| Excellence in Coaching: The Industry Guide | 
enlarge | Creators: Jonathan Passmore, Maria Alicia Pena, Philippe Rosinski, Alex Szabo, Katherine Tulpa, Sir John Whitmore, Carol Wilson, Michael Neenan, Geoffrey Abbott, Graham Alexander, Frank Bresser, Cary L Cooper, Hetty Einzig, Anthony M Grant, Dr Peter Hawkins, Allard De Jong, Ian Mcdermott Publisher: Kogan Page Ltd Category: Book
List Price: £24.95 Buy New: £14.82 You Save: £10.13 (41%)
New (28) Used (4) from £14.82
Avg. Customer Rating: 5 reviews Sales Rank: 94142
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 222 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9 Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 6.1 x 0.8
ISBN: 0749446374 Dewey Decimal Number: 658.3124 EAN: 9780749446376 ASIN: 0749446374
Publication Date: September 3, 2006 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
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| Customer Reviews:
Never mind the width, feel the quality! February 6, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Running an Executive Coaching practice, where I have personally delivered thousands of hours of coaching, I approached this book with a healthy scepticism. Was this a book where as many people as possible submitted their names so that they quickly could claim to be `an author'? (I say this with my opinion informed as author of The Coaching Parent). In fact, and the reader will form his own opinion, I believe that for at least 80% of the work this is not the case and either new, or refreshed material is offered. I have annotated significant amounts of the text and found it an excellent product overall. Highlights - having seen Grant in London, I found his piece on Solution-focused coaching worthwhile. Also it was great to hear the thoughts of Alexander on his Grow model.
David Miskimin The Directors Coach
Excellence in excellent!! January 25, 2008 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
I feel this is the coaching book I've been waiting for and I suspect many readers will feel the same. It is not for the beginner, but for any experienced coach, coach supervisor or trainer of coaches this is a rich source indeed.
The book is essentially an anthology, but with recurring themes throughout each contribution. Many of the chapters are also presented under a set of uniform headings which makes comparing and contrasting ideas and approaches very easy. There are contributions from many of the better known commentators and a full range of topics from `What is Coaching?' to `Coaching Ethics'
The book is structured in three parts. In Part 1, The Business of Coaching, Frank Bresser and Carol Wilson provide a chapter on exactly what coaching is while Katherine Tulpa and Alex Szabo present chapters on `Coaching within organizations' and `Setting up and running your coaching practice' respectively.
Part 2 is dedicated to coaching models and approaches. This is the central part of the book and includes eight chapters ranging from a detailed examination of the ubiquitous GROW model from its originator Graham Alexander to a look at how coaching can contribute to managing stress by Cary Cooper and Maria Alicia Pena.
The Third part is concerned with professional issues with a chapter on ethics by Allard de Jong and one on coaching supervision from Dr Peter Hawkins.
Each chapter is a well-thought out summary of a given topic from an author with a particular interest. As such different readers will favour different contributions but I would encourage anyone to read all of the book as, in its entirety, it represents a tidy overview of the profession as it stands today.
My particular interests would lead me to highlight the chapter on Transpersonal Coaching by John Whitmore and Hetty Einzig and Philippe Rosinski and Geoffrey Abbott's chapter on intercultural coaching. The transpersonal model offers an accessible way for business coaches, experienced with GROW and so on, to take their clients to the next level and begin to examine more `spiritual' issues. Intercultural coaching offers essential tools for coaches who assist managers in global organisations with a wide mix of regional, national, ethnic and professional cultural groups. I also really enjoyed `Solution focused coaching' by Anthony Grant and `Cognitive behavioural coaching' by Michael Neenan.
Great overview of approaches and valuable insights June 23, 2007 I have found this to be a very helpful and practical guide to my own coaching work. It summarises a range of coaching models in a very readable way and the authors illustate well how you can apply them to your own coaching practice. A number of chapters also consider some of the business and ethical issues executive coaches need to pay attention to if we are to serve our clients well. The book is well laid out and very accessible. It is has become a well thumbed book on my bookshelf!
Excellent book! June 11, 2007 Lots of theory and practical issues are covered - as well as different approaches to coaching. Useful book to use as a reference and overall coaching guide. Easy to access.
Wide ranging and informative June 11, 2007 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I liked this book a lot because it covers a lot of ground and added - chapter by chapter - to my knowledge of coaching approaches and techniques. It also covers the crucial area of coaching supervision and - through Jonathan Passmore's own integrated coaching model - gives a new angle to what experienced coaches are doing. Recommended for those new to coaching to get a better grasp of the many different facets and also for experienced coaches because of the supervision angle and the new approach.
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