Library of Professional Coaching

Five Signs That Measuring the ROI of Coaching is Critical to Your Success

Article written by Lisa Ann Edwards, February 2017

Discover how to measure both qualitative and quantitative results of your work, prove the impact of your coaching in any boardroom and use reliable data to grow and sustain your business as a professional coach. Secure your spot for Lisa’s upcoming Complimentary Workshop happening this March.  Secure your spot now. 
 

Five Signs That Measuring the ROI of Coaching is Critical to Your Success

Some may believe that measuring the return-on-investment of coaching is impossible, or even unnecessary! As a coach, I understand this perspective. In fact, just like my coaching colleagues, I already know first-hand that coaching works.

Like you, I’ve seen coaching clients recommit to the organization, re-energize their teams, communicate more effectively, become more resilient and have seen the positive ripple effect these changes have on the coaching client’s team.

So, why do I believe that it’s important to measure the return-on-investment of coaching?

Personal satisfaction with coaching is not enough
In fact, for a long time, I didn’t believe it was necessary. My perspective changed suddenly when I worked for a global organization owned by a billionaire with deep financial reserves, and run by a CEO who wholeheartedly believed in the effectiveness of coaching, yet decided to eliminate all coaching when the business faced a financial crisis.

I was shocked.  I never believed coaching would be cut because:

But the CEO’s personal satisfaction with coaching wasn’t enough to keep coaching in our organization.

While our CEO acknowledged that he loved working with his coach and believed it made a difference, when faced with the realities of profit and cash flow, the CEO said he could not see how coaching added a positive impact to the bottom-line.

Unfortunately, the organization had no way to prove otherwise.

How demonstrating the value and return-on-investment of coaching worked for me

I was able to bring coaching back to the organization and won a significant budget to launch a leadership program during a period of continued deep budget cuts, by building upon the ways I was tracking success and incorporating the monetary value of coaching as well as ROI, then presenting my work to the CFO.

You can ensure your coaching isn’t cut, too, by recognizing the signs that measurement is absolutely critical to the success and ongoing financial support of your coaching.

The five signs that measuring coaching value is critical

Below are the five signs in which measurement, including ROI, are critical to the ongoing support and success of your program.  I’ve seen people overlook these critical signs and have their coaching budget cut as result.

Get Ahead: You can get ahead of any of these issues so that you don’t have to repair a situation. Be proactive by assuming that it’s always possible that coaching will be cut from your organization or from your client’s budget. If you see any of the signs listed above with any of your clients, start taking action today. It’s much easier to prevent a budget cut than to repair a budget cut.

What you can do today: Scan your existing client business and recognize the signs that coaching is at risk and measurement is critical. Then begin tracking the success of your work, documenting measurable impacts and linking to monetary values and share your evidence of success and monetary value to your client or sponsor.

Discover how to measure both qualitative and quantitative results of your work, prove the impact of your coaching in any boardroom and use reliable data to grow and sustain your business as a professional coach. Secure your spot for Lisa’s upcoming Complimentary Workshop happening this March.  Secure your spot now.
 

Exit mobile version