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Research in Executive Coaching
Purpose

The purpose of the Research Page is to serve as a resource to executive coaches, executives, HR and OD Professionals, researchers and others involved with Executive Coaching who are interested in promoting, conducting and accessing research on executive coaching. A great deal of practice wisdom is available in books published by executive coaches and in articles in a variety of industry and trade magazines. Relatively few reports of empirical research are available, however. Fortunately, there is a growing interest among practitioners and scholars in the study of executive coaching. This site will provide those interested in executive coaching with an opportunity to announce their research and solicit help, access descriptions of research related publications, and post their research related questions, ideas or other announcements.

James Hunt is the editor of the TECF Research Page. Those who would like to post to the Research Page can reach James at Huntj@babson.edu. All postings should be closely related to the specific field and activities of executive coaching. Potential postings will not be peer reviewed but will only be reviewed to determine their fit with the purpose of the Research Page. The editor of the Research Page and the Leadership Group of the Executive Coaching Forum reserve the right to withhold postings not directly related to the purpose of the Research Page.

Current Research Programs and Projects

We invite scholars, graduate students and practitioners in the field to share their current research efforts with others, and ask for help as needed. If you would like to post in this area, please e-mail your name, affiliation, contact information and a brief (no more than 250 word) description of your work.

Research Literature

We will post and continually update articles and books that report on quantitative or qualitative research on executive coaching. We will be posting listings and abstracts of articles on executive coaching processes, outcomes, research methodology and research oriented literature reviews. Postings that describe previously published research reports based on empirical data for either theory building or theory testing in executive coaching is appropriate. We will also post literature reviews or research methodology papers, if in our view they would be useful to researchers in the field. We will not be posting information about conceptual articles or books on the research page. We are happy to post information describing previously published research sponsored or conducted by consulting firms or corporations, if the methodology and the nature and/or size of the sample is clearly explained in the publicly available research report. Each posting will include the name of the article or book, reference information and a brief abstract or one-paragraph description of the work. If you would like to suggest the posting of an appropriate work, please e-mail your suggestion with reference information to the editor of the Research Page.



Contents
(click on a heading to jump to it)

Current Research Programs and Projects

    • Successful Executive Coaching from the consumer's Perspective.

Research Literature

Coaching Process

    • Executive Coaching, An Outcome Study
    • Can working with an executive coach improve multisource feedback ratings over time? A Quasi-experimental field study.
    • Executive coaching: it’s not just about the executive
    • Needs and outcomes in an executive development program, a matter of perspective
    • Behind closed doors: What really happens in executive coaching

Literature Reviews

    • Executive coaching: it’s not just about the executive
    • Executive coaching: a comprehensive review of the literature

Outcome Studies

    • Executive Coaching, An Outcome Study Can working with an executive coach improve multisource feedback ratings over time? A Quasi-experimental field study.
    • Creating value and enhancing retention through employee development: The Sun Microsystems experience.
    • Behind closed doors: What really happens in executive coaching.
    • Executive coaching as a transfer of training tool: effects on productivity in a public agency.
    • The impact of executive coaching and 360 feedback on leadership effectiveness.

Research Methodology

    • Coaching at the top: Assisting a chief executive and his team.
    • Reflecting on Mary Kralj’s Case Study.
    • Constructing a literature from case studies: promises and limitations of the method.
 


Current Research Programs and Projects

SUCCESSFUL EXECUTIVE COACHING FROM THE CONSUMER’S PERSPECTIVE:

Adaptive and Developmental Learning is a new research study by TECF board member James M. Hunt, DBA, Associate Professor of Management, Babson College. It will be published in Research in Management Consulting, Fourth Edition, Tony Buono, Editor, Greenwich, CT: Information Age Press, August 2004. The study reports on in depth case analyses of fifteen successful executive coaching engagements. Both coach and executive were interviewed for the study, and a grounded theory methodology was utilized to perform a content analysis on the interview transcripts. The study examined how coach and executive define successful outcomes, the processes by which successful outcomes were achieved, and the impact of the organizational context on the outcomes of coaching. The results of the study are a series of hypothesis regarding successful executive coaching activities and the factors that facilitate successful outcome. See the Power Point presentation describing the study.

