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Ted Turner With Intelligent Leadership Executive Coaching

March 31, 2022 by Jacob Lapera

TedTurner
Association Leadership Radio
Ted Turner With Intelligent Leadership Executive Coaching
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TedTurnerTed Turner, Master Certified Executive coach at ILEC. With over 40 years of leadership experience in the Engineering, Construction and Services industries, Ted has successfully managed large, complex projects in 31 states and 17 countries and four continents.

His professional credentials include General Engineering licenses in four states and contractor licenses in 12 states, as well as certifications from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, The U.S. Navy Facilities Engineering Command, The Board of Certified Safety Professionals, The American welding society, IMD Lausanne Switzerland and other entities.

He is co-author of the ACCE Decision and Risk Management Professional Study Guide, and his accomplishments have been featured in Popular Science, The San Diego Union Tribune, The Austin Construction News, and other publications.

As a business executive Ted has directed business portfolios exceeding $3.5 Billion USD to profitable, safe, and timely completion. An example of his entrepreneurial acumen is the recent development of a small specialty contractor from $24 Million USD to $140 Million USD in yearly revenue while increasing EBITA from 6.7% to 16.2%.

However, in Ted’s view those accomplishments pale in comparison to the successes in working with executives and others from around the world, bridging differences in culture, education, habit, language, religion, customs, experience, and attitudes to build cohesive teams of people that respect each other’s talents, show patience for their weaknesses, and embrace their mutual success.

Helping individuals and groups unlock their potential and realize successes they never thought possible have by far been the most rewarding experiences in a long and varied career.

Ted is a Master Certified Executive Leadership Coach, focusing on developing leaders, from C-suite occupants to emerging leaders, corporate culture, Diversity and Inclusion efforts, and team alignment.

Connect with Tedd on LinkedIn.

What You’ll Learn In This Episode

  • Member participation – a two-edged sword
  • Recruitment and retention
  • The importance of strong leadership
  • Leveraging shared values
  • Diversity and inclusion

This transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:02] Broadcasting live from the Business RadioX studios in Atlanta, Georgia. It’s time for Association Leadership Radio. Now, here’s your host.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:17] Lee Kantor here another episode of Association Leadership Radio, and this is going to be a good one. Today on the show, we have Ted Turner and he is a master certified executive coach and he is here to talk about associations. Welcome, Ted.

Ted Turner: [00:00:33] Thank you Lee, pleasure to be back with you.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:34] Well, before we get too far into things, let’s talk a little bit about your coaching practice. I know you serve leaders in all different facets of business, but your background includes some roles in associations as well. So tell us a little bit about your practice and your background.

Ted Turner: [00:00:55] Well, certainly so my my background has been in construction and engineering for 40 years, large, major projects all around the world. And so as part of that, I’ve been a member of several trade organizations concerning engineering, construction, trade work, those kind of things. I’ve served on a number of committees, both at the local chapter level and at the national level advisory committees, as well as on the political action committees and and workforce development. A number of different experiences working with associations.

Lee Kantor: [00:01:31] So now for those people listening and that maybe aren’t members of associations left yet, why was it important for you to being a practitioner and working in the industry? Why was it important for you to not only join associations but also to take leadership roles?

Ted Turner: [00:01:50] You know, there’s a number of reasons why a person would want to get involved in an association. For me, I got involved at a early stage in my career and really didn’t know what to expect. I was there really to soak up the information at that point to learn from those that had been in the industry longer, to get the latest tidbits of information and research to be able to network and get creative ideas for different problems we were solving. I was very much into the educational part of the associations and all the unique things that they offered. And then as the years went by, I became more and more involved in setting the tone there and taking on assignments and working in an advisory role in different capacity. So my reason changed over time. I realized the power of having a lot of like minded people, whether you’re trying to affect ways to reach out to the community, ways to to fill gaps in workforce, ways to prepare the next generation of workers, whether it’s regulatory issues. There just was a lot of power and a lot of different directions that you could affect your industry, dealing with a well organized and and good sized association. And that’s true for whatever industry you’re in.

Lee Kantor: [00:03:11] So now since you have been on kind of experience in association at a variety of levels, can you share a little bit now using your master certified executive coach lens on what advice would you give the leader of an association in order to serve their members more to maybe increase retention or to recruit more people, maybe a more diverse group of people? What advice would you give those leaders of associations? You know, having kind of been there and done that in a variety of ways?

Ted Turner: [00:03:47] Yeah. You know, I tell you, that’s a very timely question. There’s there’s a fairly new survey out that shows that 45% of associations in the United States are reporting declines in membership renewals. Just last year, that was only 24%. So that’s that’s a huge issue that they’re facing right now. So so there’s the good news, bad news with that with associations. The good news is, is that leadership is agnostic. The traits that make a good leader in an association are much the same in any kind of an organization. They have to be a constant presence. People have to know that they can depend on them and know that they’re steering the ship with some constancy and some competence. They need to be vulnerable enough to listen. And especially in an association, these are all volunteers. None of them have to be there. They all have a level of passion about what they’re doing, at least enough to sign up. For some, it is just the level of passion that they think, Oh, this might be fun going to some of these mixers. For others, they are truly passionate about accomplishing something and they will jump in and they will work. So a leader of an association has got to have a very clear vision, has to communicate it very well to people so that they understand what it is they’re trying to accomplish. That’s even more important when you’ve got an all volunteer army, all these people have day jobs, right? And so motivating them takes some strength and it takes some some inclusivity.

Ted Turner: [00:05:16] It takes opening up your mind and explaining things and listening to the needs of your members. Because when you talk about retention, which what you asked about and getting new members, number one top priority, you’ve got to show your members value if you’re not giving. A value for their time and their money. They’re not going to stick around. Most of them are not in it just for the social aspect. Like I said, there are some. But you’ve got to give them you’ve got to give them value for their money. Are you helping their businesses? Are you helping their personal growth? Are you offering them products and services that will help them grow as business people or as researchers or as educators or as whatever the association is? Are you giving them unique things that they can’t get anywhere else? Are you helping them to leverage the power of that association? Are you fostering networking so that they can work within a group of people that have the same values? They’re just so many things there. If you’ve got some time, Lee, I can give you an example of some recent things we’ve done on this committee to meet the needs of the members. That I think is quite unique.

Lee Kantor: [00:06:21] Yeah. And you’re bringing up DNI diversity, equity and inclusion. That is obviously it’s a hot topic today and maybe it should have been a hot topic way before today. But how let’s bring that into play here a little bit, because a lot of associations, leadership don’t look like the members. And a lot of times if you go to the Web page of the leaders, they all look alike. And and it’s hard for some of them to make the shift to include other people that don’t look like them. So any advice or or counsel in this area is much appreciated.

Ted Turner: [00:07:06] Yeah. And like I said, that’s that’s the committee I’m serving on now. So that’s my focus now. But it all comes down to member value and diversity, equity, inclusion. Like so many things, we don’t make the shift until it either becomes too painful not to or until the lightbulb goes off. So many organizations wait until it’s painful to make the change. It’s smart to be on the front end of it. We just recently made a presentation to a to an association board about why it is monetarily and morally and every other aspect you want to make of it. Imperative to open up your doors and bring in diverse, you know, diverse attitudes, diverse experiences, diverse backgrounds, cultures. Open up those doors to those other ideas that you haven’t accessed in the past. The demographics of this country are changing that if even if you’re a cynical person, you just want to look at it at the bottom line. You’re not going to be able to attract intelligent and capable workers if you don’t start opening up your eyes and recruiting those that are a little bit more diverse. The demographics are just going to put us all in a bind if we don’t. Now, you couple that with the fact that there is some great talent that just has been ignored for a long, long time women and minorities and other marginalized groups.

Ted Turner: [00:08:34] There’s been no good reason to marginalize them. It’s just been our bias that’s done it and not that that’s always nefarious. Sometimes you just do what you’re used to doing. You just lean towards the people you’re used to see. But but there’s a huge wealth of talent out there that needs to be tapped into. And somebody will somebody will tap into that talent. So it’s either going to be your association or your company, or you’re going to be five years down the road thinking, dang, we really should have gotten ahead of this thing because now we’re hurting for people. We’re not able to compete because we don’t have the good ideas, we don’t have the new ideas, we don’t have the fresh perspectives. Just a slew of things. I know Toyota, when they first started making SUVs, they thought they had the perfect plan. And one of the women engineers walked out and said, well, this tailgate doesn’t work for me. I’m probably holding a baby and I’m trying to unload groceries. And this just flat out doesn’t work. None of the other engineers, all male, had ever thought about the practical application of half of their drivers. The female audience.

Lee Kantor: [00:09:33] Yeah, this is one of those things to me where associations really should take the lead. They have to be the role models for the industry. And if they’re not demonstrating this, making this a priority in the association, they’re really doing a disservice to their industry. I think that this is, you know, if their association isn’t doing it, it’s a lot easier for the industry members to say, you know, it must not be that important. But if they see the the associations leaning into this and doing this and behaving and role modeling this behavior, I think you have a lot better chance of getting the members to step up.

Ted Turner: [00:10:13] Yeah. And there has to be outreach. You have to reach out to those folks that traditionally have not been part of your association. And you’re right, if they haven’t been part of your association, then you’re probably not seeing them reflected in the leadership of your association. You’ve got to face the fact that that’s where you are and go out and show them the benefit to them to being a part of your group.

Lee Kantor: [00:10:33] Right. And at first, you might have to be proactive and go out and and kind of knock on some doors that you historically haven’t. And I don’t think it’s fair to say, well, they know where we are. You know.

Ted Turner: [00:10:46] It’s not fair at all.

Lee Kantor: [00:10:48] But a lot of folks take that that perspective where, hey, you know, we’re we’re out there. We’re it’s not like we’re hiding now.

Ted Turner: [00:10:56] You’ve got to be proactive. And as we’ve built the the participation in the women and minority owned businesses, we’ve been able to partner with municipalities and state, county, federal, you know, local port district to build some outreach programs and also to build some educational programs to get some of these newer women and minority owned businesses in those circles where they can network with those that they can do business with to to do some leadership training with them, to do some general business training with them, to give them access to things that an association buying in bulk, so to speak, can provide at a much, much more cost effective price point. Then they can get on their own hooking people up with mentors in their industries. So there’s a lot that you can do to show them that value, and then that value returns to your industry, to your association.

Lee Kantor: [00:11:50] And especially in today’s world where there is kind of a crisis of hiring and finding the right people. I mean, to ignore certain parts of the population seems silly.

