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Enterprise Coaching Conference

March 4, 2010 by admin

I am delivering a short key note address at this Enterprise Coaching Conference.  Perhaps I will see you there?

The Derby Conference Centre
27 April 2010 09:30 – 16:00

Welcome to the inaugural national conference on the theme of enterprise coaching.

The conference will be bringing together decision makers and practitioners who have an interest in the issues raised by the use of enterprise coaching to encourage people into enterprise, particularly from disadvantaged communities.

The conference is being organised by Wood Holmes and The Watershed, companies with a long history of involvement in regeneration, enterprise and business support. It was through their work with projects that use enterprise coaching that they were alerted to a number of emerging issues including:

  • How is enterprise coaching being implemented in practice?
  • What type of clients are coaches working with?
  • What are the barriers and challenges that coaches face?
  • What is the future for enterprise coaching?
  • What are the professional development needs of coaches?

National Survey of Enterprise Coaches

The basis of the conference will be the findings from the first national survey of enterprise coaches and will provide evidence around the ways in which coaches are meeting expectations.

If you are involved in enterprise coaching and haven’t yet received an invitation to complete our survey and contribute your views you can complete the short questionnaire, and enter our prize draw for £100 voucher from John Lewis.

We look forward to meeting you at the conference.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: community engagement, enterprise coaching, entrepreneurship, professional development, training

Enterprise Coaching Award – New from SFEDI Enterprises

March 2, 2010 by admin

OK it’s not quite like a new product launch from Apple, it won’t get people queuing outside the SFEDI stores for days in advance, but in its own way the launch of an Endorsed Award for Enterprise Coaches is a significant milestone.

This Endorsed Award is not from SFEDI, the Government recognised standards setting body for business support and advice.  It is from SFEDI Enterprises a private limited company that provides accreditation, products and services based on the SFEDI National Occupational Standards for Business Enterprise and Business Support.  There are no SFEDI National Occupational Standards for Enterprise Coaching.  Confusing isn’t it?

Enterprise Coaching is still new.  It comes in many shapes and forms and goes under different names.  For some it is a recruitment sergeant for mainstream business support – scouring the ‘hard to reach’ for people with the potential and desire to explore options around self-employment and entrepreneurship, preparing them for referral to the mainstream.  A kind of enterprise skimming activity.

For others, including yours truly, it is a more radical relationship with clients to help them explore how more enterprising attitudes and skills might help them to develop more influence over their own futures and help them to become  more active and engaged citizens.   It is as closely related to the development of the wellbeing agenda, cohesive communities and PSA 21 as to the narrow increase of Gross Domestic Product and reduction of benefit dependency.

But this Award has the hand of Government in it.  The majority of these Enterprise Coaches will be branded – ‘Solutions for Business – Funded by Government’.  They will be focused on entrepreneurship.

Solutions for Business - Funded by Goverment

The majority of providers of enterprise coaching come from a background in business support and advice.  I don’t expect many of them to see this as a problem.

SFEDI Enterprises have developed an ‘Endorsed Award’ and the role of the Enterprise Coach has now been quasi officially defined.  It IS about coaching people to ‘increase their capacity to be enterprising which might include self-employment’ (and business start-ups).  On close inspection the qualification is almost all about self employment and starting a business.

Enterprise Coaches can join the rank and file of ‘outreach workers’ foisting another policy goal of government onto unsuspecting deeply suspicious people living in areas of multiple deprivation.   Once again we are in danger of missing the chance to do something different and radical that might make a real difference.

But suppose that I am wrong and SFEDI Enterprises are right.  That the Great British Taxpayer, and service users in some of our most deprived communities, are well served by a small army of Enterprise Coaches acting as recruitment sergeants for mainstream business support.

(If you think this overstates the case let me refer you to assessment criteria 3.3 Support people to identify and overcome their own barriers to employment or self employment (be warned there are several 3.3s in the Award – this is just one of them).  The award talks of ‘overcoming clients barriers and objections’.)

There is just one criterion that I could find that hints that self employment and starting a business might not be right for everyone.  It requires that the Enterprise Coach should Explain when self employment may not be a viable option.  This puts the Enterprise Coach as judge and jury – deciding whether the client is capable of achieving their ambitions or not.  There is no such judgemental clause in relation to starting a business – just self-employment.  In my opinion this demonstrates a misunderstanding of the coaches role to say the very least.  ‘Judgemental’ is not one of the four approved intervention styles!

