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Why managers don't, coach

MAURICE CLARKE (Harold Whitehead and Partners Limited Maurice Clarke is a psychologist, recently employed as Senior Management Development Officer with the Hotel and Catering Industry Training Board. He is now a management consultant with Harold Whitehead and Partners Limited. His interests centre on human problems in industry.)

Industrial and Commercial Training

ISSN: 0019-7858

Article publication date: 1 July 1971

112

Abstract

The term coaching comes from the sports field, where an experienced and knowledgeable player watches the way the less‐skilled batsman or golfer makes his shots, and suggests ways of improvement — ‘Keep your eyes on the ball, use your wrists’ and so on. Increasingly the development of subordinates is seen as a major responsibility of managers. But what is accepted in principle is found to be very difficult to practise in the day‐to‐day pressures of industrial life, because it involves the interactions of people with each other. This article takes a typical make or break situation. Built on a case‐study, it shows how a deputy, who might have been passed over, becomes the man ready to take the place of his promoted boss.

Citation

CLARKE, M. (1971), "Why managers don't, coach", Industrial and Commercial Training, Vol. 3 No. 7, pp. 308-310. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb003145

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1971, MCB UP Limited

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