Ted Turner: [00:12:01] We’ve especially in construction where my background is, for years we have faced a dearth of qualified people. It’s been really hard to find folks to fill those slots and it’s only going to get worse. You know, we’ve had something like 6.7 million people. If the workforce just 6.7 more than would have left because of COVID just decided to stop working. It’s just going to get worse. We’ve got to tap into those generations that are up and coming. And the greatest area of growth right now is in minorities in this country. So we’re going to come from that’s where the leadership is going to come from.

Lee Kantor: [00:12:37] So what is some baby step? What’s a baby step in association or a member company can take to attract a more diverse kind of base?

Ted Turner: [00:12:49] You know, it’s it’s hard to overcome inertia in anything, isn’t it? You said it earlier. A mindset has to shift. I was talking with a member of the board of this association. He’s an African American man who his first experience with this association was kind of standoffish, admittedly on his side. He didn’t see anybody that looked like him. He didn’t really have confidence that they were serious about integrating. And in talking to him just the other day, he made a comment. He said they’d been trying for years to do something and they finally decided to be serious about it. And that really is what it comes down to. They made the decision, you got to make the decision that this is something we’re committed to. You need to, again, coming back to vulnerability, reach out to those that have done this, that know how this is done. Reach out to the other associations. Reach out to the people who do this as a living within corporations that they have their outreach and the committees and initiatives. Learn the things you don’t know and start making those contacts and be aware that it may take time. You’ve got to build trust with people that you’ve never had a relationship with. We all like to trust the other human being talking to us, but we all have those reservations, no matter what the setting is. You’ve got to make the decision that you put in the time and you will put in the effort. And it really comes down to that. Nothing is going to start until you are dedicated to it.

Lee Kantor: [00:14:17] And and just like any change in an organization, it has a better chance of succeeding if it starts at the top.

Ted Turner: [00:14:26] Oh, yeah. I mean, you talk about initiatives and there’s lots of studies that show that over 70% of any kind of business initiative fails to reach its its stated goals. And that all comes down to leadership. So absolutely, if the leadership the association, the industry association you use, you’ve got a president or CEO or something, but then there’s usually a good sized board behind them. If they as a group and individually don’t buy in, give it the resources, give it the time, give it their personal clout. It’s not going to happen. Or if it does, it’s going to be much more difficult than it has to be.

Lee Kantor: [00:15:02] Well, Ted, thank you so much for sharing your insight today. If somebody wants to get a hold of you, maybe needs help with their association. You’re coaching practice is a great place to start to have these conversations. What is the best way to find you on the internet?

Ted Turner: [00:15:19] On the internet? You can find me at Ted Turner dot intelligent leadership e c that e c stands for executive coaching. So Ted Turner Intelligent Leadership E SI.com.

Lee Kantor: [00:15:33] Good stuff. Well, thank you again for sharing your story. You’re doing important work and we appreciate you.

Ted Turner: [00:15:37] Thank you so much, Leon.

Lee Kantor: [00:15:39] All right. This is Lee Kantor. We’ll see you next time on Association Leadership Radio.

Tagged With: Intelligent Leadership Executive Coaching, Ted Turner

Jeremy Gustafson With Intelligent Leadership Executive Coaching

March 10, 2022 by Jacob Lapera

JeremyGustafson
High Velocity Radio
Jeremy Gustafson With Intelligent Leadership Executive Coaching
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JeremyGustafsonJeremy Gustafson’s thirty years of experience in business leadership and management has established a proven track record of leading double digit growth for both his firms and his client’s firms. Curious & disruptive at his core, Jeremy brings deep passion and experience to the total picture of successful leadership, client satisfaction and talent development with measurable results. With specialties in strategy, marketing, business development, talent acquisition and change management, he has served in a variety of leadership roles in multiple successful start-ups, growth stage companies and large multinational firms.

Jeremy successfully led a global digital transformation engagement for NIKE, cutting product content go-to-market time by more than 900%, resulting in a large balance sheet win to their favor. Constantly innovating and working through massive ecommerce 1.0 and 2.0 disruption, he has had the privilege of helping enhance the way many top brands go to market and connect with customers.

Over a period of six years, he was part of a very small team that changed the way several top ten retailers bring their assortment to market. His tenure in retail and ecommerce has provided him with many opportunities to provide C-suite teams, marketing, technology and creative leaders with a deep perspective on strategy, implementation, talent and leading change.

With a degree in applied mathematics, Jeremy is no stranger to data and analytics that make today’s business world hum. An avid gardener, cook, watercolorist, collector of vinyl LPs and was voted the #1 Cub Fan (as published in their fan magazine), he is proudly and happily kept on his toes by his three growing daughters as a coach, cook, mentor, homework helper and cheerleader and whatever else they may ever need.

This transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:04] Broadcasting live from the Business RadioX Studios in Atlanta, Georgia, it’s time for high velocity radio.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:13] Lee Kantor here, another episode of High Velocity Radio, and this is going to be a fun one today on the show, we have Jeremy Gustafson and he is with intelligent leadership executive coaching. Welcome, Jeremy.

Jeremy Gustafson: [00:00:26] Thanks, Lee. Nice to see you again.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:28] Well, I’m excited to learn what you’re up to. Tell us about Ilic. How are you serving, folks?

Jeremy Gustafson: [00:00:35] Right. So our primary focus is in leadership coaching, so we do stay focused, although we do coach people at different levels. So C-suite and VP directors, but also my favorite group to work with our emerging leaders or people making or thinking about making a change in their career, either a wholesale change or moving up within their existing organization or similar.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:59] Now have you always been involved in coaching or is this kind of a second act for your career?

Jeremy Gustafson: [00:01:05] A bit of a second act, but I would say this in my twenty five years in business, largely leading marketing and creative firms. A huge part of my job and the part I enjoyed the most was coaching and mentoring the talent both acquisition, development and retention when it made sense, but also coaching people to to help them move on if that was the right time for them as well.

Lee Kantor: [00:01:31] Now is there a kind of a story you can share about where coaching made a difference in your career? Whether it’s you coaching someone and taking them to a new level? Or are you being coached yourself to help you grow?

Jeremy Gustafson: [00:01:42] I think I think both have occurred many times. The one that strikes me in terms of being coached was as a young executive, always feeling I had to know the right answer. Always tiptoeing around that and and having the the CEO of our holding firm say to me one day it’s OK to say, I don’t know. And those simple words I don’t know were so powerful and liberating and showing vulnerability, although I didn’t know what that was at the time, turns out to be one of the one of the key aspects of coaching and being coached. As far as as a coach in my last two years with I always have joined just about two years. It’ll be two years in coming up here in June. I would say the marked difference and those that are experienced huge growth versus more modest growth is is the decision to be vulnerable and really, truly look at themselves and and work work the system and our processes and the philosophy. And, you know, each each journey is unique and different, but that vulnerability concept is one that I see as the key to success.

Lee Kantor: [00:02:53] Now how have you seen the coaching profession evolve at the beginning of your career? It was probably only for a handful of folks, maybe the highest of the high performers, and now it seems like it’s trickling down to more and more people in the organization and they get to benefit right.

Jeremy Gustafson: [00:03:09] And part of what we do when a leader decides they’re perhaps wanting, wanting a coach to help become a better leader is, you know, they kind of they go public with that statement within their organization. And that engenders again shows vulnerability, but engenders a lot of pride within the ranks. Our leader wants to be better, and ultimately there’s interest that picks up and wants a higher level leader or manager goes through this. They will often ask us to come in and do one to one or even some group coaching, as well as leadership workshops. So it’s definitely trickled down. And like I said, my favorite group to work with these days have been that those emerging leaders because they’re just so ready and eager for the help. And it’s it’s really rewarding to see the growth and see what they’ve gone in. And now that I’ve been in the coaching practice long enough to keep up with some of the folks that I’ve worked with. I can say that it’s really made a huge difference in their career paths.

Lee Kantor: [00:04:08] Now can you talk about the decision you made? You were. You’ve had a career that, as you mentioned, was very robust and and touched a lot of different people and a lot of different places. And then at some point you said, you know what? I’m going to go out on my own as a coach. And then from that point, you could have just been Jeremy, the coach sharing what you’ve learned based on all your history and your work history and your career. But you said, No, I’m going to partner with the Intelligent Leadership Executive Coaching Program, and I want to kind of use their methodology and use their tools to help me be better at this coaching thing. What was the thought process there? Did you consider going out on your own or were you always looking for a partner in this regard?

Jeremy Gustafson: [00:04:54] You know, I did consider and in fact, I received two life coaching certifications prior to joining Alec and getting the master coach certification through them. So I did have some of that behind me and I was doing some coaching. What I like about ILC is that we’re all independent business. On Earth, there’s, I think, 13 of us now, it’s a fairly elite group at this point, two years in all of which have robust business, military and other lifetime backgrounds and experiences. But I wanted to be in business for myself, but I really enjoy the time with the clients, right? Finding clients, developing clients, coaching clients. And I’ve never been a big fan of the back office kinds of stuff. I’m kind of a marketer, strategic guy by trade. And so the fact that I’ve got a group that that really does handle a lot of the business aspects, administrate administrative aspects behind us, as well as, of course, the whole program, the philosophy, the process and the tools and the training that we’ve received. So it’s it was an interesting decision. I knew I wanted to be in business for myself after working really across four firms, either startups or roll ups, all of which recap successfully, I felt it was as part of that team. I really felt like it was time for me to be at the helm and. You know, and run my own business and enjoy the things that come from that flexibility, decision making, the responsibility and accountability and so on.

Lee Kantor: [00:06:31] Now you mentioned that you’re really enjoying working with emerging leaders. Did that? Was that kind of your first move of, hey, I’m going to work with emerging leaders? Or was that something that you kind of discovered over time after kind of working with the different, different groups of people?

Jeremy Gustafson: [00:06:48] Now that’s developed a little bit. Given my, my startup and roll up experience, I was fairly certain and you can’t know what you don’t know at the time. You enter a new gig that I would be working with a lot of executives, startups that mid stage startups, you know, at this stage, you’ve got some funding. It’s time to grow. And you know, they may have not received a lot of leadership training that might be brilliant technologists, brilliant strategists or brilliant creative people, but the leadership side might be a little bit underdeveloped in their case, just based on where they’ve been and what they’ve done. And so that really was where I saw my focus to begin with. But as that developed and talking with those folks as they’re bringing people on, you know, and putting them in their first management or leadership role, I prefer the word leadership over management, but both are necessary. They saw the need for coaching and development and really giving those folks the confidence, but also giving those leaders the confidence that their people are being trained in some of the best practices of leadership. And it’s been proven across now about 10000 executives over 10 years through the ILC parent.

