You're the CEO in your business or organisation, or maybe an HR Director and you've taken the decision to commission some coaching to help improve productivity and decision making. It's a wise move as there's a many a quote from CEOs of blue chip companies that they recommend having a coach for success. Yet those at the very top are now reaching out to philosophers it seems.
As Prof Marinoff, from the City College of New York says in a Guardian article,“These are very intelligent people, who are also overworked, more so than most of us. And they don’t have enough time to reflect. A lot of what we do is to create reflective space.”
It's not just in the US either. Joe Garner, Chief Exec of Nationwide also works with a Professor of Philosophy. As mentioned in the article, 'A philosopher can nudge and question, take leaders on uncomfortable journeys, even be a disruptive force.'
I feel that our learned Professors are now being forced to seek alternative income generating streams and are promoting a methodology that is already in use; just assimilating it, claiming it for themselves as a new way of doing things.
So, I'm sure they can do all that they say but, and here I'm going to admit to being a bit biased as I'm a coach, isn't that what good coaching does anyway?
Yes there's different coaching models but the positive psychology methodology that I use provides that protected, reflective space. It enables deep seated questioning of oneself, of one's approach and values - all the things that the philosophers state they do so much better than coaches.
I also encourage the client to take those uncomfortable journeys and believe me, it's not all sweetness and light. They do question their strategies, their decision making and scrutinise their actions. With the positive attention they have, and knowing they're not going to be interrupted they have time to think with quality, to step outside of the boxes they might have placed themselves within and become their own creative, innovative selves as a result.
I've seen amazing changes in direction from the client who had spent three days agonising over an issue to come up with a solution in less than 30 minutes because they had that protected, positive, supported thinking space. With my challenge I've listened as the MD questioned their own assumptions about an issue and found a completely different route, a new strategy that made a significant impact on performance.
So no, it's not philosopher v coach. It's just another model of coaching; a model that is already being used by experienced, qualified, client centred, positive psychology coaches. We too provide an environment where you can nudge and question, even be a disruptive force.
So welcome Prof Marinoff - just don't try and pass this off as something new because it ain't.
Where we bring you the latest news and views from mtc2 ltd to help businesses manage change and develop their staff. You can go back to the website using http://www.mtc2.co.uk
Friday, 13 April 2018
Wednesday, 4 April 2018
Where is leadership in the gender pay gap debate?
So, as of midnight on 4 April 2018 companies with over
250 employees have had to report on their gender pay gap. It’s a milestone achievement to officially
recognise that there is a gender pay gap, even though there are many who swear
there is no such thing. And the vitriol
from those who think it’s a feminist generated plot to undermine men’s roles in
society is astounding.
What’s interesting is the breakdown displayed so
far. RyanAir report the highest GPG at 71.8%,
saying that it’s because pilots are the best paid (male dominated) and women
make up the majority of the lower paid roles.
Conversely certain High Street brands report no difference, whilst 8% of
those who have declared so far, report they pay women more. The GPG in reverse as it were.
There’s also a clear sector differential with the highest
gap being in the construction industry, closely followed by finance and
insurance. Yes these are traditionally
male dominated industries but education, which is frequently declared to be a
profession that attracts more females, is running a close fourth.
Where then is the source of the issue and thus the source
of the solution?
Stereotypes reinforce
sector differentials
Of course it’s more complex than just one issue and one
solution. Parents, society, education,
the media all have a role to play in challenging stereotypes and the sector
differentials by encouraging girls to enter STEM whilst boys can make good careers
within social care.
But can they? Can
either poles be truly equal? Not
currently because society puts different values against each option with unconscious
biases regarding the skills and qualities required, labelling them as either
male or female. The reality is that we
can all learn the skills and qualities – it takes an effort on the part of the
industries themselves to change things. And an effort it will be if this issue is to
be fully addressed. For what’s the point
in reporting it if no action is going to be taken to change?
And then we have the huge bulk of businesses who employ
less than 250 people. Are they equally
cognisant of the issue? Are they
recognising and, importantly, dealing with it? They won't be immune from the fall out as customers and employees may well start to question them on pay differentials. Certainly if they're part of a larger supply chain in government contracts they may well have to prove their credentials on this issue.
A moral hysteria?
There are those who think it’s a flash in the pan, the
latest moral hysteria that sweeps societies periodically. Give it six months or so and things will
quieten down. There’ll be no penalties
issued for those who do not report, no backlash if things don’t improve.
Yes, things will quieten down and yes, there will be some
who do not report and some who do nothing …
BUT
I sense a paradigm shift here. There is a new wave of feminism driving this. Not the hawkish, demanding feminism (or so it
seems to be described now) of the 60s and 70s.
No, this is a quieter, more assured, socially, societally grounded feminism that recognises true
equality between men and women. And now
it’s being accepted that it’s OK in the UK to talk about pay, about what you earn. The more it is described within the media
and the boardroom, over the water cooler and the sports fields, the more women,
and men, will demand it. That demand can
only be fulfilled by the industries themselves.
Leaders must
embrace a new paradigm
It takes excellent leadership to redirect the habits and
practices within industries, to reshape the cultures and those unconscious
biases mentioned earlier. It takes
leadership to take an organisation in a new direction and deal with the flack
that always comes as a result of change.
Some leaders have already recognised this and are actively
making a difference. Do you consider
yourselves to be amongst them? Would
others agree with you or would they think you’re complacent or complicit? Do you recognise leadership within your
industry or community and if so are they supported? Or are they bashing their heads against a
brick wall?
Leaders today have a decision to make. They will decide whether to embrace the new
paradigm and get the support to do so, or they will decide to wait and
see. The ‘wait and see’ brigade may well
end up the ‘wait and decline’ squad as its workforce, and customers, gravitate
to those who are fessing up and actively changing. They will be the ones who have acknowledged
the under-utilisation of 50% of the population as industry differentials are
challenged. It won’t be easy – leadership
was ever thus – but it can be done.
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