Team Coaching verus Individual Coaching
You’ve invested in coaching for individuals, but something still isn’t shifting. This is where lots of organisations get stuck: it’s easy to assume the problem lies with an individual and to send them for coaching. But sometimes, the challenge isn’t one person, it’s in how the team works together (or doesn’t).
That’s where Team Coaching comes in.
What is Systemic Team Coaching?
You can coach brilliant individual leaders and still have a team that struggles to align, adapt, or deliver together. Here’s why Systemic Team Coaching is the missing link and why I’m training as a Systemic Team Coach.
Why Team Coaching Is What Organisations Need Today
Effective Teams create successful organisations. Why Coaching teams, not just individuals, is what organisations need today.
How to Give Feedback
This is the second blog in my weekly series: Practical Tips for Leaders and Managers.
This article shares some practical tips for giving feedback, something that almost everyone I work with admits is hard and uncomfortable.
How to build Confidence and overcome Imposter Syndrome
This is the first article in my new series: Practical Tips for Leaders and Managers. Over the next 10 weeks, we’ll explore topics like: Giving Better Feedback, Managing and Prioritising your Time and Leading Change.
First we we explore How to Build Confidence and Overcome Imposter Syndrome, why self-doubt is normal and what to do when it holds you back.
5 Steps to Building Brilliant Teams. No 5. Results
Teamwork is about getting things done. It’s about making progress on the things that matter most. Results give focus, energy, and meaning to all the work that happens day-to-day. That’s why great teams align around shared results — and make them visible, measurable, and worth celebrating.
This is the final blog in my series exploring how to build a brilliant team — inspired by Patrick Lencioni’s Five Dysfunctions of a Team model.
5 Steps to Building a Brilliant Team. 4. Accountability
Accountability is how trust and commitment come to life in action. It’s about making sure what we said would happen, actually happens. It is a sign of mutual respect. It’s about showing up for each other.
This is the fourth blog in my series exploring how to build a brilliant team — inspired by Patrick Lencioni’s Five Dysfunctions of a Team model.
5 Steps to Building Brilliant Teams. 3. Commitment
Commitment in teams isn’t about getting everyone to agree - it’s about shared clarity and confidence in the way forward. Real commitment in teams doesn’t come from keeping everyone happy. It comes from clarity.
Without clarity, teams drift. Without commitment, teams stall.
This is the third blog in my series exploring how to build a brilliant team — inspired by Patrick Leconi’s Five Dysfunctions of a Team model.
5 Steps to Building a Brilliant Team. No 2. Healthy Conflict.
When people hear the word conflict, most of us flinch. We think of drama. Arguments. Division. But healthy conflict makes ideas stronger, decisions better, and teams more committed to what happens next.
This is the second article in my series exploring how to build a brilliant team — inspired by Patrick Lencioni’s Five Dysfunctions of a Team model.
5 Steps to Build a Brilliant Team No. 1 It Begins with Trust
In this series, I’m exploring what makes teams succesful — and how to apply the ideas to your team to make it happy, motivated, and productive. First up - Trust.
I’m exploring Patrick Lencioni’s The Five Dysfunctions of a Team model not to dwell on dysfunction.