Lee Kantor: [00:07:59] Now, when you’re working with these emerging leaders, you mentioned earlier the importance of vulnerability, maybe a little humility, and a lot of those folks didn’t get to where they are at that this moment by being humble and vulnerable in their minds, they got there because they were the smartest person in the room or they had stumbled upon something brilliant. How do you kind of open them up to the power of being vulnerable?

Jeremy Gustafson: [00:08:27] Well, you know, we we use a variety of fairly comprehensive assessments at the front end. Sometimes even pre engagement just to show people, you know, a little bit of a baseline where they are. And one of the things that we look at are natural abilities across nine different leadership traits. You’re born with these, these gifts and some are, you know, more developed and we’re all a mix of those. But also, we take a look at the maturity levels and those and often we see high natural ability, but without the corresponding maturity level. And I think once folks see that and I talk, get them talking about examples. And that’s what a coach will do. We don’t tell folks what to do. We get them talking, thinking and feeling their way through the process themselves. The vulnerability generally starts to emerge because most folks are surprised by some of the results in these assessments, but none of them deny. On my watch have denied. Yeah, that’s not me. They’ve always said, Yep, yep, that’s that’s me. That sounds right. And they’re admitting this to themselves in the mirror. As a coach, we basically act as a mirror for their own self discovery. And so it’s really wonderful to see how the system, the philosophy, the tools and the coaching experience brings that out in these folks. And you’re right, they did not get there by being humble or showing humility, and many of them feel that those are weaknesses. And as we know, servant leadership is probably the most one of the most powerful things in life, let alone business.

Lee Kantor: [00:10:02] Now for you personally, this transition into coaching, I would imagine there has to be some challenge in that. Having a career of somebody who has achieved all that you’ve achieved and rolled up your sleeves and made things happen and and, you know, created something out of nothing. A lot of times and then now you’re being the mirror and now you’re being the sherpa to help someone else succeed. Was that transition difficult or or did part of what I helped you with is kind of retrain yourself to be more of the person? That’s a guide rather than the doer?

Jeremy Gustafson: [00:10:38] I think more the latter, although I would tell you in getting into this business, I always did see myself developing a practice that was it may go beyond me, right? So a leadership practice under the ILC umbrella that you know where we were developing strategies for companies and which I’ve done my whole life. But if we don’t coach folks, you can hand them a new strategy and they’ll just fall back into their old gifts. And so I’m able to do some of that and work with different people in different roles. But as far as that, yeah, it was. I learned something new personally in every session and certainly in every journey with each person I coach about myself and about leadership, which has been a really phenomenal thing. So anything that I may have been missing from that side I found in in wonderful new gifts.

Lee Kantor: [00:11:34] So now you mentioned earlier that you had a story to share about a client that I guess was reentering the workforce, that they are transitioning into a new adventure. Can you share a little bit? Obviously, don’t name the name, but maybe the lesson behind the journey?

Jeremy Gustafson: [00:11:53] Yeah, it was really powerful. And this is someone I had worked with in the past, in fact, was my client and one of my marketing agencies has been watching my practice grow and we’ve stayed in touch over the years. But he was ready to after sabbatical and COVID and things, he was ready to reenter the workforce. He had a fortunate situation where all that was was OK for him and he really wanted some coaching and I think something was gnawing at him about that. And as we got into it and we took a look, indeed what I mentioned earlier, some of his natural abilities as a creative marketing person to the artist side, the thinker side and the creative side were were very high natural abilities, but very low maturity because he had spent 19 years in a marketing role inside a Fortune 50 company where he had to be a driver in an arbitrator most of the time. So while those weren’t clear runaway natural abilities, he’s pretty strong across the board, but those were lower than the ones I mentioned. His maturity levels through the roof on those things. But what that did was he really got to see himself as who he, you know, who he really was and and the things that he said as he went into these interviews and he was interviewing with CEOs of startups that were, you know, three or four hundred people growing fast, high pressure as well as, you know, some of the some of the large, you know, big four consulting firms and such. So a variety. But he said, as I go through this process and to work with you, I’m thinking completely differently. That being out of my comfort zone may actually be my true comfort zone, meaning his, you know, playing to his natural abilities.

Jeremy Gustafson: [00:13:33] He said his confidence was through the roof, and he knew at that point that he could just go take a safe job in a similar corporate marketing role. He said, I know, I know I want more and that I can do it. And he said, it really it really does work so well. We went down a leadership path because he’s run fairly large teams, you know, 40, 50, 60 people at times as a leader, being in that role in a corporation, you know it. He didn’t have a need to flex those creative muscles so much. But so as he went through these, he said he could hear our discussions in his interviews and he could see these people through some of the lenses that we had put him through. And he knew he had much higher confidence of who he might gel with versus not as he went through these interviews, and a lot of them were panels. Of course, he’d interview at his level five, six seven, folks. And so it really pushed him to think very differently by getting to know himself a lot better after. Twenty five years in the workforce, he’s still just getting to know himself, so in a way, he was emerging as a, you know, a creative and an artist talent within himself. But that was that was extremely rewarding and he ultimately did landed an excellent job. And I stay in touch with my clients. And after his first month or six weeks or so, he’s got a very objective view of of this new role and where he fits in and how and and where he can take it. So it was really interesting to see that that change in somebody who had been in a certain role for so long.

Lee Kantor: [00:15:22] Right. He had seen himself a certain way and you were able to kind of open his eyes to a new way. And once you see something, it’s hard to unsee it. And then that became kind of the truth that he really believed. It resonated and he he got the belief that maybe he needed that nudge to trust what probably he felt in his gut all along.

Jeremy Gustafson: [00:15:44] Exactly. He knew something was there. He just wasn’t sure quite what it was. So we were able to we were able to help him help him determine that through. Like I said, comprehensive tools and processes and exercise. It’s getting down to that core purpose. And what does he really want to really hard question to answer? I say that from personal experience and and watching people go through it as well. But once they do, like you said, it’s very hard to unsee something once. Once you see it about yourself

Lee Kantor: [00:16:14] Now, is there any advice you can give the listener right now, something that’s actionable that they could do right this second today that could help them open their eyes to maybe what is possible?

Jeremy Gustafson: [00:16:28] Sure. I mean, if someone’s thinking about that, you know, obviously talking with a coach and most of us, including me, we’ll do complimentary coaching sessions to see if there’s a fit and help people understand the processes and things like that better. So, you know, if they invest, you know, thirty forty five minutes in a conversation like that, they may have a better idea if that’s a path that they would want to pursue. And if so, what kind of coach, right? Whether it’s life, leadership, nutrition, there’s a I don’t know how many now, but there are a lot of coaches and a lot of types of coaches out there right now. But yeah, if they’ve got questions, there are a lot of quality organizations and a lot of a lot of quality coaches that I know would be willing to to talk with them to give them a better idea of what that could do for them. But I think if I could just say one thing, I think if they ask themselves, you know, what am I really good at? What do I really want to be doing and what do I really want, right? I think a lot of people are rethinking those things based on what we’ve all been through the past couple of years, and I’ve seen it. And as as they do that, you know, there are a lot of people are are surprising themselves with changes that they’re making in their life, in their careers.

Lee Kantor: [00:17:50] Yeah, I think a lot of times people are now not settling their, you know, kind of going for that brass ring and they’re not waiting. Maybe till the end they were taking action sooner and having a coach by your side can really accelerate things and smooth down that learning curve.

Jeremy Gustafson: [00:18:09] Yeah, that’s the key. There is just really, truly accelerate that and the work I did with the with the gentleman I was speaking about. You know, I think we probably had 12 or 14 sessions over a nine or 10 week period, which was about the length of his his job search, which is about pretty normal. And we compacted those up front and and truly move through this stuff. You can’t compress it. Not always. Things emerge on their own timeline, right? Not everybody’s ready to admit things right away, but there was a natural path for each person.

Lee Kantor: [00:18:45] Well, Jeremy, if there’s somebody out there that wants to learn more about your practice, what is the? Is there a website? Is there a way to get a hold of you to take advantage of that complimentary first session?

Jeremy Gustafson: [00:18:56] Yes, we go to my website, which is Gustafson coaching, Gustafsson coaching. And there you can book a meeting. I’ve got my calendar set up. Anyone can grab time on there. And it says complimentary session. Maybe do an assessment. Give them a better idea and see if see if it warrants further discussion.

Lee Kantor: [00:19:22] Good stuff, well, thank you so much for sharing your story today, you’re doing important work and we appreciate you.

Jeremy Gustafson: [00:19:28] Thanks, Lee. Great to talk with you.

Lee Kantor: [00:19:30] All right, this is Lee Kantor. We’ll see you next time on high velocity radio.

Tagged With: Intelligent Leadership Executive Coaching, Jeremy Gustafson

Jean Durham With Intelligent Leadership Executive Coaching

February 28, 2022 by Jacob Lapera

JeanDurham
Atlanta Business Radio
Jean Durham With Intelligent Leadership Executive Coaching
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JeanDurhamJean Durham, Master Certified Intelligent Leadership Executive Coach at ILEC

Jean has more than 20 years of military service and has recently retired. The Marine Corps has definitely taught her that organizational skills coupled with hard work pays off; loyalty and teamwork are a must for the task at hand; and that a culture of strong leadership can really make a difference.

Her new calling is to help leaders become the absolute best versions of themselves. She wants to help change the world, and she knows that can happen one leader at a time.

As an executive coach, she enjoys working with and helping people with the same drive, compassion, understanding, and sense of adventure that she possesses.

Connect with Jean on LinkedIn.

What You’ll Learn In This Episode

  • Executive and leadership coaching is more important than ever post-pandemic
  • Help women overcome gender inequality in the workplace
TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:04] Broadcasting live from the Business RadioX Studios in Atlanta, Georgia. It’s time for Atlanta Business Radio brought to you by on pay Atlanta’s new standard in payroll. Now here’s your host.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:24] Lee Kantor here, another episode of Atlanta Business Radio, and this is going to be a fun one. But before we get started, it’s important to recognize our sponsor on pay. Without them, we couldn’t be sharing these important stories today on the Atlanta Business Radio. We have Jean Durham with intelligent leadership executive coaching. Welcome, Gene.

Jean Durham: [00:00:43] Hi, thank you, Lee.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:44] Well, I’m excited to learn what you’re up to. Tell us a little bit about your practice. How are you serving, folks?

Jean Durham: [00:00:50] Yeah. So intelligent leadership executive coaching. We’re dedicated to growing strong leaders at every level, building cultures and and driving results. Of course, so I’ll seize coaching methodology. It includes a proven philosophy system and tools that empower leaders and future leaders to unlock and unleash their potential. So really, Ilex purpose is to accelerate the development of these leaders while helping organizations build and sustain strong cultures.

