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View this
issue online at http://www.todayscoach.com/2002/103102bizyourein.html
The future of coaching discussion will return in 2 weeks.
Wednesday, October 30, 2002
Dear Today's Coach Reader:
Think Southwest
Airlines is in the airline business?
Think again.
Southwest is actually in the
transportation business and competes with cars in some markets. If
they thought they were in the airline business they'd start thinking like
every other airline and would be stuck within that box.
Think State Farm
is in the insurance/protection business?
Nah.
State Farm is really in the peace
of mind business. Insurance is a need. Peace of mind is a
want. They wisely sell to the want.
Think Proctor &
Gamble is in the soap business?
Not really.
Proctor & Gamble is really in
the branding business. They just happen to specialize in soap.
Think the Graduate
School of Coaching is really in the coach training business?
Close, but it's much bigger than that.
We're really in the coach success
business, which just happens to include coach training. That gives
us an edge in the marketplace because coach training is just one component
of a coach's success and we're focusing on the bigger/full service picture
that coaches want (and need).
Think you're in
the coaching business?
Well, that's somewhat true, but that's only part of the story.
Coaches are in the achievement
business. Or the personal development business. Or the
happiness business. Or the executive development business. We just happen
to use coaching as the format, structure and style of the relationship and
use coaching skills and the coaching label as our preferred packaging.
Who cares? Why
does it matter to know what business you're really in, as a coach?
It does matter and here's how
asking yourself "What business am I really in?" will help...
1. You'll start thinking bigger -- beyond the label (and some call it
the tether) of coach/coaching.
When you identify what business you are in, you start focusing on a much
larger market -- much larger than the market for coaches and
coaching. Bigger market means more opportunity -- and less
'translation/explanation' required for those unfamiliar with the word
'coach.'
2. You'll start focusing on what you do best and packaging yourself
around that.
In addition to learning coaching skills, it's essential to also learn
knowledge, models, concepts and situational solutions that work for your
clients. Coaching skills and proficiencies are very important but the
marketplace is currently rewarding coaches with specific knowledge or
expertise in addition to great coaching skills.
3. You'll start looking for more ways to serve your markets -- and NOT
limit it to 'just' coaching.
Creative solutions and packages (coaching or not) is what the marketplace
really wants. Coaching is a key part -- but only part -- of the
package.
Okay, but how do I find out what business I am really in?
This is where you get to be really
creative. Here are some examples of the type of businesses coaches
are really in.
Feel free to use this list as a way to get started...
The success business
The balance business
The financial independence business
The evolution business
The mastery business
The training business
The proficiencies business
The transformation business
The joy business
The love business
The systems business
The lifestyle design business
The entrepreneur challenge business
The superconductivity business
The attraction business
The personal satisfaction business
The situational solutions business
I hope that this was useful.
Best,

Thomas J. Leonard
CoachVille.com
thomas@coachville.com
Note: The Future of Coaching Series will return in 2 weeks.
Personal Note:
Hey, greetings from Sydney where it's always a day ahead of the Americas; kind of
fun, actually, even with the 14-hour overnight flight from Los
Angeles. Kudos to Qantas for the impressive service and to the gate
agent who got me an exit row, window. Yep, no biz class for us; we
run a lean operation at CoachVille in order to give back as much as
possible to the 22,500 CoachVille members in 107 countries. If you
haven't joined CoachVille, visit http://www.coachville.com.
It's free, for a lifetime. And, while you're at it, check out the
live events in your area at http://www.coachvilleconference.com.
-T
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