life coach taught me
to
go easy — it seems all the guilt and negative self-talk
that fuel a drive to perfection can also poison productivity.
All lessons learned during this process carried over into
life’s
other aspects — but none as much as this ability to
forgive imperfection (I remind myself of this as I sit here
revising
this article a week past its original deadline).
I was also
to learn this year that the life coaching field has grown
beyond personal one-on-one goal achievement to
impact many other realms. One in particular, the corporate
was a bit
surprising because from the outset, such an intensely personal
process can appear incongruous to the application of an arena
whose objectives — for the most part — can be
defined as highly impersonal.
Purely by chance and for research
related to another project, I attended a business re-development
seminar conducted by
Greg Voisen of eLuminate, a consulting firm dedicated to
helping
businesses and individuals overcome obstacles to success — a
broader application of the life coaching process. I found
application of this concept to the corporate arena fascinating,
and wondered
whether the personal lessons learned and insights gained
through my own experience could be directly translated in
an organizational
setting. The short answer, according to Voisen, is absolutely.
Voisen
graduated from San Diego State University with a degree in
business management, which led to a 25-year career in
the insurance and financial planning sector. While helping
clients
achieve financial objectives, Voisen figured he spent about
90 percent of consultations focused on more personal struggles.
That’s when he began to make the connection between
business or financial difficulties and personal strife. So
in 1991,
he decided to shift his career into one more directly related
to this correlation.
His first company, Sales Solutions Systems,
was based on a program Voisen developed for people in the
financial industry
to address the huge incongruence he noted between the pursuits
of his colleagues and their personal fulfillment. “People
are often driven by money in their professions,” he
explains, “but
end up empty spiritually.” An expansion of this program
beyond the scope of his former industry led to the formation
of eLuminate. In August 2005, Voisen will complete a master’s
program in spiritual psychology, coming full circle in his
quest to heal professionals and corporations by first healing
the spirit.
Since 1994, Voisen has worked with a variety
of companies — from
avocado packers to retailers, both large and small in annual
revenues — to facilitate the process of rebuilding
their organizations into those that “would put their
original company out of business.”
Like a more individual
life coaching experience, this process starts first by identifying
core values and a fundamental
purpose, then aligning all resources to support these, while
eliminating
those influences that undermine defined principles. Contrary
to traditional business mantras like “It’s not
personal, it’s business,” Voisen is convinced
the key to true organizational success is understanding people
and tapping into what motivates them, rendering this a very
personal process.
“Every business owner wants to do more,
be more,” says
Voisen. “But what management sometimes fails to realize
is that it’s not about the numbers, it’s about
the people — everyone needs to be engaged and included
in the process of changing or growing an organization . .
. when you’re constantly trying to convince people
of your goals, that’s a sign that there’s no
synergy; instead, everyone is working toward their own agenda.”
Therefore,
critical to the success of corporate change management is
the buy in and support of all team members. And just like
individuals need to identify passions and find a calling
to realize true success, those businesses that define for
themselves
a higher-level purpose consistent with organizational values
and goals have a better chance at long-term success. Voisen
says upper management must include people at all levels in
this process of goal determination and setting, so they have
a say and are engaged in the evolution of the business. “Businesses
don’t transform, people do,” says Voisen, convinced
that you can’t heal one without addressing the needs
of the other.
Voisen describes change management as an awareness
process during which an atmosphere of open communication
must be
fostered. “Management
must cultivate an environment in which communication is free,
open, and where people don’t feel like they need to
hide mistakes out of fear of reprimand.” Just like
being too hard on yourself for falling short of perfection
is counterproductive
in the long-term, so are harsh reprisals by management in
response to employee mistakes. Instead, Voisen explains that
when mistakes
are made, management should mentor employees, imparting advice
on how to avoid similar errors in the future.
Not that there
should be an environment free from accountability. In fact,
one of the biggest obstacles to success in corporate
America today, according to Voisen, is a lack of accountability
at all levels. Not only can there be a shortfall in employee
willingness to take responsibility and commit to excellence,
but, Voisen says, “I often have management-level people
come to me unhappy with how things are going in their company,
and they’re generally pointing fingers outside themselves.
I always turn that finger back around and ask: ’What
is it you’re doing as a leader to create this environment?’” Accountability
is fostered when employees not only clearly understand expectations
and the scope of their positions,
but agree to — in lieu of having been ordered to — follow
through.
Accountability is, in fact, an underlying
factor in both personal and business objectives. It’s
what drove me to meet personal deadlines with Hendershot, and
it’s what motivates the
people involved in the businesses Voisen works with to define
key initiatives and stay on track.
Upon completion of Voisen’s
seminar, I recognized so many parallels in my personal quest
for achievement and life
coaching principles leading to success in broader, more team-oriented,
business-minded pursuits. In fact, unlike in my college major
of political science wherein one of the fundamental lessons
is “don’t apply the behavior of individuals to
attempts to understand the interactions of nation-states,” developing
a feel for what motivates individuals really can be essential
to the success and forward-motion of corporate organizations.
I
finished this seminar a couple months ago. Just days ago
I came across an ad in which the services of a “money
coach” — a job title I had never heard of — were
being sought, someone to work with individuals to keep them
from sabotaging financial objectives. It seems the coaching
field is spawning yet another permutation of itself.
So,
whether your goal is to write a book, climb a mountain, lose
weight, or increase bottom-line profitability, there’s
hardly an objective imaginable for which the services of
a life coach can’t be applied to create a foundation
of commitment and accountability that leads to achievement
at
levels previously only imagined.
|