No Image Available

Jan Hills

Head Heart + Brain

Partner

Read more about Jan Hills

Coaching or telling. Which works? Here’s the evidence…

pp_default1

It's Neuroscience Learning Month on HRZone. You're reading one of the pieces that's been written to help you develop a sound understanding of why neuroscience principles are important to business, and a basic understanding of how you can apply them effectively. There's loads more content going live over the month to help you on your way, from articles to videos and podcasts, and it's all available in our Neuroscience Learning Hub. Head there today to read more!

Given the name of my company, Head Heart + Brain, you won’t be too surprised to learn I like to have an evidence base for what I do.

The ‘brain’ part of the name represents understanding the science behind leadership and change. This links to my curiosity about ideas that ‘seem obvious’ to me but that don’t get traction.

I talked about this in my article on Emotional Intelligence. I feel the same about coaching.

Whilst many companies use external coaches to work with senior people, HR find it harder to gain traction for the 'manger as coach.' Companies we work with still have many managers who adopt a ‘command and control’ style; that is telling people what to do.

What is the evidence of which works best; coaching or telling? Is coaching actually more effective than just telling people what to do especially in complex change?

I will look at some of the evidence which may help to understand which will maximise performance.

Brain basics

Let's look at how the brain works in an organisational context.

The brain functions by making connections and associations, linking what is happening now and what has happened in the past, the memories both conscious and unconscious.

This combination creates a kind of map of connections in the brain. No two maps will be the same even though the biological process for creating them is. The maps are created by making over a million new connections every second.

The brain likes order so seeks to connect new information to what is already known, to categorise it.

This gives you some indication of the complexity. The brain likes order so seeks to connect new information to what is already known, to categorise it. Gerald Edelman developed the Theory of Neural Darwinism which provides a physical explanation for how our mental maps compete for resources.

The way the brain seeks to predict and make connections is explained by Jeffrey Hawkins in On Intelligence. He says our prediction abilities differentiate us in the animal world. When we first encounter something we are relatively slow to understand it. Like this article we need first to get the foundations in place.

In learning a new skill for example it takes a while, maybe a few minutes or days depending on the complexity, for it to become familiar, that is create the map. The more embedded these maps the more we free up mental resources. We call this process forming a habit. Habits are run by the older more energy-efficient parts of the brain.

This process of shifting activity, including thinking, from the high-energy, relatively inefficient, prefrontal cortex to the more efficient areas is a basic operating mode for the brain.

Linked to this is neuroplasticity.

Expert Norman Doidge, in The brain that changes itself points out, there is substantial evidence we can “rewire our brains with our thoughts.” Hebbs Law states that ‘neurons that fire together wire together’. So the more you focus on something the deeper the neurological connection.

The more you focus on something the deeper the neurological connection.

When we delve into and analyse a problem we are reinforcing the connections in the brain. This occurs through a process called myelination: the more a pathway is used, the stronger it becomes. When we repeat an action, a fatty covering called myelin coats the neural pathway, making connections stronger and more secure.

Because the default is to go with the pathways that are developed it is hard to change habits but easier to create new ways of working. But it is still difficult to change without focused support and intentional effort.

The other relevant question is whether there are distinct functions responsible for emotional, as opposed to general intelligence. Research by Reuven Bar-On isolated these regions by studying people with damage to the brain in areas correlated with diminished ability in understanding self and understanding others.

His findings clearly point to brain areas which relate to understanding self and others, that is Emotional Intelligence, which are distinct to areas associate with general intelligence.

So with this understanding as background let's look at the impact of telling someone to change verses coaching them to change.

Telling versus insight

A premise of coaching is that people work things out for themselves. The difference between being told and having insight is all about creating new mental maps.

If you are thinking about something like how a new process will work or the reaction of your team to a new strategy you are creating a mental map. These new thoughts are energy-consuming from a brain perspective so you often do this when your brain is freed up from other activity like in the shower or on the walk to work. This type of thinking creates what we call an ‘aha moment’ or an insight.

This is literally new connections happening, a new map or part of a map is formed.

The additional issue with telling is that it is more likely to set up a threat response.

If you are told how to carry out the new process or what the strategy means for your job you still have to create that mental map. So coaching insight is more brain-savvy than telling an employee the answer. To take any kind of action people have to think it through for themselves. They can do this for themselves and immediately create the map when the coach/manager asks questions that create insight or they do it later after they have been told.

The additional issue with telling is that it is more likely to set up a threat response (see more in the CORE video) as the individual’s predictions and connections are different to what was expected. As we have observed before, this difference creates an error message and a sense of pain in the brain. This in turn moves people away from the new information and increases the likelihood of resistance.

Managers who tell rather than coach not only waste their own energy but they are potentially making it more difficult for employees to accept a new idea. Are your managers and coaches creating insight or giving advice?

Transferring skills

You will have experienced that an insight comes with a burst of motivation or energy but this quickly dissipates if not reinforced.

