Sunday, May 24, 2020
Get Coaching But Dont Tell People - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career
Get Coaching But Dont Tell People - Personal Branding Blog - Stand Out In Your Career Get leadership coaching but donât admit you got it. The best in every field of endeavor gets coaching â" that being objective, professional advice and direction. Trust me, whatever field youâre in, your competition is getting outside input right now. To compete you should too but just donât tell anyone. Not that itâs a sign of weakness, far from it. But because whatever you do in executing, itâs you executing itâs not the coach. When Peyton Manning won Super Bowl XX the sports pundits didnt quip about the great coaching, pointers, guidance, direction or advice he was given. No, they rallied about what a great quarterback he was. And in a locker room interview Manning wisely said itâs his team that made it happen. He didnt say, âIt was due to the great coaching. When you similarly win and they say good job, you say, âYes, I have a great team.â Do not say, âYes, I had great coaching. News anchors on your local television network affiliate are totally scripted and coached as to what, when, and how to report the news. The casual banter is scrolling across the monitor for them to read along with the physical gesture or expression to use that corroborates with the words. Whether on the athletic field or on television everyone gets coached but the success is in what you do with it â" your execution. Itâs just not necessary to say itâs due to coaching. I tell executives that I coach in the business world to take full credit for anything good they did even when I helped with the strategy and approach. I got paid, thatâs my thank you. I tell them, You are the one who did it and thatâs why you take credit. My long time friend and mentor, Jack Falvey, wrote hundreds of editorials published in the Wall Street Journal. He told me how to get my own byline. I did it and later thanked him. He said, âIâve told countless people how to do it, but you did it. Donât thank me, it was all you.â So thatâs why I say: 1) do seek executive coaching (from me preferably!), 2) when you do stellar things, say thank you and own the success. Itâs due to you. Benton is co-author of new book, The Leadership Mind Switch (McGraw-Hill, 2017
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