Leadership Development Hub

Coach Mode: On Hub

A great manager creates a high-performance environment full of specialists who can work autonomously towards a shared goal. Managers do not do the work themselves, but create conditions for the work to get done well consistently.

Your progress through the program
1
Clarity & Direction
2
Coaching Behaviours
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3
Feedback & Accountability
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4
Ownership Culture
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What's Next
Exercises completed
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Clarity & Direction
You are the bridge between strategy and execution. Your team should know three things at any moment: what they're working toward, why it matters, and how much room they have. Without this, coaching is just noise.
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Coaching Behaviours
Once the work is clear, your role shifts. Instead of directing, you're developing. Ask questions before giving answers. Support independent problem-solving. Create space for growth conversations.
What's expected
Ask questions before giving answers. Support independent problem-solving. Create space for growth conversations.
The default trap
Most managers default to directing or rescuing. It feels helpful. But it creates dependency and teams that can't move without you.
From our sessions
In Round 1 (The Helpful One) the manager solved the problem. Two weeks later an almost identical situation came in. The team member hadn't learned anything.
The key question
Think about the last time someone came to you with a problem. What was your first move and was that the right one?
What we actually do today
Coaching behaviours in reality
In some cases I step in to solve challenges for my team instead of coaching them this creates dependency and weakens accountability
When urgent tasks arrive I tend to focus on the resolution instead of people growth
Due to high workload I sometimes can't give opportunity to colleagues to learn and grow
I sometimes avoid delegating because it takes less time to do it myself
Urgent issues get solved quickly but I don't pause enough to turn them into coaching moments
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Feedback & Accountability
Coaching without feedback loops is just conversation. Address performance issues early and directly. Provide clear, actionable feedback. Follow up on commitments. This is what makes development actually stick.
What's expected
Address performance issues early and directly. Provide clear, actionable feedback. Follow up on commitments always.
The accountability gap
Shielding underperformers and letting high performers carry the load is one of the most damaging things a team can experience.
Three models here
SBI the foundation for all feedback. CLEAR build trust before action. FUEL structured performance conversations with measurable outcomes.
From the board
Multiple managers named this as their hardest challenge: giving direct feedback in difficult conversations, consistently enough that it actually lands.
What we actually do today
Feedback and accountability in reality
I delay having difficult conversations
Providing immediate feedback gets pushed back due to workload and isn't super specific by the time I share it
Very difficult to focus on people development while working on projects that are constantly top priority
Hardest part is to balance between business needs and motivating/managing high workload for team members
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Ownership Culture
Delegate outcomes, not only tasks. Enable team ownership. Avoid stepping in too quickly. Everything in this program is building toward a team that doesn't need to be told what to do, coached through every problem, or chased for updates.
What's expected
Delegate outcomes, not tasks. Enable team ownership. Avoid stepping in too quickly even when it's faster.
What ownership looks like
Team members who bring solutions. Who take initiative without being asked. Who own the outcome, not just the task.
Two models here
STEPPA for when mindset and emotions are the real blocker. WOOP science-backed tool for turning intentions into follow-through.
From the board
Several managers committed to supporting independent problem-solving, and to stop stepping into the resolution the moment things get urgent.
Manager commitments
What managers committed to
Focus on enabling team to problem solve more independently
Support more their own way to problem-solving tasks and ownership
Allow teammates to undertake more pressing tasks without my direct involvement in the resolution
Focus on coaching through guiding questions rather than immediate answers
Encourage team participation in new tasks to promote individual growth and broad understanding
Focus on monitoring tasks/progress of each team member
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