Reinforcing the insight creates new connections and potentially new behaviour. Because this type of action and thinking is hard work, because it takes more brain energy, people may avoid it or give up too soon before a deep map is formed. But people are also adaptable and can find shortcuts.

Conventional wisdom, in many businesses, is that if people understand rationally why they need to do something the change will occur.

A new study provides strong evidence for a "flexible hub" theory of brain which has implications for using skills.

"Flexible hubs are brain regions that coordinate activity throughout the brain to implement tasks – like a large Internet traffic router," suggests Michael Cole, the author of the study.

By analysing activity as the flexible hubs connected during the processing of specific tasks, researchers found unique patterns that enabled them to see the hub's role in using existing skills in new tasks. Known as compositional coding, the process allows skills learned in one context to be re-packaged and re-used in others, shortening the learning curve.

By tracking and testing the performance of individuals the study showed that the transfer of these skills helped participants speed their mastery of new tasks, and use existing skills in a new setting.

Are your coach/managers focusing people on transferring existing skills to the ‘new world’ to speed up change?

Moving to action

Conventional wisdom, in many businesses, is that if people understand rationally why they need to do something the change will occur.

Kevin Oschner estimates 70% of what we do is habitual and that includes your job. As previously mentioned habits are run by the older parts of the brain, the basal ganglia.

Because habits operate out of our conscious awareness our rational understanding is not enough. Coaching on why the new behaviour matters to the individual and designing a strategy might work.

Several things need to be in place to achieve behavioural change. Matt Lieberman says we must go beyond conscious systems and use our unconscious or “reflexive” systems. Goals for the new behaviour tend to be created in the conscious reflective system but we need to also control the unconscious habit system by managing triggers that generate the old behaviour.

Elliot Berkman studies goal setting and achieving new behaviour and his research suggests there are several elements that must be aligned. 

For example in new habit formation there is a sequence:

  1. cue; when to act,
  2. routine; the steps to take, and
  3. reward.

You can see this sequence below:

Are coach/manages working with both systems? Are they creating new behaviour by creating new routines and rewards? Are there strategies to manage the triggers that will prompt old behaviour?

We are social

The science shows social needs are primary in the brain, something many forget at work.

Social pain activates the same regions as physical pain. When someone is put down, or their ways of working are controlled, or they are told what to do, especially publically, a threat response is activated reducing the ability to think clearly.

You know that feeling – “I’m just blank, I have no mental space.” The frontal cortex is drained as the limbic system hijacks the energy. Again, a strike against telling!

This evidence base may go some way to persuading reluctant managers to adopt a different style.

But I am not going to fall into the same trap – and will practice what I preach.  So far be it for me to tell you that telling doesn’t work.

I’ll leave you with a few questions to generate you own insight.

What reaction have you experienced when telling someone to change? When has telling someone to do something differently worked? What has been the benefit for you of creating insight in others? What, good, surprises have you got from asking questions rather than telling?

It's Neuroscience Learning Month on HRZone. You're reading one of the pieces that's been written to help you develop a sound understanding of why neuroscience principles are important to business, and a basic understanding of how you can apply them effectively. There's loads more content going live over the month to help you on your way, from articles to videos and podcasts, and it's all available in our Neuroscience Learning Hub. Head there today to read more!

5 Responses

  1. appreciate the evidence based approach

     

    Great article, great combination of evidence base and pragmatism

  2. good point

    Thank you for mentioning coaching for managers on coaching. it is a very good point. 

  3. Coaching for Managers

    I guess that telling is a habit for managers too – so perhaps some coaching for them to help them ask a question rather than go down the more established pathway of telling might help.

     

  4. Time poor managers

    I agree re your comments on time poor managers. It is interesting isn't it even when people know rationally that coaching will get them a better result they still don't do it.

    One thing I have found helps with sales managers ( we do a  lot of work in retail) is to link the employee 'coaching' to what they do with customers. They would never tell a customer to buy but ask powerful questions to get the customer to see the benefits. Getting them to see the same works with employees can create insight . 

    Thank you for your nice comments!

  5. coaching or telling article

    Jan, this is a fantastic summary of the head, heart and brain aspects of this topic. Really appreciate the way that you have related the dilemmmas we all face in a time-starved world back to the neural basics of how habits change and the role of coaching. This solid grounding back to the research is an invaluable resource. Thank you.

    We work a lot with sales leaders and professionals, who are extremely time poor. Transformational managers absolutely coach their time to higher performance, as their mindset is to do so. We find that many others are not making the time, nor do they sufficiently value coaching, which is surprising given the evidence of how much impact coaching has. In sales you can measure results pretty quickly!

No Image Available
Jan Hills

Partner

Read more from Jan Hills
Newsletter

Get the latest from HRZone

Subscribe to expert insights on how to create a better workplace for both your business and its people.

 

Thank you.