Team
Coaching: the Living Systems Approach
Gerald A.
Fryer, FSA, FCIA, ACC
“I love to hear a choir. I love the humanity...to
see the faces of real people devoting themselves to a piece of music. I like
the teamwork. It makes me feel optimistic about the human race when I see them
cooperating like that.”
--- Sir Paul McCartney
Teams or groups emerge all the time. Their members may work in
close proximity, meet on an occasional basis, or comprise virtual teams. You may
have observed or worked in teams which have had varying degrees of
functionality and success. I believe that an organization’s single greatest
point of leverage is its ability to transform what amount to groupings of human
capital into purposeful, collaborative and accountable teams. These renewed teams
can become stimulating environments, capable of eliciting continuing
contributions from all their members.
Modern coaching practice has developed the ability to
influence people’s lives, enabling them to learn, grow and contribute to cultural
change and sustainable results in the teams and organizations in which they
work. The Living Systems Approach to team
coaching is the catalyst for the transformation of the individual and the
organization.
Living Systems
Teams are dynamic, rather than static; as with your body or
any other life form in the universe, each team is creating itself on an ongoing
basis. Teams have the potential to learn and to evolve, and to adapt to their
context or environment as if they had a “social identity”. These are the
characteristics of a Living System.
Given their mandate and the context, each team is unique. To
move forward, team members need to look within themselves in order to enhance
their personal capacities. In the Living Systems Approach to team coaching, coaches
support the members in achieving these new levels of awareness, and in creating
their own self-reflective and self-regulated learning environment. This
environment allows team members to continually deepen their learning and
forward their actions towards the outcomes they desire.
As a group of individuals meld into a team, its members can
feel a perceptible mental shift…
“Team: an attitude
held by collaborative high performers who have a common purpose and a mandate
to fulfill.
This definition also puts few limits on who can be
considered as a team under the Living Systems Approach: for example, seasoned
C-suite executives, non-profit leaders joining forces for the first time, or
project teams.
Coaching
supports team members to reflect on how they are showing up collectively and
how they are supporting each other.
The support is offered not by telling or advising, but by
increasing team members’ self-awareness and the degree of connection they have
to the group. The experienced coach provides the appropriate mix of activities
in the moment, in order to advance the team’s learning.
Emerging
from this initial focus are the foundations
for high performance capacity, personal growth, and innovative approaches
to resolving performance and business issues.” *
The Living Systems Approach focuses on fundamental cultural issues
for the team and its members. Besides developing the team’s capability to
better deal with today’s major business issues, the aim is to develop the kind
of robust human infrastructure which will serve the organization for the future
as well. Key results are that the team can think more effectively as a unit,
and that its members develop a way to achieve alignment on defining and then
acting on what matters to them.
* The quotation in
this section is courtesy of
Benefits
The main benefits
of the Living Systems Approach are that:
Process
This section outlines the course of a typical Living Systems
team coaching engagement.
Advantages
The Living Systems Approach is a different way to do team
coaching. It works well because:
Conclusion
The Living Systems Approach to
team coaching emphasizes trust in the ability of team members to access the capacities
that they need, individually and as a collective, to move the team towards what
it desires. Once the members become deeply aware of their collective strength
and they coalesce into a collaborative team, they are far more likely to evolve
further, both as individuals and together, to the benefit of the organization
which they serve.
“Through techniques like dialogue and skilful
discussion, teams transform their
collective thinking, learning to mobilize their energies and actions to
achieve common goals, and drawing forth an intelligence and ability greater than the sum of individual members’
talent.”
--- Peter Senge