Lee Kantor: [00:01:22] Now what’s your backstory? How did you get involved in coaching?

Jean Durham: [00:01:27] So I was active duty in the Marine Corps in my transition was slowly approaching. I didn’t know what I wanted to do after the Marine Corps. And and just so you have it. There was a transition coach that reached out to me via LinkedIn. So he and I worked for several months trying to figure out what what it was that I wanted to do, what my calling was, and I knew that I didn’t want a corporate position. I knew that I wanted to be an entrepreneur in franchising. Just it sounded right up my alley. And we went through a couple of them, which I didn’t feel was a good fit for me. But he introduced me to Elysse and I was like, Yes, that is my calling. That’s what I would like to do.

Lee Kantor: [00:02:10] Now let’s talk a little bit about that transition period. Here you were. Your career was in the armed services and now you’re transitioning into civilian life. And for some people, that could be overwhelming, it’s like, I don’t know if I can do anything other than what I have been doing, but for other people it might be like I can do whatever I want now, you know, the world is my oyster. There’s infinite choices. How did you kind of navigate that? You know, the, you know, the trap of some sort of scarcity, but also the trap of so much abundance that it’s, you know, it’s almost paralyzing.

Jean Durham: [00:02:46] Right? I know exactly what you’re saying. You know, it’s it’s a rarity that you’re going to find a marine who truly like joins and then wants to do more than four years. I think we’re all just doing four year increments until, you know, twenty two years passes and it’s like, OK, I think it’s time to move on and do something. It’s risky. It’s scary. Absolutely. But no one, no one ever did anything great being scared all the time, right?

Lee Kantor: [00:03:16] But how did you kind of narrow your choices like you looked at franchising? And I would imagine some of the appeal of franchising is there’s a structure. There is already kind of a roadmap that I, if I’m a good steward to this, then I should become successful. That’s attractive to a lot of people as opposed to you had the background to to have your own kind of internal philosophy of coaching and leadership based on your history. So something drew you to a already an existing methodology.

Jean Durham: [00:03:49] Definitely. I am a big believer in big fan of structure and organization, you can imagine. But the best part about me being a coach with Elysse is that I get to take my experience from before and couple it with this awesome coaching system. And it’s it’s a really nice package of what I get to do. So I don’t lose anything. I get to be me and use the system at the same time.

Lee Kantor: [00:04:17] So it kind of shores up some of the structure and operations that maybe you weren’t familiar with or didn’t already have fully baked. So you can start kind of off and running and just kind of leapfrog from that foundation into your own kind of skill set?

Jean Durham: [00:04:32] Yes. Yes, precisely.

Lee Kantor: [00:04:35] Now in your in the world you were in is a male dominated field, obviously. Is part of your practice going to be kind of aimed at women who are in male dominated fields? Is that an area of practice for you or you’re taking all comers?

Jean Durham: [00:04:52] Of course, I want to help as many people as as I can, absolutely. But helping women who are in male dominated industries, I that is a that is a demographic that I’m very interested in helping. Absolutely.

Lee Kantor: [00:05:08] So how do you go about the kind of the sales and marketing for that? Like, how do you identify people to even start having these conversations with?

Jean Durham: [00:05:18] Sure. I mean, so I was in the Marine Corps for four, twenty two years, and so I know what it’s like to be the only woman in the room or the only woman at the table. And I know what it’s like to have a little bit of time before your voice is heard. But you know, what I learned is that I had every right to be in that room or at that table because I earned it. And sometimes working twice as hard as men is is what it takes. But it is noticed and the people who might have questioned my ability to do my job well that that ceased. And so that’s something that I that’s my unique perspective that I can bring to the table.

Lee Kantor: [00:06:01] And then how do you identify the women out there that might be going through the same thing, but maybe don’t have that support and maybe that inner confidence? Or maybe they have some sort of imposter syndrome that they aren’t kind of worthy of where they’d like to go? How do you identify them so you can help them?

Jean Durham: [00:06:22] Well, it’s it’s going to take a lot of conversation, and that’s my job. And that’s what I want to do is I want to establish relationships with with these folks. And so of course, I I don’t think I can show up at a production company and be like, Yes, that’s the woman she needs. My help. It’s just it’s it’s going to be a lot of meeting people and kind of digging out like what the challenges are and where I can help.

Lee Kantor: [00:06:51] Now in your journey to find IAC, I guess you worked with a coach yourself to help identify a variety of franchises of which you chose ILC. Are there kind of do you see some sorts of referral partners in your future that you could be working with to collaborate so that they can? You can work together to identify that ideal client fit and or serve that group.

Jean Durham: [00:07:18] Oh, sure. I actually am looking into a couple of groups here in Savannah. It’s a it’s a pure it’s like a yeah, it’s like what you said, it’s a referral network, so we’re all out to help each other. I’m definitely joining a lot of different groups in that arena.

Lee Kantor: [00:07:36] Now, when you retired from the Marines and began this kind of journey, does the armed services provide kind of a pathway or are they just say, Well, that’s your last day, you know, good luck. And off you go it.

Jean Durham: [00:07:56] Know there is a transition readiness seminar that every marine is is required to go through upon transitioning out. So the Marine Corps has has set me up appropriately.

Lee Kantor: [00:08:09] And then what was it like kind of that first day that you were untethered from the Marines?

Jean Durham: [00:08:16] It was very weird. I know that’s probably not the best word I could use, but it truly was. It was I. I no longer was required to wear the uniform that I had been wearing for 20 twenty years. It it definitely put my thoughts and feelings about the Marine Corps in perspective. While you’re in, you might be like, Oh, well, this is kind of awful, and I think I really need to move on. And then that last day, you’re like, No, no, no, no, no, I really want to stay in now. I miss you guys already.

Lee Kantor: [00:08:50] Did you find that that you your identity kind of changed because like when you were part of a team like the Marines for a period of time, that’s how you probably identified. And then now you’re a former marine. Do you feel like kind of a little bit of an outsider?

Jean Durham: [00:09:08] I do, and I do. It’s because that’s that was one thing that made me truly unique is I was a female in the Marine Corps. The percentages are so low, I think I made up six percent. That’s a very small number. And then it’s almost like I lost it. But upon my transitioning transition out, I, I did not realize how many people, how many veterans were out there that were like, No, no, no, we’re we’re still a family and you were still a marine and you can count on us and we’re here for you and like, OK, I love this. This is great.

Lee Kantor: [00:09:46] Yeah, it’s one of those, I guess, transitioning from anything that you’ve been so intimately involved in for so many years. It becomes part of you. And then when you kind of take that next step in the journey, you know, it’s it leaves a mark. Definitely now being part of a franchise like ILC also comes with some support and teamwork. Have they set you up to be successful in your market or what are some of the things they’ve done to help you kind of launch your practice?

Jean Durham: [00:10:22] Oh my goodness, this has been some of the most supportive staff I have ever worked with. They were with me every step of the way leading up to me being awarded the franchise. And that did not stop. Once I got the franchise, they I have calls with them on a weekly basis to make sure that everything is going well. They honestly, I had no idea I had someone pitch my story to you on my behalf, and I just I’m ecstatic. Like, there’s there’s only so much marketing I can do. And then you’ve got this extra team out there that’s like posting content on your behalf and reaching out to the media to be interviewed. And I’m just I’m it’s so wonderful.

Lee Kantor: [00:11:08] So let’s share some advice or maybe some of the wisdom you’ve learned over the years for the listener out there, maybe it’s that woman that’s in a male dominated field. What is some things they could be doing today? What some action they could be taking in order to, you know, take their career or their business to a new level?

Jean Durham: [00:11:28] Sure, absolutely. I’ve got a couple of things, so it might be a long answer. First and foremost, lead by example. Women have always been and will continue to be under the microscope, and unfortunately, that when a mistake is made, it’s noticed. So it starts with how you carry and conduct yourself. You know, you want to model and develop the behaviors that you expect. And I want to coach women into becoming more self-aware, getting more comfortable with being vulnerable. And when I say vulnerable vulnerability is associated with feelings of fear and uncertainty, absolutely. But when someone is truly vulnerable, it, it builds trust it. Builds empathy and understanding it opens us up for growth, and it allows us to be our authentic selves. I would like to encourage women to showcase their talents. So I mean, confidence is built through helping someone realize their self-worth. And it’s it’s a it’s a game changer. And, you know, women have a voice and they have a unique perspective that men just don’t have. So when they speak up, it builds credibility and increases their confidence. And I mean, at the end of the day, women might just have to be their own advocate.

Lee Kantor: [00:12:53] Now you mentioned earlier working in the film and entertainment industry, how did you kind of get involved in that group?

Jean Durham: [00:13:02] Well, the film industry, it it fascinates me as a whole. I just like I like everything about it, especially the behind the scenes stuff, what goes into it? But of course, over the past few years, I think it’s gotten highlighted for some, some negative things and. I I wanted to get into that in particular, just because there are certain beliefs about women’s leadership abilities. There are harmful stereotypes. There are, of course, the sexual harassment and women as a whole in the film industry, they’re underrepresented. And so that’s that’s definitely an area that I would like to to try to help.

Lee Kantor: [00:13:48] Yeah. And Georgia has this, you know, kind of a this burgeoning film industry that we are taking the country in the world by storm, by producing so much stuff here. So there’s definitely opportunity.

Jean Durham: [00:14:00] Oh, definitely. Oh my gosh. Great state.

Lee Kantor: [00:14:03] Now for you in your practice, is there anything that you would recommend a somebody transitioning to think about when it comes to launching into a career in coaching? I know you went the route of a franchise, but there’s a lot of other routes for a person. But but to have the confidence and to transfer some of that knowledge and just I mean, the military does a great job in creating leaders. There’s nobody that trains probably more leaders than the military. And I think that this country in the world would be better served if more of the more out there leading, you know, and get some of that brainpower working to make the country better and better place. Any advice for that person to take that step and to get into coaching into a leadership training?

Jean Durham: [00:14:57] Oh, oh my goodness. Because you’re right there, there are so many different programs. Oh, if I keep keep doing leadership development yourself. I just made a post earlier on LinkedIn about how I joined the local Marine Corps League and it’s like, you know, you don’t want to. You don’t want to get the training and then just sit and try to to to train, folks. You have to continually evolve with with what you’re you’re putting out there to the world. So read more Listen to more podcasts. Listen to Atlanta Business Radio. Just continually educate yourself.

