Assessment of the Impact of Coaching on a Company’s Performance: A Review of Methods
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
2.1. Gradual Impact of Coaching
2.2. The Impact of Coaching on Open Innovation Processes in a Company
- Engaging external knowledge into internal innovation activities;
- The use of networks when commercializing the innovation outcomes;
2.3. Assessing the Impact of Coaching
- The integration of the evaluation of ongoing coaching activities towards achieving the established goals with the assessment of the outcomes of a completed interaction.
- The establishment of clear criteria (ROI vs. coaching objectives) against which to assess the impact of coaching interactions on a company’s performance.
- Ensuring that the assessment of the impact is carried out with sufficient accuracy. It is recognized that the use of a pre-post design to assess the impact and the establishment of a control group can increase the rigor of the estimation of the impact of coaching.
- Considering the needs of coaching clients and organizations which can be met by coaching.
3. Materials and Methods
- What methods are used for assessing the impact of coaching?
- How are these methods used in the course of the coaching interaction?
- How does coaching interrelate with open innovation?
4. Results and Discussion
4.1. Methods for Assessing the Impact of Coaching
4.2. Coaching and Open Innovation
4.3. Open Innovation for the Advancement of Coaching Knowledge
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Open Innovation Processes | The Fields Where Coaching Can Be Applied | How Coaching Can Impact |
---|---|---|
The entire open innovation process | Facilitate improving entrepreneurial knowledge and skills | Strengthening innovation culture |
External knowledge sourcing | Cooperation across company’s boundaries | Improves collaboration between a company and external agents |
Experimenting with potential markets, and exploring prospective partnerships | Developing open innovation mindset and building shared mental model | Reducing uncertainty, increasing mutual trust and promoting positive attitude to change |
Leading innovation | Developing and supporting open-innovation-oriented qualities and skills of the leaders | Leaders recognize the value of listening and considering new ideas |
Generating and refining innovation ideas | Creating innovation environment | Advancing the processes of converting innovative ideas into real innovation projects |
Utilizing and integrating external and internal sources | Fostering proactive approach to innovation activities | Employees recognize innovation opportunities and put forward their proposals |
Commercializing innovation | Support in integrating a new product into the customer’s company | Self-directed learning to get knowledge about new products is increased |
Author | Aim of the Paper | Assessment Methods | Application of Methods | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Birknerová and Benková [48] | to develop a methodology for assessing the factors of coaching by coaching recipients | AC-BEC methodology | developed to assess the coaching factors |
2 | Albizu et al. [49] | to provide an empirical test of effectiveness of executive coaching | first three levels of Kirkpatrick’s evaluation model (1975). | as a tool for summative evaluation |
3 | Wenu and Tan [50] | to elaborate the project management coaching framework | Kirkpatrick and Kirkpatrick’s (2016) learning model | as a means to evaluate the validity of the AKW-PMCF framework developed |
4 | Pousa et al. [51] | to explore the impact of managerial coaching on employees’ performance | survey questionnaire with subsequent data processing through structural equation modeling in AMOS | as an assessment of the impact of coaching interaction |
5 | Hagen and Peterson [52] | to test the exciting coaching scales for reliability and validity to measure managerial coaching experience | Ellinger Behavioral Scale and the Park Skills-based Scale | Ellinger Behavioral Scale is proposed to use for team members while the Park Skills-based Scale for leaders |
6 | Nansubuga et al. [53] | to assess the effect size of coaching interaction regarding the ability to coach clients to reflect on their behavior | pre-test assessment, treatment group and control groups, and post-test assessment | as an assessment of the entire chain of impact of coaching interaction |
7 | Gan and Chong [54] | to research the relationship of trust, rapport and commitment with the effectiveness of coaching | objective-driven model | as the measurement of coaching goals achievement |