 


Research Literature


Coaching Process


Wasylyshyn, Karol (2003). “Executive Coaching, An Outcome Study,” Consulting Psychology Journal, Vol. 55, No. 2, 94 – 106.

From the abstract:
This article presents the results of a study that explored factors influencing the choice of a coach, executives’ reactions to working with a coach, the pros and cons of both internal and external coaches, the focus of executive coaching engagements, indications of successful coaching engagements, coaching tools executives favored and the sustainability of coached executives’ learning and behavior change.

Editor’s comment:
Eighty-seven executives completed a survey for the author. The author points out in the text that the reader must take into account that the executives participating in the survey were all previous clients. Nevertheless, the author makes interesting observations from the research about both coaching processes and outcomes.

 

Smither, James; London, Manuel; Flautt, Raymond; Vargas, Yvette & Kucine, Ivy (Spring 2003). “Can working with an executive coach improve multisource feedback ratings over time? A Quasi-experimental field study.” Personnel Psychology, Vol. 56, (1), pp. 23 – 44.

From the abstract:
This study examined the effects of executive coaching on multisource feedback over time. Participants were 1,361 senior managers who received multisource feedback; 404 of these senior managers worked with an executive coach to review their feedback and set goals. One year later, 1.202 senior managers (88% of the original sample) received multisource feedback from another survey. Managers who worked with an executive coach were more likely than other managers to set specific rather than vague goals (d = .16) and to solicit ideas for improvement from their supervisors (d = .36). Managers who worked with an executive coach improved more than other managers in terms of direct report and supervisor ratings, however, the effect size was small (d = .17).

Editor’s comment:
The previous article will be of particular interest to executive coaches who routinely work with 360 feedback results as well as to researchers interested in both the outcome of executive coaching interventions as well as the length of time/number of sessions of coaching provided and the possible relationship between number of coaching sessions and outcomes.

 

Orenstein, Ruth (2002), “Executive coaching: it’s not just about the executive.” Journal of Applied Behavioral Science, Vol. 38 (3), pp. 355 – 374.

From the abstract:
This article challenges the prevailing understanding of executive coaching as an exclusively individual intervention. It discusses executive coaching as a complex and demanding process that encompasses multidimensional interrelationships among the individual, the organization and the consultant. It presents four premises that guide the process, including the role of the unconscious in individual and group behavior, the interaction between the individual and the organization, multilevel organizational forces, and the consultants use of self as a tool. It describes and analyzes three illustrative excepts from actual coaching cases conducted by the author in the manner proposed by the article.

 

Bernthal, Paul; Cook, Kevin & Smith, Audrey (December 2001). “Needs and outcomes in an executive development program, a matter of perspective,” Journal of Applied Behavioral Science, Vol. 37, No. 4, pp. 488 – 512.

From the abstract:
The processes and outcomes associated with an executive assessment program for development were evaluated in a field setting. Data concerning the activities of 104 executive-level managers were drawn from three sources: program participants, development team leaders and professional assessors. Development activity and outcome showed positive relationships to several personal factors, especially motivation, self-efficacy, and preference for intrinsic incentives. Development activity also showed positive relationships to situation factors, especially interpersonal support. Implications for promoting the success of an executive assessment and development program were discussed.

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Hall, Douglas; Otazo, Karen & Hollenbeck, George (Winter 1999). “Behind closed doors: What really happens in executive coaching.” Organizational Dynamics, pp. 39 – 53.
  • This paper presents an exploratory and descriptive study of the reported coaching experiences of 75 executives from Fortune 100 companies. Topics addressed in the paper include the reasons for seeking out coaching, the use of internal vs. external coaches, the role of trust, interventions that were helpful vs. those that were not, and hypotheses regarding the outcomes that occur in executive coaching.

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Literature Reviews

Orenstein, Ruth (2002), “Executive coaching: it’s not just about the executive.” Journal of Applied Behavioral Science, Vol. 38 (3), pp. 355 – 374.