Lee Kantor: [00:15:40] Yeah, I think that sometimes when you’re so immersed in something, you might take it for granted and not realize the gift that you have and that that has been kind of given to you, that you have an opportunity to really make a big impact. And don’t sell yourself short. I think that all the people that transition out of the military have a lot to offer, and then businesses would be smart to really think about them as employees. And a lot of those veterans should consider, you know, doing their own thing and helping other people level up.

Jean Durham: [00:16:14] Oh, absolutely. Thank you for saying that.

Lee Kantor: [00:16:17] Yeah, I think it’s a it’s a it’s a wonderful resource that the country has, and I think we take it for granted. And I think a lot of the veterans don’t really appreciate all the value that they have to give. And I think that there’s a lot of opportunity there that we can all benefit by the work and the sacrifice that the military folks have already given. But there’s there’s a lot of work to be done.

Jean Durham: [00:16:42] No. Absolutely, yes.

Lee Kantor: [00:16:45] So now if somebody wants to learn more about your practice and get on your calendar, what is the best way to connect with you? Do you have a website?

Jean Durham: [00:16:53] Oh, I sure do. It is extremely long. So do you want me to just go ahead and say it?

Lee Kantor: [00:16:58] Hey, you said we’ll put it in the link, but why don’t you say it out loud?

Jean Durham: [00:17:02] Ok, it’s if you go to Jeanne Durham dot intelligent leadership for education or for executive coaching.

Lee Kantor: [00:17:11] Right. And that’s G.A.. And you are a smart, intelligent leadership.

Jean Durham: [00:17:19] That’s correct.

Lee Kantor: [00:17:20] Well, Jean, thank you so much for sharing your story today. You’re doing such important work, and we appreciate you.

Jean Durham: [00:17:26] Oh, thank you so much for having me on today, Lee.

Lee Kantor: [00:17:28] All right, this is Lee Kantor UCL next time on Atlanta Business Radio.

 

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Tagged With: Intelligent Leadership Executive Coaching, Jean Durham

Dirk van der Vaart With Intelligent Leadership Executive Coaching

August 5, 2021 by Jacob Lapera

DirkvanderVaart
Coach The Coach
Dirk van der Vaart With Intelligent Leadership Executive Coaching
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ilec

DirkvanderVaartDirk van der Vaart has 30 years of experience in the defense and security industry and has served in executive, operations and business development roles throughout his career, including overseas projects in more than 22 countries.

Dirk most recently served as President of a US subsidiary of global defense and aerospace conglomerate, Ultra Group. Prior to Ultra, Dirk held the position of Chief Operating Officer (COO) at an advanced technology company dedicated to the development of intelligent optical inspection systems. He previously served as President of GardaWorld Government Services.

Earlier in his career, he served in senior business development and strategy roles at Global Group, Raytheon, American Systems and ManTech. Dirk’s start-up experience includes a role as vice president and general manager for an Israeli tactical radar innovator. He also formed a company in Iraq, spending nearly two years in Baghdad at the height of the conflict there. Before entering the defense industry, Dirk served 11 years as a special operations officer in the Intelligence Community and was also a Port Security officer in the Coast Guard Reserve.

He is fluent in Italian, Dutch, French, German, and Spanish; and is currently studying Hebrew and Arabic. Dirk holds a BA degree in journalism and political science from Messiah College and an MBA in international business from The George Washington University.

When not riding horses, he shoots in the Precision Rifle Series and competes in the Kayak Bass Fishing regional circuit.

Connect with Dirk on LinkedIn.

What You’ll Learn In This Episode

  • When a position opens up, almost always someone from outside is hired to fill the position
  • For most people, they need to leave to take the next step in their career

This transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix.

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:02] Broadcasting live from the Business RadioX Studios in Atlanta, Georgia, it’s time for Coach the Coach Radio brought to you by the Business RadioX ambassador program, the no cost business development strategy for coaches who want to spend more time serving local business clients and less time selling them. Go to BRXAmbassador.com to learn more. Now, here’s your host.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:33] Lee Kantor here, another episode of Coach the Coach Radio, and this is going to be a good one. Today we have on the show Dirk Vandervoort with Intelligent Leadership Executive Coaching. Welcome, Dirk.

Dirk van der Vaart: [00:00:45] Thank you, Lee. It’s good to be here. Glad to be on the show.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:48] Well, I’m excited to learn what you’re up to. Tell us a little bit about your practice, how you serve in folks.

Dirk van der Vaart: [00:00:54] Sure. I spent about 30 years in the defense and aerospace industry mostly focusing on national security and government contracting. And as I approach the the end of my career, so to speak, I was president of three different companies and had spent quite a few years in the in the executive suite and was looking for a way to sort of give back to the community. And as I looked at my options and the covid pandemic kicked in and we all started working from home, I was introduced to the concept of executive coaching and I found that it really kind of resonated with who I was and what I wanted to do. And in that process of discovery, I learned about intelligent leadership, executive coaching, and the rest, as they say, is history. It really worked out well. It was a marriage made in heaven, so to speak.

Lee Kantor: [00:01:43] Now, when you were deciding how to kind of leap into this second act of your career, what were some of the other choices you were kind of playing around with and exploring?

Dirk van der Vaart: [00:01:58] I had contemplated getting into some kind of retail, so some kind of a franchise, perhaps looking at a number of different options there as well as, you know, the typical what we do here in the Washington, D.C. area, we call Beltway bandits, the typical consulting kind of career where you kind of hang out a shingle and say, I’m a gun for hire.

Lee Kantor: [00:02:21] And so you were exploring that. And then at some point you said, you know what, I would like to serve and help maybe other executives or business leaders that are struggling with an aspect of their business that maybe I was good at while I had my first career.

Dirk van der Vaart: [00:02:40] Yeah, you know, it was it was it was an interesting thing. I had reached a point where I was looking back at my career and sort of who I was and what I’d become and what I’d accomplished. And at that same time was exploring these various options and learning more about executive coaching. And at the core of intelligent leadership, executive coaching is the philosophy that in order to be the best executive or the best leader that you can possibly be, it requires a fairly high degree of self-awareness. You’ve really got to understand how you tick and how you then show up as a leader. And as I kind of went through that process and explored it a little bit more, I realized that for most of my career I was really good at delivering results. Companies like me and companies promoted me because I got things done. But as I look back at that, I realized at the same time I wasn’t really good at bringing people with me on that journey and leaving people better off for having known me than they were before. I realized there was a lot of broken people in my in my wake and that that really kind of weighed heavily on my conscience.

Dirk van der Vaart: [00:03:49] And I said, you know, I was really good at at at the numbers game, at performance, at outcomes. But somehow I missed out on that that truly critical part of leadership, which is really motivating, energizing, inspiring and building up future leaders. Beneath that, I hadn’t done very well. And I wanted a chance to correct that. I wanted a chance to go back and say, how can I make myself the kind of leader that actually builds new leaders under me and leaves people better off than when they started? And that’s kind of what fuels my my coaching process today and what fuels my passion today is that chance to say, hey, there is a better way in this industry and across multiple industries, particularly in this post pandemic environment, where leading from the heart and leading with empathy and understanding, the whole person plays such a big part of what the new work reality looks like. And so that’s kind of really what drives me as a coach.

Lee Kantor: [00:04:47] Now, when you were in your career, did the firms you work for encourage getting a coach or provide coaching?

Dirk van der Vaart: [00:04:56] No, they did not. And that was one of the big things. That was one of the big sort of aha moments for me when I started when I had made the decision to become a coach and actually pursue certification as a master certified coach during my training period and the things that we learned and the exercises that we went through and sort of the coaching that we did as part of that training really kind of served as that aha moment for me. And I said, boy, why didn’t these companies ever invest in me in that way? And what a better leader I might have been if if I had known that there was a such thing as executive coaching that I could tap into and use. And how much better could I have been at the people game if I had been working with an executive coach?

Lee Kantor: [00:05:40] Now the folks are calling on nowadays. Are they are they kind of getting coaching for the first time like you would have been if you were still in your career? Or is it something that they’re kind of veteran coaches so that they’re just kind of going from one coach to another?

Dirk van der Vaart: [00:05:58] Really, you know, I’m finding for the most part, it’s it’s first time Koichi’s it’s it’s people that for the first time are realizing, hey, there’s there’s a new dimension that I don’t know how to do as a leader. There are new things that I’m confronting today as a leader that I’m not fully prepared to confront. And I and I don’t know how to do that. The other thing that I see quite a bit in my practice is folks that have been in a position or in an industry for a while have have risen up through the ranks and suddenly they’re feeling a little bit stuck. They’re saying there’s got to be something more. How do I where do I go from here? What more can I do? How do I have more impact? How do I grow as a person and as a leader and get unstuck from this position that I seem to be in? So I see those two things most commonly.

Lee Kantor: [00:06:50] So now when you’re having these conversations to kind of educate folks on the benefits of coaching, is it something where they’re like, wow, where has this been all my life? Or was this like they’re hesitant to be vulnerable or hesitant to maybe be this kind of introspective, introspective ness that would give them kind of this self-awareness to, hey, maybe I should look in the mirror a little bit and work on some of my own stuff.

Dirk van der Vaart: [00:07:17] Yeah, that’s a great question, Leigh, and and really, I kind of see two very distinct groups emerging in my experience so far, the first group are those folks that kind of have a sense that, hey, I’m pretty good, but I could be better. And there are some things that I realize I need to work on and I just don’t know how to do that myself. And so I would like someone to guide me and walk me through that process. That’s that’s one set of people. The other set of people are those people that say, hey, I’m really, really good at doing this, but I really want to go next level and I really want to be the best that I can possibly be. And they have a mindset, a lot like elite athletes, if you think of any athlete that’s at the top of their game. But LeBron James is of the world, the Tiger Woods of the world, Olympian athletes, all of them have a coach right there at the pinnacle of success. Yet they still work with a coach. And there are there are certain executives that kind of fall into that mindset that say, hey, I know I’m an athlete, I know I’m really good, but I also know that I need to work with a coach to continue to refine and hone my skills. So I kind of see two different aspects of that. They kind of come back to the same thing ultimately. But there’s two different approaches now.

Lee Kantor: [00:08:37] Are you finding that from an organizational standpoint that the organizations are becoming kind of appreciative of coaching to say, you know what, I’m going to assign a coach to all my leaders or my, you know, high potential younger folks that I think could be leaders? Or is it something that every individual has to kind of shell out the money on their own for a coach because it is about them ultimately and their own kind of career?