The whole tenor of the Award is to move clients towards self employment and start ups.  There is little explicit recognition that the role of the coach is to help clients to look at these as two options among many for making progress.  Nor is there any mention in the award of the coach helping the client to explore the potential risks associated with either self employment or starting a business.  This is part of the Enterprise Fairytale. It is ALL upside.

I know from personal experience that this Enterprise Fairytale leaves some people in debt, with visits from bailiffs, and their relationships and health under immense strain.  I get to work with them when they contact me occasionally through this blog.  Businesses that are ‘Dreams’ on paper sometimes turn into ‘Nightmares’ in reality.  The Endorsed Award, like so much publicly funded enterprise propaganda, chooses to ignore the potential downsides.  Indeed if the client should express reservations about losing money the award actively encourages the coach to ‘overcome’ them.

I spent a couple of hours getting to grips with this document and read it carefully. Structurally it is not very intuitive. However, its structure and the minor errors and typos are the least of its problems.

It is the impact it could have on ‘licensing’ sometimes poorly qualified, poorly trained, poorly paid, poorly experienced and on occasion poorly managed and supervised ‘coaches’ to go out there and encourage people to rush into risky endeavours for which they are often ill prepared that worries me.  And enabling them to do this in some of our areas of greatest multiple deprivation.  These communities deserve better.

NB I can find no expectation that Enterprise Coaches should seek effective supervision for their work – which is I believe a requirement of most of the major professional coaching accreditation bodies.

Not only will we weaken our enterprise culture (as more people experience the unanticipated downsides of enterprise) we may also significantly decrease the quality of our small business stock as people rush to enterprise without the skills and experience that they require to serve their customers well and profitably.  Yes I have seen this happen too, on several occasions. It leads to more debt, desperation and poverty.

The fact that Enterprise Coaches will have an Endorsed Award may promote a sense of comfort and wellbeing in funders and service users that may be misplaced, unless the award provides reasonable guarantees that coaches will do no harm and may do good for the majority of service users. I am not sure that this one does.  But these are just my opinions.

Some criteria from the award that are, in my opinion, too ‘open to interpretation’ include:

  • Analyse the reach that centres of community activity have in engaging traditionally difficult to reach individuals
  • Evaluate the stage that individuals have reached
  • Analyse the change an individual may go through when undergoing enterprise coaching
  • Carry out awareness raising activities that manage the diversity of people, ideas, interests and motivations

Personally I am very comfortable at this stage in its development for the enterprise coaching role to be interpreted in many different ways. Enterprise Coaching on a University Campus will differ from Enterprise Coaching in a super output area. Rural models will differ from urban. We should let differences flourish and seriously look to share ‘interesting practice’ across the sector. Unfortunately at the moment I can find little serious reflection on ‘what is working’ as most programmes paint an extremely positive picture to support applications for further extensions to their funding. High failure rates, and high rates of loan defaults are ignored as we announce how many hundreds of businesses have been created.

If Enterprise Coaching is to have a respected future then it needs a standard setting body that does not just reflect current practice in order to turn the handle on the qualifications and funding machine, but challenges the sector to raise its game. I have watched SFEDI engage with business advisers and enterprise professionals ‘where they are at’ for over a decade now. Suffice to say progress has been slow.

The new award has some technical holes, but politically too it is ‘interesting’.  It is not a full qualification – but an Endorsed Award.  With a light touch on assessment and verification, it is designed to be accessible to those who may aspire to this role but do not have sufficient or the appropriate experience to begin to practice or apply for posts of this nature. The National Award is not an assessment of competence.  It is not a measure of a person’s ability to do the job to the standard sets by the industry.  I am not really sure what it is a measure of.  Potential perhaps?

Part of the assessment requires observation of the coach working with a ‘real’ client, which is a concern if you are one of those without sufficient or the appropriate experience.  SFEDI recommend ‘volunteering’ for such people ‘where learning support is available’.

