' Becoming a Personal Coach'
Entering the Field
So you're considering a career as a personal coach, but wondering what's
the best way to enter the field?
Do I need to do a training course? Do I need to get accredited? Where
will I get clients, and do I have what it takes?
Most coaches agree on the best way to begin a career as a personal coach
career: Work with someone who already is a personal coach! Simple eh?
In other words, work a month or two with a Coach; someone who has already
built the type of business or career you want to have, and who can then
help you do the same.
Only faster and more efficiently!
Here are the key steps:
-
Interview 2-3 coaches to find out more about the career and lifestyle
you would be getting into. They can tell you the good and the bad;
how easy, or difficult it is, and ...... how they got started.
-
Hire a personal coach and experience coaching for yourself. But don't
get coached on Becoming a Coach. Not just yet. Be coached on something
else you want to achieve, or something you want to alter in your life.
This will give you the best feel for whether or not this is the career
for you.
It's actually the best training you can get. Training from a live course,
teleclass or book is great. But there's no substitute for the experience
of personally being coached, and seeing how an experienced coach moves
you forward.
For information on how I mentor coaches, visit my personal
coach mentoring page.
-
Once you've decided to go ahead, consider personal coach training.
This will give you resources, insights, tools and support. It will
also help you to build your coach network; other coaches you can call
on for help and advice. We'll profile coach training schools in a
later issue. For now, suffice it to say you should pick a school which
has happy, successful coaches.
Do you require face to face training, or want the flexibility
of teleclass (phone conference calls) training? And shop around - prices
vary. For a list of training schools, visit www.becomeacoach.com
- Work with a coach to build your practice. Some people skip Step 3
and jump straight to working with a coach to enter the industry. People
in this category are usually those with existing transferable skills
(e.g. counselling, or a lot of personal development training), or people
short on cash, and wanting to generate some revenue from personal coaching
before they invest in a proper training course. A coach can help you
avoid common mistakes, and build your practice faster, and with less
effort than you would on your own.
What business systems do you need in place? Where will you find clients?
How will you keep your clients? And how do you keep your chin up when
you lose three in one day!?
In future issues, we'll examine the different training options, provide
tips on selecting a mentor coach, discuss the importance of accreditation,
and publish interviews with new and experienced coaches.
If you feel
ready to start your own personal coaching business, you might like to
visit my site at FirstFiftyClients.com
for free tips on exactly how to get your first fifty clients.
For more articles on success as a personal coach, you can get a free
subscription to the Mentor Monthly newsletter here:
Personal
Coach Newsletter
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David Wood, PCC
Personal
Coach
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