Dirk van der Vaart: [00:09:08] Yeah, I think the first is what I’m seeing more I’m seeing more and more organizations come to the realization that we need to do something different in terms of our leadership development, in terms of our succession planning, in terms of our employee experience and corporate culture. All of these things tie back to how you recruit, groom, develop and retain top flight leadership. And many, many companies now are coming to the realization that, hey, working with an external coach or developing an internal coaching program really is providing that return on investment. So we’re starting to see that emerge more and more. It used to be that executive coaching was kind of the domain of the problem executive. It would be something that boards reached out to a coach and said, hey, this CEO isn’t quite making it and we either need you to fix them or give us enough evidence to fire them. Right. And that’s probably not the best scenario for executive coaching. I think today the environment is very different. And again, this pandemic that we’ve all lived through for the last year and a half has really changed a lot of perception of what it means to work, what is the workplace and what is a corporate and what is corporate culture really in this hybrid environment that’s beginning to emerge. And in order to successfully navigate that and really grow outstanding leaders to deliver a top flight employee experience and really retain those people that we want to retain and the organization, more and more human resource officers and other boards and leaders are realizing executive coaching plays a big part in making that possible.

Lee Kantor: [00:10:57] Well, I would think that kind of the forward thinking organizations would really lean into executive coaching in terms of not only retention of their leaders that they have now, number one, but also attracting up and comers. If the up and comer knows there’s built in leadership coaching and executive coaching when they’re deciding which company to to partner with. I think that would be definitely persuasive for me if I was taking on a role and I knew that it was going to come with some type of coaching. That’s a bonus that I’m going to benefit not only just to do my job, but that organization. But going forward, no matter where I went.

Dirk van der Vaart: [00:11:44] Yeah, absolutely, that’s very much a part of what what I see emerging in the field today, I’ve started partnering with a lot of executive head hunters and boutique search firms to sort of bundle those two things together as a as an organization is recruiting for and attempting to retain new leaders and bring new leaders into the organization to bundle that onboarding experience with a period of executive coaching does a couple of different things. One, it really eases that transition for both the new leader and the company that they’re moving into. But it really also sets everyone up for success. It sets the team up for success. It creates that sort of dynamic that that is likely to to keep that person on board for longer and really deliver the kind of results the organization is looking for. So that’s one way that the industry is changing a little bit, is now looking at executive coaching right from the start, the minute a person comes on board and sometimes bundled in with the onboarding process. So there’s there’s a lot of innovation surrounding this. But, yeah, absolutely. That’s the trend.

Lee Kantor: [00:12:54] Now, are you finding that because there is this race for talent and it’s getting more and more competitive, especially with this work from home element to a lot of jobs now that the candidate is becoming more and more selective? Is it something that having a coaching plan in place can become a competitive advantage? It can be part of the offer. And I know you’re doing this bundling with the executive search team, but I would imagine that a lot of organizations, when they’re recruiting for the C Suite, have to really be creative in terms of the opportunities now, because people it seems like the employee is is more and more curating choices maybe, which is different than historically.

Dirk van der Vaart: [00:13:45] Yeah. You’re one hundred percent correct. And that trend was already beginning before the pandemic took place. The pandemic has really accelerated that into into hyper speed, really. And think about it, what we’ve all learned during this period is that work can be done from virtually anywhere that you’re no longer tied to a location. The idea of going into an office and sort of being in the office, what I would term activity as being a central item that’s judged and evaluated as a person, as a as opposed to true performance and outcomes. So the culture and the mindset of employees is rapidly changing. In a lot of recent surveys, you’ll see numbers that suggest somewhere between 40 and 60 percent of employees today would prefer either a fully remote or some form of hybrid employment arrangement where they can work partially from home and partially from the office. Whereas if you look at surveys of top leadership and organizations, they’re still sitting somewhere between 60 and 80 percent, preferring employees come back into the office full time. So right there there’s a big disconnect. And what’s happening is, as you said, in this race for talent, a lot of employees and a lot of potential leaders are sizing up opportunities not just for title and pay, but really thinking about it in terms of what is the organization willing to invest in me and how am I going to grow and how am I going to be developed during this experience that I have with this organization. And so you’re very right to suggest that. And it is a trend not seeing it exactly built into offers yet. However, that conversation is starting to come more and more to the front. And I think we’re going to see a lot more of that in terms of organizations being creative and thinking about how do I really create a top flight employee experience for my C Suite leaders, as well as my emergent leaders. And investing in coaching as opposed to training is really a big return on an investment.

Lee Kantor: [00:16:00] Yeah, I’ve got the pleasure of interviewing lots of leaders. And one of the things that stuck with me a long time ago, somebody said their fear was, what if we coach them and they leave? And then somebody said to that person, well, what if you don’t coach them? And they say, yeah, you know, it’s one of those things where it’s kind of a leap of faith that sure, you’re giving them this coaching and hopefully as a culture that’s showing them that you want to help them. And there’s something in it for them to stick around, because the alternative is you don’t and you hope they. Figure it out, but you’re not getting the best out of them, so I think companies nowadays have to take that leap of faith and really invest in their people, because there was a time when people just, you know, went from job to job to job. And if you have it in a culture that makes it worth staying, you’re going to get better people there longer.

Dirk van der Vaart: [00:17:04] Yeah, you’re absolutely right. And a lot of that and perhaps I’ll comment briefly on on what has changed, you know, prior prior to this and sort of the old way of doing things. We talked about training all the time, leadership development, training. And if you were an emergent leader or a newly appointed leader in an organization, chances were of that organization whether they had an in-house, you know, Company X University, so to speak, or whether they sent you externally. But they’d send you to some class how to be a better manager, how to be a better leader, how to think like an owner, you know, those kinds of things. And that was a prepackaged curriculum. So you’d go to this class and you’d receive whatever information they decided they were going to impart on you. And then you were expected to take that back to the organization and figure out how to use it and adopt it. Coaching is very, very different in that coaching starts with the premise saying, let’s explore you as a leader in whatever context you’re leading in in your organization. What is it your organization is paying you to do? What do they expect from you? And now let’s see, what are your inner core drivers? What are the things that compose your worldview? How do you form opinions? How do you interpret events around you? Because how you think determines how you feel and how you feel determines how you behave. And so in order to understand how you’re actually showing up as a leader, you kind of have to unpack all of that, starting with the inside.

Dirk van der Vaart: [00:18:39] And so rather than beginning with here’s a curriculum I’m going to push on you coaching turns that around and says, let’s explore together. And my role as a coach is not really to tell you or to prescribe to you what you must do. My role as a coach is to help you down that path of self discovery, prompter prompt and and proctor some of the difficult questions to ask and say, hey, have you thought about this? And why do you think you might be reacting this way or why do you think you feel this way? And how might other people perceive that and go through a journey like that, combined with some scientifically proven diagnostic tools that can help us unpack that a little bit further, but then say now that we understand a little bit about the inner workings of you, the leader. Now let’s see how we can take that and use that to our advantage to shape how you would like to show up as a leader. And we’ll develop an individual plan around that and then we’ll engage the stakeholders, whether those are people that work for you, above you, around you, et cetera. And we’ll measure that performance. So very, very different from training. And again, the outcome, I think, is much different than what you get from training, executive coaching across the board. Most industry surveys tend to show somewhere between seven and thirty times return on investment for executive coaching. So it definitely works when done properly.

Lee Kantor: [00:20:10] Can you share a story? Don’t name names, but of maybe an executive that was facing a challenge that you were able to intervene and help them get to a new level?

Dirk van der Vaart: [00:20:20] Yeah, absolutely. I was working with an individual in the finance industry and this individual was extremely data driven. In fact, the person held the title of chief data analysis officer and so was really kind of a facts and figures, numbers driven person. This person’s inner voice would constantly say, I’m right until you prove me wrong. And so the challenge for this individual was like saying, hey, I’ve arrived at a certain station in my career. I’ve arrived at a certain level, and I see people around me being advanced and going on to higher positions with greater responsibility. Yet even though I’m really good, I don’t seem to get those same chances. And why is that? So we kind of spent some time unpacking. How does this person think and how does that inner voice really influence how they behave and how they show up as a leader? And so if you think about that, that inner voice that was constantly saying, you know, that data driven, data fueled voice that says, hey, I’m right until you prove me wrong, you’ve got to show up with facts and figures for me to change my opinion. How might someone at the other side of the table perceive that that might be perceived as arrogance, sometimes as indifference, maybe even obstinance, inflexibility, all kinds of different ways that it’s perceived that this individual had no idea and had never really thought about it that way. So we worked on some exercises and we worked on some thought, some thought journeys to sort of flip that equation and say, what if you could change that inner voice from saying, I’m right until you. Prove me wrong to when somebody tells you something, may be forming a question saying, well, that’s interesting, tell me how you arrived at that opinion or that conclusion and does that conclusion build on what I’m what I think is right? Does it contradict what I think is right? Or do I maybe need to reevaluate my own conclusion and see if I can incorporate this new data? And so as we started to work on it that way and sort of change the inner voice to saying from sort of that adamant, strident, I’m right until you prove me wrong, too.

Dirk van der Vaart: [00:22:39] I’m curious. That’s interesting. Tell me more about that. Why do you think that or how did you come up with that particular conclusion once we got this person thinking that way? Suddenly their perception in the workplace and how people receive them as a leader really flipped one hundred and eighty degrees. Right. And they became very popular. And suddenly some of those opportunities for advancement and greater responsibility came down the path for this individual. So it really, again, comes down to sort of really taking a detailed look at the inner core of the person. What makes you think the way you think? What is your inner voice saying to you in in most interactions? And is it productive or nonproductive? Do you have hidden talents that you don’t even know you have that we can really bring to the forefront? Or maybe you have some things that are derailing you a little bit that you’re not that you’re not even aware of? That’s the role of a coach, is to sort of work through that process and guide the coach on that journey of self discovery and then work to say, OK, now that we’ve learned this, what things can we do to develop the positive aspects so that you continue to grow and show up the way you want to show up as a leader?

Lee Kantor: [00:23:55] Now, you mentioned that your career was spent in defense and security. Is your coaching in that industry as well, or is your coaching kind of industry agnostic?

Dirk van der Vaart: [00:24:06] Well, you know, as as as I build up my practice, obviously the first the first place for me to go is those people that know me well. And over the course of a 30 year career, I’ve developed a pretty big circle of influence or a pretty thick Rolodex, if you will. So I’m tending to work mostly in that. However, the example I just gave you was a person in the finance industry, an industry that I have really no knowledge of and don’t come from. So the the the fundamentals of coaching are applicable to all forms of leadership, whether that’s in government, whether that’s in business, church leadership, civic leadership, even to a certain extent in the family. I don’t brand myself as a life coach. I’m really, really narrowly focused on executives and those people in a leadership position that have to build up their their leadership capabilities. But that said, yes, the the the the tenets of executive coaching are applicable across all industries and all applications.