To be an effective enterprise coach, to establish transformational relationships and maintain them over a period of time to help service users make a real difference in their lives is a demanding job, both emotionally and technically.  The fact that we are unwilling to pay the people who do this work what it is worth is not an excuse to water down the standards and allow those without sufficient or the appropriate experience to gain the award.  But politics being politics I fully expect that when the enterprise coaching award becomes a qualification and gets slotted into the national framework it will be at Level 3.  Business adviser qualifications are at Level 4.

All in all I think this is an inadequate, if well intended, attempt to provide professional development opportunities and ‘recognition’  for people (who may not have the required experience) to work with others on developing their capacity for enterprise, considering self employment or starting a business.  I refuse to believe that is is designed to sell watered down business adviser training and ‘quality assurance’ through SFEDI endorsed ‘Centres of Excellence’, which I believe will be the only routes to access the Endorsed Award.

Either way the Endorsed Award frames the role of the enterprise coach in a  narrow and limiting way and will, in my opinion, do little to help us develop the ‘enterprise culture’ that we aspire to.

The job of engaging people in some of our most deprived communities on the journey towards living more enterprising lives, offering them a relationship that they can use to transform their own futures, and helping them to adopt sometimes radically different behaviours and choices deserves better.  These are not second class business advisers.

They need to be first class enterprise coaches.

Details on the SFEDI Enterprises Endorsed Award for Enterprise Coaching can be requested here: http://www.sfedienterprises.co.uk/contact

But perhaps I have got it wrong.  It would not be the first time.

Perhaps the awards will provide us with a solid platform from which excellent Enterprise Coaching services can flourish. I have my doubts but I sincerely hope they are proven to be misplaced.

Filed Under: enterprise, Uncategorized Tagged With: barriers to enterprise, community development, community engagement, enterprise coaching, entrepreneurship, operations, professional development, training, Uncategorized, wellbeing

The Leash Fetish

February 26, 2010 by admin

  • Unleashing talent
  • Unleashing creativity
  • Unleashing potential
  • Unleashing enterprise
  • Unleashing entrepreneurship

These aspirations I see nearly every day of my working life.  There is always something or someone to be ‘unleashed’.

But, where is the leash meister?  The evil one who holds us back?

Most systems of parenting, education and employment are designed to establish control, compliance, conformity and predictability.

Perhaps there are some systemic changes that we might make so that the challenge of unleashing is consigned to the history books?

But the real challenge is to recognise that with the transition to adulthood the leash IS off.  

We are free to choose and to act.  But like a dog that has been chained up for too long – when unleashed many of us have little desire to go beyond our former boundaries.

We ‘know’ our place and we stick to it.

The role of the enterprise educator is not to teach about business.  Nor is it to parade in front of students waving tenners inciting them to grab it!  Nor to put on yet another inspirational conference with a secret millionaire, dragon, apprentice or teenage entrepreneurial prodigy.

It is to help us to recognise that the leash has been slipped.  And we can begin the journey of becoming the person that we want.  And to show us how we can help ourselves and our peers to explore what we might be able to achieve through association, collaboration, perseverance, learning and skill.

This is the role of the enterprise educator.

Filed Under: enterprise, entrepreneurship, management, Uncategorized Tagged With: community development, development, enterprise coaching, enterprise education, entrepreneurship, inspiration, management, operations, power, professional development, self interest, strategy, training, Uncategorized

Mentoring Enterprise – the corruption of a powerful process?

February 26, 2010 by admin

According to Tim Smit over at the School for Social Entrepreneurs all social entrepreneurs should demand a mentor. Far be it from me to disagree with such a luminary but I think not.   It is this kind of sloppy thinking that says we should ‘universalise the particular’ that leads to powerful processes of creative learning being undermined.
Entrepreneurs should seek to develop clarity on what their learning priorities (and which ‘gates’ they need ‘keepers’ to open), and they should be clear on how they are going to learn.
But the truth is that mentoring, while transformational for some, is next to useless for others.
We all have our preferences for learning process.  This truth is a problem for many enterprise support organisations who default to the ‘we’ll provide you with a mentor’ setting because they are more focussed on delivering their neatly pre-packaged service offer, agreed with funders no doubt, than they are in really understanding the needs of their service users.
Many of the mentoring enterprise schemes that I see use poorly trained mentors with even more poorly trained mentees.  There is a lack of clarity about the importance of choosing and using mentors in lifelong professional development, as the provider short cuts this with a ‘matching process’ to force start their own mentoring scheme.  No wonder that often the results are disappointing.
Such schemes tend to put the mentee in a passive role.  Mentoring becomes a process that is done to them rather than a process to help them find the personal and professional relationships that they need to help realise their enterprising vision.
Mentoring is an immensely powerful tool for professional development and the transmission of wisdom.  However poorly designed mentoring programmes, driven by big businesses CSR ambitions, and wads of taxpayers cash have undermined its credibility in the enterprise sector for many.

