Library of Professional Coaching

Coaching Research: Examining the Influence of Goal Orientation on Leaders’ Professional Development

Whether you’re an executive coach or not, Rosanne Scriffingnano’s paper “Coaching within organisations: examining the influence of goal orientation on leaders’ professional development” (Coaching: An International Journal of Theory, Research and Practice, Vol. 4, No. 1, March 2011, 20-31) provides some essential considerations about the impact of clients’ goal orientation on their development. Given the prevalence of the goal setting process in the field of coaching, this research has clear implications for your coaching practice.

COACHING RESEARCH:

This study, which involved 110 executive leaders, sought to shed some light on “the relationship between goal orientation and leaders’ professional development during executive coaching engagements” (p.20). It highlighted two major forms of goal orientation: learning or performance (which, by the way, proved in this study not to be mutually exclusive). Here are the definitions:

Some of the findings of the study highlighted that individuals with learning goal orientation “believe that they can acquire new skills and master new situations; whereas performance goal-oriented individuals tend to believe that their abilities cannot be expanded” (p.27). In addition, more participants in this study were identified as learning goal oriented rather than performance goal oriented and it was suggested that one reason for this may be leaders’ interpretation of executive coaching i.e. it tended to attract people with a learning orientation.

IN PRACTICE:

The paper itself  identifies two implications for coaching professionals:

In the light of this, you might also consider:

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