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The Coaching Manual: The Definitive Guide to the Process, Principles & Skills of Personal Coaching by
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Ondrej Ko
is on page 212 of 356
Research suggests that our intelligence (our IQ) might account for just 20 per cent of our career success. The rest is down to our personality, (preferences, attitudes, postures, etc.) and, of course, emotional maturity. This is great news because, although personality and IQ remain fairly fixed over time, our emo-tional maturity is something we can always work on, to develop and improve.
— Nov 09, 2025 05:42AM
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Ondrej Ko
is on page 211 of 356
Emotional maturity-a key to coaching
It is important to recognise that we do not always occupy one fixed place: metimes, we are relaxed and resourceful; sometimes, we are uptight and crit-al. To be an effective coach, we want our general levels of emotional maturity most circumstances to stay healthy. By 'healthy', I mean that our behaviours d responses create a mostly constructive effect over time.
— Nov 09, 2025 05:36AM
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It is important to recognise that we do not always occupy one fixed place: metimes, we are relaxed and resourceful; sometimes, we are uptight and crit-al. To be an effective coach, we want our general levels of emotional maturity most circumstances to stay healthy. By 'healthy', I mean that our behaviours d responses create a mostly constructive effect over time.
Ondrej Ko
is on page 115 of 356
Coach the person, not the issue
In coaching, remember to focus primarily on the person in front of you, rather than their issue. Sometimes, we can get so involved in the engaging challenge of a situation that we forget that our role is not to solve some-one's issues for them. By using behaviours such as silence, summarising and questioning, we support the coachee to find their own solution. Of course, at times it's
— May 22, 2025 04:04AM
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In coaching, remember to focus primarily on the person in front of you, rather than their issue. Sometimes, we can get so involved in the engaging challenge of a situation that we forget that our role is not to solve some-one's issues for them. By using behaviours such as silence, summarising and questioning, we support the coachee to find their own solution. Of course, at times it's
Ondrej Ko
is on page 74 of 356
Keeping things simple
Simple questions often have the greatest impact because they allow your coachee to use their energy to form their response, rather than to try to under-stand the wording of the question. In addition, simple questions often get 'to the heart of the matter' more easily, because of their direct (straight-talking) nature: for example, 'What's important about that?' or 'What causes this?' We obvious
— May 21, 2025 01:16AM
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Simple questions often have the greatest impact because they allow your coachee to use their energy to form their response, rather than to try to under-stand the wording of the question. In addition, simple questions often get 'to the heart of the matter' more easily, because of their direct (straight-talking) nature: for example, 'What's important about that?' or 'What causes this?' We obvious
Ondrej Ko
is on page 58 of 356
Relationship factor: openness and trust
A successful coaching relationship is built on a foundation of openness and trust between the coach and the coachee. As a coach, you encourage this by being open with your coachee and demonstrating that you are someone they can trust.
— May 21, 2025 01:07AM
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A successful coaching relationship is built on a foundation of openness and trust between the coach and the coachee. As a coach, you encourage this by being open with your coachee and demonstrating that you are someone they can trust.
Ondrej Ko
is on page 49 of 356
At a Glance
Watch my feelings!
It is okay to mirror positive feeling words
Sometimes, we need to acknowledge someone's feelings as a way of empathising with them, or to demonstrate we understand what they have said. Here, it usually works best to use the exact words or phrase they use.
But
avoid embedding negative feelings...
— May 21, 2025 12:59AM
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Watch my feelings!
It is okay to mirror positive feeling words
Sometimes, we need to acknowledge someone's feelings as a way of empathising with them, or to demonstrate we understand what they have said. Here, it usually works best to use the exact words or phrase they use.
But
avoid embedding negative feelings...
Ondrej Ko
is on page 40 of 356
BELIEFS WE OPERATE FROM
Once skills are acquired, it's not like riding a bike - we coaches do forget! These skills are more like muscles; they must be used regularly to keep them strong.
— May 21, 2025 12:57AM
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Once skills are acquired, it's not like riding a bike - we coaches do forget! These skills are more like muscles; they must be used regularly to keep them strong.
Ondrej Ko
is on page 40 of 356
Fundamental skills of coaching
Building rapport and relationship
Constructive feedback
Focused levels of listening
Asking effective questions
Use of intuition
BELIEFS WE OPERATE FROM
Once skills are acquired, it's not like riding a bike - we coaches do forget! These skills are more like muscles; they must be used regularly to keep them strong.
— May 21, 2025 12:53AM
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Building rapport and relationship
Constructive feedback
Focused levels of listening
Asking effective questions
Use of intuition
BELIEFS WE OPERATE FROM
Once skills are acquired, it's not like riding a bike - we coaches do forget! These skills are more like muscles; they must be used regularly to keep them strong.