All entrepreneurs should understand the power of the mentoring process and how it operates in the REAL world (where it is not funded by taxpayers) as it is likely that most of them might need mentoring at some point in their career.   But is should never be a set component of enterprise development programmes and it is certainly not right for all.

So let us stop grabbing the cash and setting up the schemes and develop an understanding of the mentoring process that will serve our entrepreneurs and our communities for many years to come.

Filed Under: entrepreneurship, management Tagged With: development, enterprise, enterprise education, enterprise journeys, management, mentoring, operations, professional development, strategy, training

Your work is NOT person centred if…

February 4, 2010 by admin

My inbox is rammed with emails from various agencies of the State claiming that they are developing person centred approaches to service design, delivery and development.

Most are not.

  • If you have set up a service designed to promote behaviour change because you have been told/asked/contracted to do so by a policy maker – then your work is not person centred – it is policy centred
  • If you have developed a service that only works on predefined agendas, with pre-defined ‘solutions’ and services, then your work is not person centred – it is service centred.
  • If your service works on a  premise that service users are in some way broken, faulty or otherwise in need of your modification (smoking cessation, weight management, more entrepreneurial, better CV and qualifications etc) then your work is NOT person centred.
  • If you push your services on people without being invited, using systems of sticks and carrots, and large marketing budgets, to promote engagement – then your work is not person centred – it is, to some degree at least, manipulative and coercive.
  • If you make decisions that prioritise achieving targets over the wellbeing of the people that use your service – then your work is not person centred.  It is target centred.

Person centred work is done:

  • At the invitation of the person – they invite you to work with them – primarily based on their perception of your relevance to them and their agendas.  If people are inviting you to work with them and finding the process helpful then word of mouth will soon spread and you do not need to spend vast sums promoting your service.
  • When the person sets out their agenda and accesses the support that they choose (rather than those that your agency is set up to deliver).  They always have choices and person centred work helps them to recognise these and prioritise amongst them.
  • When interventions let the person decided whether they wish to engage with ‘professional service providers’ and/or with their neighbours and peers – they don’t assume that the solution lies with experts and ‘mainstream’ providers.
  • When the ‘whole’ person is acknowledged and accepted – not when we fragment them according to our service design.  If we have a service that is just designed to promote health, crime reduction or entrepreneurship – then we are not person centred.

This matters enormously.

Once we start to take the ideas and ideals of person centred working seriously we can transform the impact of the so called ‘helping services’.  Instead of a Nanny State we can have an enabling and empowering state.  And people can really start to recognise their own responsibility for helping themselves in a context that is out to help rather than to fix.

Carl Rogers in On Becoming a Person had this to say:

It has gradually been driven home to me that I cannot be of help …by any means of any intellectual or training procedure.  No approach which relies upon knowledge, upon training, upon the acceptance of something that istaught, is of any use.  These approaches are so tempting and direct that I have, in the past, tried a great many of them.  It is possible to explain a person to himself, to prescribe steps that should lead him forward, to train him in knowledge about a more satisfying mode of life.  But such methods are, in my experience, futile and inconsequential.  The most they can accomplish is some temporary change, which soon disappears, leaving the individual more than ever convinced of their inadequacy.

The failure of any such approach through the intellect has forced me to recognise that change appears to come about through experience in a relationship.

…

If I can provide a certain type of relationship, the other person will discover within himself the capacity to use that relationship for growth, and change and personal development will occur.

Carl Rogers – On Becoming a Person

So my plea to you: If your work is not genuinely person centred – please don’t say that it is. You will just be serving to reduce the chances of genuinely person centred approaches ever getting a fair crack at the whip.

And if you you want to explore how you can adopt genuinely ‘person centred’ approaches then please do get in touch!

Filed Under: management Tagged With: community, community development, development, enterprise, inspiration, management, marketing, operations, outreach, policy, professional development, strategy, training

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