Table of Contents

Coaches Values and Principles

Since so much of Agile and Lean operates through values and principles it is clear there are also values and principles that can be applied to Coaching. The following values and principles reflect my view of “good” Coaching.

Values

Principles

John Wooden (coach UCLA men’s basketball team) is widely considered one of the greatest coaches in the history of sports. He lays out five basic principles of coaching which can easily be applied to our world

What Does a Lean-Agile Coach Do?

Coaching is a mix of:

A coach must be prepared to:

Coaching Cycle

Typical cycle of an Agile coach is 3-18 months. The first three months are high engagement and last three are more ad-hoc engagement - high engagement for a specific issue, but much less continuous engagement. Coaches start a client with a high engagement which tapers off as they take more responsibility for their learning.

Coaches walk people and organizations through the:

What is the Outcome of Coaching from Coaches Perspective?

To be “out of the job” while the organization and people that have been coached can take full responsibility for their improvement. And to be a trusted advisor, for when issues come up in the future.

What We Don't Want to See

What does a coach not do?

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