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Action plan, business coaching, career, Corporate, Decision making, fulfillment, Performance

Secret Pal or Powerful Tool—Your Coach

Today The New York Daily News, in an article on business coaching, got me thinking about my profession. I was pondering what I bring to my clients as the article headliner chalked up the advantages of business coaching.

One financial executive commented how much she liked the idea of talking though things she was dealing with. So, I asked myself, “What is that really, especially in a business setting?”

  • Being heard and acknowledged
  • Guided to or off the ledge!
  • Safety without concern of others’ perceptions
  • Invisible to their colleagues, family and friends
  • Watching my clients’ backs.

Of course, circumstances are mightily different in a corporate setting where much of the structure—mission, vision, values, for example, are already etched—from business owners, sometimes themselves consultants who use a coach differently.

How would you benefit from using a business coach, life coach? One of the best tools you can bring to your life and career is auditioning different coaches. You’ll learn something from each one. Most offer a complimentary session to measure a fit. I welcome your input.

Life and career are entwined because how do we take the humanity and life out of the person? Evidence litters the landscape with how people have fared poorly in large companies, suffered burnout, and have lost their way, their relationships, and their sense of purpose. Coaching supports how to integrate and enrich each aspect of a client’s life.

Coaching is a personal process through which clients process their humanity and their connections to compose and sustain fulfillment in their lives. It is a transparent process of a client meeting the self, dreams and desires.

Often at networking groups I introduce myself as a tuning fork or a Muse to draw upon a creative energy that may be tired, resistant or just plain lazy. Coaching works to link your intentions to commitment while we advance your career or business and your life.

The ultimate key for me is how I show up for my clients no matter what their condition. With their permission, they count on me for an unfiltered, clear reflection of what they bring to coaching.

I simply listen and guide, celebrate in concert and show up. With coaching, we can move mountains! —mc

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Action plan, business coaching, career, change, entrepreneurs, Strategy, Visionary

Put Response Back into Responsibility

One of the easiest ways to build your credibility is to be responsive. The impact is resounding because your response is an indication of how you relate to the recipient.

It is simple—if you are communicating outside yourself, there is a message you’re sending that you want someone to receive. Stating the obvious you might say? Think again and how many times people respond based on their own needs like when they’ll call you back—at their earliest convenience.

Consider easy ways to do this:

  • Actions can be fun, healthy and full of personal reward.
  • Action changes your perspective.
  • Action moves circumstances forward.
  • Action is the antidote for procrastination—helps to avoid “getting ready to get ready.”
  • Action underscores your commitment to change the status quo.

What outcomes can you recall when you took positive action? Please email examples to begin a dialogue.

Remember, reacting is impulsive while responding takes a step back and assess the situation. Running from a burning building is a life-saving reaction. Jumping between relationships, jobs, is not.

Keep your eye on the ball to focus your energy and use action to head into your future.

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business coaching, career, coaching, EMBA, Emotional Intelligence 2.0, Leadership Insights, Literacy, Strategic Plan

Business Literacy™ Stimulates Entrepreneurial and Personal Mastery


As the 2008 opens business owners are in a unique position to advance their companies if they tap into an “ opportunity window.” Whatever industry sector you occupy, people are psychologically more open for change as the year turns. Businesses can capitalize on this openness and benefit from insight, rather than insider information, by committing to lead by example and direct open, literate, learning organizations.

Use Business Literacy™ as a powerful tool for businesses or service firms because of its cross-cutting effects (https://www.positivepotentials.com/businessliteracy.htm).

When ideas are uncomfortable to a leader, often they are brushed aside because the leader feels vulnerable. Openness will serve you. Just begin to explore these three elements and examine them with a positive, learning lens, not a punitive one. (This is a top coaching issue because coaching supports the leader.)

This is a positive time to shift gears and dust off your business and marketing plans. Strategic review is a sobering experience when you consider the primary reason projects, companies and services fail: severe lack of planning, not lack of funding. Another slant is to stimulate sustainability throughout your organization.

Custom Circumstance Solutions
Consider these ideas to your particular circumstances. Whatever direction you choose, the secret is to wrap these into an executable marketing plan. Below are several ways to insulate your company using a “slow-time strategy.”

Benefits and How To’s
Here are three ideas you may identify as needing attention within your company: (Excerpts from Cubas’ EMBA (Entrepreneurial Mastery of Business Assets™)

1. My contrarian view, based on two decades of coaching, is to move the company mindset from competitiveness to competence. Competitiveness distracts leaders from their core business and hijacks resources into “Me, too” modes. Competence sharpens the entire organization. Adopt Competence as an annual theme and apply it in your marketing plan. “Broadcast” how you’re doing this in your marketing materials, banners, web messages and voicemail message. This is an effective differentiator for your business offerings.
2. Another useful theme is sustainability.
A company’s sustainability factor can be measured with three core business-stabilizing factors:
• Enterprise-wide communication clarity
o Set the tone from “Gotcha” to “Serve Ya’ ”
o Intend for all to succeed in their roles to enrich the company
• Marketing-branding awareness
a. Internal and external
• Name the emotional attachments to your brand (how people identify you.) Have at least three.
If not, go to work on it.

• Ask yourself, “Would I do this if I was qualified to do something else?” or “Would my staff work here if they had other choices?”
3. Perception (image) management
It impacts quality recruiting and retention. Ever noticed how companies put the length of employment on a worker badges? What do you think when you see the years? That’s subtle sustainability.
a. When the day ends, what do you and your associates think, feel and hear about your business? Hint: how they were treated, spoken to, addressed, respected.
b. How much of your business is referral driven? Are you hunting or gathering? It’s more cost-effective to gather!

The planning void erodes limited resources essential for stability because it squanders the core areas mentioned above.

Ideas to Consider:
1. Invigorate “intra-preneurial” thinking and processes at all levels of your company. Start with gathering input rather than top-down mandates.

2. Limit meetings. A company looses ground when it squanders resources. Consider this communication and Human Capital issue:
—Communicate differently and more effectively. Email makes it easy to address individuals rather than blast “mandates.” A hand-written note is powerful. Team members will appreciate the outreach, know that you’re vigilant and will respond directly rather than drown in anonymity—it erodes accountability.

3. Understand the difference between productivity and performance (like efficient and effective.)

4. Set specific objectives for each category of your business. Have each team member write three bullet points as to how their work supports those objectives. This is useful when conducting reviews. Quarterly progress reports are essential for remaining in “flow.”

5. Understand what you intend to measure for results. Be sure the core elements relate and link back to enterprise objectives. Use metrics to connect them beyond just measure vertical units. Measure relational outcomes. Seriously, measure what price you paid to achieve your results.

As a coach, I often see smart and well-educated people overlook the simplest elements because they want to avoid risk. Coaching serves them to encompass the meta-view (from all around) when they are too close to the issues. The objective is not to avoid risk, but to manage it. The EMBA method is to shift your energy to VIEW rather than DO™.

You can submit your issues to Coach Cubas at mcubas@positivepotentials.com with a question that keeps you up at night. Trade in your antacid for a good night’s sleep when you know Coach Cubas is watching out just for you.

Cubas Contact Info
Michelle Cubas, Enterprise Business Coach and founder of Positive Potentials LLC, is a 2007-08 grant recipient from the City of Phoenix. She brought Positive Potentials to Arizona in 1995 from California. She has co-authored two books and targets fall 2008 for the release of her new book, The Broken Social Contract.
480-922-9699, www.positivepotentials.com. 1/4/08

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