This article has a particularly robust literature review, including several important historical references. See description under “Coaching Processes” above.

 

“Kampa-Kokesch, Sheila and Anderson, Mary (Fall 2001). “Executive coaching: a comprehensive review of the literature.” Consulting Psychology Journal, Vol. 53, No. 4, pp. 205-228.

From the abstract:
Executive Coaching as a consultation intervention has received attention in the literature within the past decade. Executive coaching has been proposed as an intervention aimed toward helping executives improve their performance and consequently the performance of their overall organization (R.R. Kilburg, 1996c). Whether or not it does what it proposes, however, remains largely unknown because of the lack of empirical studies. Some also question whether executive coaching is just another fad in the long list of fads that have occurred in consultation and business. To explore these issues and the place of executive coaching in consulting practice, this article critically examines the literature on executive coaching.

 


Outcome Studies

 

Wasylyshyn, Karol (2003). “Executive Coaching, An Outcome Study,” Consulting Psychology Journal, Vol. 55, No. 2, 94 – 106.

See description under “Coaching Processes” above.

Smither, James; London, Manuel; Flautt, Raymond; Vargas, Yvette & Kucine, Ivy (Spring 2003). “Can working with an executive coach improve multisource feedback ratings over time? A Quasi-experimental field study.” Personnel Psychology, Vol. 56, (1), pp. 23 – 44.

See description under “Coaching Processes” above

Elsdon, Ronald & Iyer, Seema (1999). “Creating value and enhancing retention through employee development: The Sun Microsystems experience.” Human Resource Planning, Vol. 22, No. 2, pp. 39 – 47.

This paper reports on the experience of Sun Microsystems in making career coaching widely available to employees. The purpose of the program was to help Sun employees take a more self-directed approach to the management of their careers. In contrast to the initial concerns held by some stakeholders, results of the program show that employees taking advantage of career coaching services were less likely to leave Sun.

Hall, Douglas; Otazo, Karen & Hollenbeck, George (Winter 1999). “Behind closed doors: What really happens in executive coaching.” Organizational Dynamics, pp. 39 – 53.

For a description of this paper, see the “Coaching Processes” above.

Olivero, Gerald: Bane, Denise & Kopelman, Richard (Winter 1997). “Executive coaching as a transfer of training tool: effects on productivity in a public agency.” Public Personnel Management, Vol. 26, No. 4, pp. 461 – 469,

From the abstract:
This study exams the effects of executive coaching in a public sector municipal agency. Thirty-one managers underwent a conventional managerial training program which was followed by eight weeks of one-on-one coaching. This study group was compared with a control group that received training alone. The treatment group showed a significantly greater increase in productivity than the control group. Descriptions of procedures, explanations for the results obtained and suggestions for future research and practice are offered.

Thach, Elizabeth (2002). “The impact of executive coaching and 360 feedback on leadership effectiveness.” Leadership and Organization Development Journal, Vol. 23, No. 3 and 4, pp. 205 – 214.

From the abstract:
Does executive coaching really work? This action research study answers these questions by tracking the progress of 281 executives participating in a six month coaching and 360 feedback process. The results suggest that the combination of multi-rater feedback and individual coaching do increase leadership effectiveness up to 60% - according to direct report and peer post-survey feedback.

 


Research Methodology

Kkralj, Mary (Spring 2001). “Coaching at the top: Assisting a chief executive and his team.” Consulting Psychology Journal, Vol. 53, No. 2, pp. 108 – 116.


Dunning, David (Spring 2001). “Reflecting on Mary Kralj’s Case Study.” Consulting Psychology Journal, Vol. 53, No. 2, pp. 117 –118.

Lowman, Rodney (Spring 2001). “Constructing a literature from case studies: promises and limitations of the method.” Consulting Psychology Journal, Vol. 53, No. 2, pp. 119 – 123.

This series of articles begins with a coaching case study. The follow-up articles then explore the promises and challenges of using case study research in the study of executive coaching, particularly given the rather immature state of scholarship in the field. Recommendations can be gleaned from these articles about approaches that can be make case study research more useful.

Copyright 2001-2005 by The Executive Coaching Forum