8 | Grant [55] | to assess the impact of coaching at the time of organizational change | a set of qualitative and quantitative methods of evaluation: pre-/post- design | measures were taken at Time 1 (pre) and Time 2 (four months later) |
9 | Vidal-Salazar et al. [56] | to investigate the effect of coaching interaction in the course of the management development program | coached group vs. control (non-coached) group | as an assessment of complementary effect of coaching in the development program |
10 | Gray et al. [57] | to identify favorable factors of coaching interaction in SMEs | survey developed grounded on a range of management competencies. | as a tool to assess the impact of coaching on personal traits and business-oriented attributes |
11 | Jones et al. [58] | to identify the impact of coaching on managerial flexibility. | repeated-measures design | to take measures over the entire coaching interaction including pre- and post-stages |
12 | Boak and Crabbe [59] | to assess the impact of coaching training skills program | ongoing feedback, focus group, post-program one-to-one interviews | to collect data about the impact of coaching |
13 | Nguyen et al. [60] | to develop and validate sales coaching scale to measure the effectiveness of sales coaching | a three-factor, 14-item effective sales coaching (ESC) scale | to measure adaptability, involvement, and rapport |
Methods | The Use in the Course of the Coaching Interaction | Study |
---|---|---|
Singly Applied Methods | ||
Survey questionnaire data were analyzed | using structural equation modeling in AMOS | Pousa et al. [51] |
objective-driven model to evaluate the extent to which coaching objectives were met. | Gan and Chong [54] | |
using importance-performance analysis | Gray et al. [57] | |
Coached group vs. control group | the data obtained as a result of comparing the performance of the groups were analyzed through the Wilcoxon–Mann–Whitney test | Vidal-Salazar et al. [56] |
Managerial coaching scales: the Ellinger Behavioral Scale and the Park Skills-based Scale | to measure managerial coaching skills and coaching experience | Hagen and Peterson [52] |
A three-factor, 14-item effective sales coaching (ESC) scale | contains three dimensions–adaptability, involvement, and rapport—that are shown to directly and indirectly influence sales performance. | Nguyen et al. [60] |
AC-BEC methodology | the assessment of coaching from the point of view of behavior, emotions, and cognition, using mathematical–statistical methods. | Birknerová and Benková [48] |
Kirkpatrick’s learning model | first three levels of Kirkpatrick’s evaluation model (1975). | Albizu et al. [49] |
Kirkpatrick and Kirkpatrick’s (2016) learning model | Wenu and Tan [50] | |
Methods coherently applied throughout the coaching interaction: systematic approach | ||
Baseline assessment Non-equivalent group design Post-test assessment | pre-test of participants’ ability to reflect on their actions treatment group and control groups.to assess effect size | Nansubuga et al. [53], Vidal-Salazar et al. [56] |
Within-subjects (pre/post) design with measures taken at Time 1 and Time 2 (four months later). | use both quantitative and qualitative measures to explore the impact of executive coaching | Grant [55] |
Survey | prior to coaching, during coaching, and post-coaching. Data processing: repeated measures analysis | Jones et al. [58] |
Ongoing feedback One-to-one interviews | in the course of coaching interaction with participants at the conclusion of the program | Boak and Crabbe [59] |
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Roša, A.; Lace, N. Assessment of the Impact of Coaching on a Company’s Performance: A Review of Methods. J. Open Innov. Technol. Mark. Complex. 2021, 7, 233. https://doi.org/10.3390/joitmc7040233
Roša A, Lace N. Assessment of the Impact of Coaching on a Company’s Performance: A Review of Methods. Journal of Open Innovation: Technology, Market, and Complexity. 2021; 7(4):233. https://doi.org/10.3390/joitmc7040233
Chicago/Turabian StyleRoša (Rosha), Angelina, and Natalja Lace. 2021. "Assessment of the Impact of Coaching on a Company’s Performance: A Review of Methods" Journal of Open Innovation: Technology, Market, and Complexity 7, no. 4: 233. https://doi.org/10.3390/joitmc7040233
APA StyleRoša, A., & Lace, N. (2021). Assessment of the Impact of Coaching on a Company’s Performance: A Review of Methods. Journal of Open Innovation: Technology, Market, and Complexity, 7(4), 233. https://doi.org/10.3390/joitmc7040233