Lee Kantor: [00:25:13] And if somebody wanted to learn more and have a more substantive conversation with you or somebody on your team, what’s the website?

Dirk van der Vaart: [00:25:20] The website is Dirk van der Vaart, D I R K V A N D E R V A A R T, DirkvanderVaart.com or Google Intelligent Leadership Executive Coaching, and that’ll bring up the ILEC website. And from there you can navigate and find all the coaches that are ILEC certified. We come from a diverse set of industries and a diverse set of backgrounds, and part of the success formula for executive coaching is really finding that coach that you can establish a rapport with and a and a relationship of trust, but also someone that shares perhaps a little bit of a similar background or at least has stood in a leadership role similar to the one that you’re in. So again, Dirk Vandervoort, Dotcom or ILEC, Intelligent Leadership Executive Coaching Dotcom, either one of those will get you ultimately to to to connect with me. And you can see a little bit more about my background and the kinds of things I’ve done and where I’m going as a coach and what I’m all about.

Lee Kantor: [00:26:23] Well, Dirk, thank you so much for sharing your story today. You’re doing important work and we appreciate you, Leigh.

Dirk van der Vaart: [00:26:29] It’s been a pleasure to to talk with you and and to your listeners out there. And again, I wish everyone a happy and healthy recovery. And let’s see where this journey takes us.

Lee Kantor: [00:26:40] All right. This is Lee Kantor. We’ll see you next time on Coach the Coach Radio.

 

Tagged With: Dirk Van Der Vaart, Intelligent Leadership Executive Coaching

Ronny Shumaker With Intelligent Leadership Executive Coaching

July 21, 2021 by Jacob Lapera

Ronny-shumaker
Coach The Coach
Ronny Shumaker With Intelligent Leadership Executive Coaching
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Ronny-shumakerRonny Shumaker, CEO of Coach Shu, Inc., is a master certified executive leadership coach as well as an experienced operational and management leader who partners with executives to enhance their leadership skills and increase their businesses operational efficiencies.

Ronny’s forty years of experience in business leadership and management has enabled him to establish a proven record of successfully implementing new and enhancing established leadership and operational strategies. Ronny brings valuable experience applicable to the total picture of successful leadership, client satisfaction and operational processes. He has served in a variety of leadership roles ranging from Controller to Executive Director, as well as the Chief Operating Officer.

After spending over two decades in the healthcare operational area, with a majority of that time spent in physician practice operations and management, Ronny brings valued experience applicable to the total picture of physician practice leadership and operations. His tenure in healthcare has provided him with opportunities to cultivate professional relationships in the healthcare hierarchy, as well as with key city leaders and governmental officials.

Ronny has an MBA, with a concentration in Management, Innovation and Change, as well as a bachelor’s degree in accounting. He has been privileged to serve on several professional and non-profit boards of directors.

He is the proud father of four children and grandfather of seven.

Connect with Ronny on Facebook, LinkedIn, and Twitter.

What You’ll Learn In This Episode

  • Executive leadership coaching
  • Work place culture
  • Post pandemic changes in leadership & culture

This transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:02] Broadcasting live from the Business RadioX Studios in Atlanta, Georgia, it’s time for Coach the Coach Radio brought to you by the Business RadioX ambassador program, the no cost business development strategy for coaches who want to spend more time serving local business clients and less time selling them. Go to brxambassador.com To learn more. Now here’s your host.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:33] Lee Kantor here, another episode of Coach the Coach Radio, and this is going to be a good one. Today we have with us Ronny Shoemaker with Coach Shu Incorporated. Welcome, Ronny.

Ronny Shumaker: [00:00:44] Thank you very much, Lee. I’m excited to be here.

Lee Kantor: [00:00:46] Well, I am excited to learn what you’re up to. I am a big fan of leadership coaching, and I think it’s so important in today’s world. Tell us about your practice. How are you serving folks?

Ronny Shumaker: [00:00:57] Yeah, again, great question. So I’m in I’m in Dayton, Ohio, the great Midwest, and I am a franchisee and a coach with intelligent leadership. Executive coaching is the main thing that I do through my corporation of coach. So I am providing leadership training to executives from the C Suite down to emerging leaders.

Lee Kantor: [00:01:17] So how did you get into this line of work? What’s your back story?

Ronny Shumaker: [00:01:21] So I’ve got 40 years in leadership, the last 21 or 22 years in health care administration leadership. I started in health care in ninety. Is that as a chief financial officer, worked my way up as a CEO of a hospital, a physician owned surgical hospital here in my hometown in Ohio and have served in many roles CEO, CFO, CEO and health care over the last 20 some years, working with a lot of a lot of physicians and leaders in hospitals and physician practices.

Lee Kantor: [00:01:50] So let’s talk a little bit in a macro level about leadership in general. Do you find that leaders are born or they made? What’s your take on that?

Ronny Shumaker: [00:02:00] I think leaders are born with some with some God given ability, but they’re made through trial and error. They’re made through working with coaches. They’re made with working with their staff and other leaders to get feedback on their strengths and their gaps and their weaknesses. So it’s a little bit of both. I think we have the ability we just need some help. A lot of times leaders do. And taking that ability and using it better, using the strengths to it to experience a better leadership role for them and their staffs.

Lee Kantor: [00:02:30] Now, do you feel that if you took a random person, you’d be able to help them become a better leader? I’m not saying they’d be the greatest leader of all time, but they would just kind of maximize their abilities.

Ronny Shumaker: [00:02:42] Absolutely. I think everybody has some type of leadership ability within them and their inner core. We like to refer to it ILEC and as a coach, I have the the the assessments and the tools and the training and the ability to have them look in a vulnerable type of state inside and highlight through different tools and assessments of what their leadership abilities are. Again, they need to be vulnerable and then take those those strengths that we identify and put together a development plan and an individual leadership development plan to to highlight and strengthen those leadership skills that we have inside. So, yeah, I think everybody’s got leadership skills, some more than others. Some want to exhibit them and explore and more than others. And that comes with your personality. But I think we all go we all have some type of leadership abilities.

Lee Kantor: [00:03:32] Now, when you’re working with an organization, are you sometimes tasked with, hey, fix bill when Bill may not think there’s anything wrong with him?

Ronny Shumaker: [00:03:43] Yeah, I don’t I don’t like the terminology of fixing. I don’t think as a coach, we want to take on the responsibility of fixing somebody. What we what I do as a coach is, is work with the client, both asking the client to be vulnerable and me as a coach to be vulnerable with my experience and identify, again, those inner core strengths that they’ve got, get feedback from their staff, from their stakeholders, and figure out a way not to necessarily, as you say, fix the leader, but identify ways to make them a better and stronger leader.

Lee Kantor: [00:04:19] Now, you use the word vulnerable several times, I’m sure that’s not by accident, in order for this to be effective or coaching, I guess in any situation to be effective, it takes some level of self-awareness and humbleness and openness and kind of, you know, the person you’re working with raising their hand to say that I want to change. How do you kind of assess whether the person is saying, you know, they they want to change, but really meaning they want to change,

Ronny Shumaker: [00:04:50] Know vulnerabilities key for the client and and for me as a coach through just building a personal relationship, I spent a lot of time before really even dove into the actual coaching journey of forming a relationship with the with the potential client, making sure they understand that this is a journey is not a quick fix. And for it to be successful, they have to be vulnerable. We get feedback. We get feedback from many stakeholders during this journey, whether it’s their coworkers, whether it’s the people that report to them, whether it’s the people that they report to. And we get honest feedback from from those folks. So what I urge them is we’re going to find out one way or the other. And when we ask for positive and negative feedback that they need to be receptive enough to hear it, because everybody should be on the same page of making this leader a better leader and not as a personal attack and as a coach, I’m vulnerable as well. I let them know my failures as a business person, what I’ve learned and share with them any any of the any of the failures and the successes that I’ve experienced as a leader as well.

Lee Kantor: [00:06:03] Now, tell me about a little bit back onto your journey, having as much experience as you had at the executive leadership level. Why was it, a, why did you choose to go the franchisee route rather than just kind of Romney’s own consultancy route?

Ronny Shumaker: [00:06:20] Well, what ILEC brings to the table is a proven set of tools and assessments and training, part of what I like about the franchises in any way and coaching. There was a there was an arts and a science to it. So the franchise provides the science part of it and I provide the art part of it. I provide my personality, my story, my background, but I have a set of proven set of tools through assessment’s development plans, core purpose exercises that allow me to use a proven set of tools proven over 12000 individual leaders over over the the entire world that we that we’ve studied over the last 10 to 20 years. So I’m using those tools. So that’s why I went to franchise. If I went out on my own, I would be having to redevelop or recreate the wheel. And I didn’t feel like there was a need for me to recreate something that was already successfully proven.

Lee Kantor: [00:07:13] Now, when you went out on your own, did you immediately go into franchising or did you give it a go as an independent?

Ronny Shumaker: [00:07:21] No, I went I went straight into straight into franchising about 13 months ago.

Lee Kantor: [00:07:26] Wow. So then this was kind of part of your roadmap when you were figuring out what your next stage would be, was to kind of join this team?

Ronny Shumaker: [00:07:34] Well, when I was when I was 50 years old, I decided that it was 10 years later when I turned 60. I wanted to be working for myself. I turned sixty three days prior to signing my franchise agreement last summer. I did not know at that time if I wanted to go out strictly on my own or be a franchisee and improvement company through some discovery process and working with some business coaches. This opportunity, along with a couple of other opportunities, were presented to me and I felt like with my background, my desire. I’ve mentored a lot of a lot of young business people in my career. I’ve spoken to leadership and management to a lot of different professional organizations. So I have this is a perfect example, perfect time. And with covid in many other jobs not out there because of the covid pandemic and people’s budgets being tighter, I just thought it was a perfect time to jump in feet first in the franchise world and be able to again to use the arts of who I am and my background to do executive coaching.

Lee Kantor: [00:08:37] Now, a lot of your background was in health care. Is that where you’re spending your time coaching now? Are you kind of industry agnostic at this point?

Ronny Shumaker: [00:08:44] Well, I can be industry agnostic, but I am focusing on my contacts in the health care world and in the nonprofit world, in my in my community and not just in Midwest of Ohio, but all over Indiana, Kentucky. I have connections in Tennessee. I’m working with North Carolina and with our with our franchise. We had 12 coaches throughout the country. So we rely on each other’s input in working together. So health care nonprofit is my focal point, but it’s not my only focus.

