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The role of relational mechanisms in the executive coaching process on client outcomes in distance coaching relationships

Weinberg, Frankie J; Hausfeld, Mary (2024). The role of relational mechanisms in the executive coaching process on client outcomes in distance coaching relationships. Journal of Managerial Psychology, 39(6):695-715.

Abstract

Purpose: We examine the relationships between clients’ level of coaching readiness and trust in their executive coach and increases to both personal learning improved work performance. Distance relationships, the setting for this study, epitomize the norms of the New World of Work (NWoW), but also provide particular challenges for building trust and recognizing similarities between client and coach.

Design/methodology/approach: This study investigates distance coaching relationships in matched-pairs, longitudinal investigation of formal executive coaching.

Findings: Results support the proposed moderated mediation path. Findings reveal that both coaches’ perceptions of client readiness for coaching and client trust in coach each predict both client personal skill development and performance improvement.

Research limitations/implications: While important toward gaining a better understanding of the relational functioning of distance coaching relationships, inclusion of only distance relationships may truncate the generalizability of our findings.

Practical implications: The study’s findings have practical implications for organizations that invest in executive coaching with regard to the importance of evaluating the candidates' readiness for coaching before the assignment, trust-building throughout distance coaching relationships and perceptions of similarity on client coaching outcomes.

Originality/value: Distance relationships, the setting for this study, provide particular challenges for building trust and recognizing similarities between client and coach and the current investigation points to the relevance of these relational mechanisms to client outcomes. In so doing, this study explores how perceptions of deep-level similarity between a coach and client may serve as moderators of these relationships.

Additional indexing

Item Type:Journal Article, refereed, original work
Communities & Collections:03 Faculty of Economics > Department of Business Administration
Dewey Decimal Classification:330 Economics
Scopus Subject Areas:Social Sciences & Humanities > Social Psychology
Social Sciences & Humanities > Applied Psychology
Social Sciences & Humanities > Management Science and Operations Research
Social Sciences & Humanities > Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management
Language:English
Date:21 August 2024
Deposited On:04 Nov 2024 13:47
Last Modified:31 Mar 2025 03:30
Publisher:Emerald Publishing
ISSN:0268-3946
OA Status:Closed
Publisher DOI:https://doi.org/10.1108/jmp-02-2023-0073

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