Lee Kantor: [00:09:15] So what is the challenges that your potential clients? Are having where you’re a good fit to help them get through the whatever that challenge is or maybe take their business to a new level.

Ronny Shumaker: [00:09:29] So, you know, the pandemic covid is present a lot of challenges that 15 months ago nobody even knew was coming, let alone be prepared. Some of my clients I’m working with now, one is an emerging leader whose company is owns a another other types of franchise franchise companies, and they’re expanding. And they want this individual to get some leadership training so that she will be better prepared to deal with the expansion in their business. More locations working with a physician who hire a new a new manager that needed some leadership training on not on the health care side itself. As far as the billing and what comes in running a practice, but working with people, working with the staff, working with the physician. And so that’s that’s what we’re looking at, is it’s a new world out here with post covid people aren’t going back to work in the health care in the health care arena. There’s a lot of now telehealth medicine. So there’s different leadership skills needed and communication skills needed when you’re talking to a patient over a Zoome call versus seeing them face to face in the exam room. So just helping that leader have a sounding board and myself having somebody with 20 plus years in health care look at new and different ways. My my master’s degree is in management, innovation and change. So I think with my experience, my education, I can help leaders of today look at the changes that have been forced on them through covid and look at have them look at a different ways to attack, maybe the same problems with looking at it a different way.

Lee Kantor: [00:11:05] Now, I would imagine, like you mentioned, that since the world has kind of gone remote and is accepting of this new kind of remote communications and remote interactions with their service providers, that it’s a challenge for a lot of folks to maintain that culture that they had previously when everybody was in the same location. And they can see people and shake their hand and hug them and and interact with them face to face. How do you help your clients kind of maintain a culture? I’m sure it has to be tweaked a little bit. It can’t be the same exact culture. But I would imagine the big why in the mission can’t really change that much. But maybe the execution on how they interact and communicate has to be adjusted.

Ronny Shumaker: [00:11:53] Like the change in culture right now is probably our biggest opportunity because it’s the biggest challenge because of what I have friends that work work in the health care world on the insurance side, who went home in March of last year to start working from home and have been told they may come back in January of twenty twenty two, they may not come back at all. And this is a large, large insurance company, the the, the relationship building. A lot of them, if you’ve already got those relationships pre covered, a little bit easier to maintain, especially as the world’s loosening up a little bit with some of the some of the constraints we had. It’s really tough when you hire a new person, you’ve never met them in person. So what I tell my leaders that I’m working with my managers is they’ve got to be able to spend some time, whether it’s on the phone or on the Xoom or teams or whatever, and asking personal questions about that employee and their family, not just about what can you bring to me to make to make you a good employee.

Ronny Shumaker: [00:12:51] But what can we do to form this relationship? Because people strive and yearn for that opportunity to walk down the hallway, like you say, with a cup of coffee and drop it a coworkers office and say, hey, let’s talk about this little problem I got. You’ve got to create that personal relationship, at least in my belief. You’ve got to create that personal relationship first and foremost, so that your staff, whether it’s a coworker or somebody that report to you, is willing to be vulnerable and open up and say, here’s the problem I’m having. So we need to be able to use technology the best we can and look for opportunities to get together face to face, whether it’s at a coffee shop, whether it’s meeting them. And literally, I’ve had people meet in the parking lot of the grocery store because they ran into one another and they’re an hour later talking about what they’ve had to deal with at work. So it is a challenge. But again, it’s it’s looking at different ways of doing things in a different, different world that we’re in now.

Lee Kantor: [00:13:44] And it’s like you said, it’s got to be done kind of intentionally and proactively. This is not something like I believe culture is something that’s going to happen whether you work on it or not. There’s going to be a culture. So you might as well create some intention behind it in some way and be mindful about how this is going to play out and carve out specific times where people can interact in this kind of a more casual way that maybe historically that wasn’t the case in LA.

Ronny Shumaker: [00:14:12] You’re 100 percent right. Every workplace has a culture, whether it’s good or bad, they have a culture. And the leaders, in my opinion, the leaders, are the ones that are responsible for setting the path to create a good culture. So for a leader to, like you say, to be in. It’s easy to be intentional if you can walk down the hallway, it’s a whole lot more difficult to be intentional in today’s world. So they do have to set out time. They do have to carve out time in their schedule and ask their staff to carve out time because you just can’t drop in and have that conversation like it used to be. So, again, to me, all the responsibility is on the leader and the leadership team to create the culture that wants people to continue to to come to work on a daily basis, even if coming to work is walking from their kitchen to their office in their condo, like I’m doing today and talking with somebody on the phone.

Lee Kantor: [00:15:03] Now, when you’re working with a leader about this. Is this something that’s like an aha moment for them that they’re like, well, look, I got a million things on my plate. This is now just one more thing that I got to deal with, or is this something that they’re like, OK, I know this is important. I got to really lean into this in order to really grow my company and really serve my people.

Ronny Shumaker: [00:15:24] It’s not an overnight it’s not a quick fix. It’s not a is not a they may they may realize. They may get a hint or an indication that it’s important, but it’s a process of, again, being vulnerable, having conversations with their coworkers and with the people that the stakeholders that they report to and then setting a plan or a process in place, developing a plan to identify the new hurdles we have in today’s workplace and get feedback on how how this works best. One of my management styles is if I’ve got 10 people that report to me, it’s important for me to understand how those 10 individuals are wired, how they communicate, how they work, and then for me to react accordingly based on who I’m talking to. So if I got an employee that works best at eight o’clock in the morning, I want to be on the phone with that employee at eight o’clock in the morning. Whether I work best a date or a o’clock or not, which I do, I work better at 6:00 AM than I do at 6:00 p.m. So it’s the effort that the leader must take to make themself accessible and vulnerable to their staff as well.

Lee Kantor: [00:16:33] Well, Ronnie, what has been the most rewarding part of this adventure, this new chapter in your career thus far?

Ronny Shumaker: [00:16:43] Seeing a successful singer, successful journey, working with clients and learning more about him, I’ve had a couple of clients that already had a personal relationship with I’ve had clients that I did not know prior to and seeing success, seeing them come back to me when I meet with them on a weekly or every other week basis and say, you know what? This worked. And I felt I felt a win. A small win is better than no win at all. And I can walk out of out of that meeting no matter where it’s at. Confident that what I was able to bring to the table to help them was successful because it’s all about helping each other. It’s all about forming those relationships and having them be successful. I mentored a number of young business people to see where they’re staying. And I have one that I can think of to see where he’s at now eight years later is not because necessarily what I’ve done, but because he opened himself up to input from a lot of different people in our community. That’s what makes me happy and makes me want to continue doing what I’m doing now.

Lee Kantor: [00:17:43] Any advice for other people that were maybe going through that transition that you went through, working for a large corporate entity and now kind of carving your own path? Any advice for them on how to kind of smooth that learning curve?

Ronny Shumaker: [00:17:58] Yeah, be vulnerable and ask a lot of questions. When I went into this, I reached out to a number of other franchise owners, but not in coaching, but in different, different industries. I reached out to people that I worked with in the health care industry that I that I respected their input and I asked him for in my family and I asked him for honest input on what they thought if I if I could be successful doing this. So anybody that is in health care, there’s a lot of there’s a lot of coaches out there. We all can differentiate ourselves from one another, ask for honest feedback before you make before you dove in feet first. And that’s what I would suggest, is not everybody is necessarily cut out to be a coach. And you may think you are. And I think you need honest input from those people around you that know you personally and professionally. Ask for their honest feedback before you make that decision.

Lee Kantor: [00:18:53] Well, congratulations on all the success. If somebody wants to connect with you and maybe have a conversation, what is the best way to do that?

Ronny Shumaker: [00:19:03] So you can reach me through my website, which is Ronnie Shoemaker Dotcom. Or you can reach me. You can you can reach me on my cell phone, which is nine three seven nine to five five zero zero five. Either way, I’ll be glad to take your call. You can reach me through an email, through my website. So that’s probably the best. The best two ways.

Lee Kantor: [00:19:24] And that’s R.O.. And then why S.H. you may KSR dot com.

Ronny Shumaker: [00:19:29] Absolutely.

Lee Kantor: [00:19:30] Well, thank you again for sharing your story. You’re doing important work and we appreciate you, Leigh.

Ronny Shumaker: [00:19:35] I appreciate the opportunity to be speaking with you today.

Lee Kantor: [00:19:37] All right. This is Lee Kantor. We’ll see you next time on Coach the Coach Radio.

 

Tagged With: Coach Shu, Intelligent Leadership Executive Coaching, Ronny Shumaker

Jeremy Gustafson with Intelligent Leadership Executive Coaching

December 8, 2020 by angishields

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Atlanta Business Radio
Jeremy Gustafson with Intelligent Leadership Executive Coaching
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Jeremy-Gustafson-Intelligent-Leadership-Executive-CoachingJeremy Gustafson’s thirty years of experience in business leadership and management has established a proven track record of leading double digit growth for both his firms and his client’s firms.

Curious & disruptive at his core, Jeremy brings deep passion and experience to the total picture of successful leadership, client satisfaction and talent development with measurable results. With specialties in strategy, marketing, business development, talent acquisition and change management, he has served in a variety of leadership roles in multiple successful start-ups, growth stage companies and large multinational firms.

Jeremy successfully led a global digital transformation engagement for NIKE, cutting product content go-to-market time by more than 900%, resulting in a large balance sheet win to their favor. Constantly innovating and working through massive ecommerce 1.0 and 2.0 disruption, he has had the privilege of helping enhance the way many top brands go to market and connect with customers.

Over a period of six years, he was part of a very small team that changed the way several top ten retailers bring their assortment to market. His tenure in retail and ecommerce has provided him with many opportunities to provide C-suite teams, marketing, technology and creative leaders with a deep perspective on strategy, implementation, talent and leading change.

With a degree in applied mathematics, Jeremy is no stranger to data and analytics that make today’s business world hum. An avid gardener, cook, watercolorist, collector of vinyl LPs and was voted the #1 Cub Fan (as published in their fan magazine), he is proudly and happily kept on his toes by his three growing daughters as a coach, cook, mentor, homework helper and cheerleader and whatever else they may ever need.,

Connect with Jeremy on LinkedIn.

What You’ll Learn in This Episode

  • What made the opportunity with ILEC so appealing
  • Who can benefit the most from its services
  • The industries Jeremy works with
  • How Jeremy’s background plays a role in his coaching style
  • How executives should adjust their leadership style to best lead their employees during today’s circumstances

About Our Sponsor

OnPay’sOnPay-Dots payroll services and HR software give you more time to focus on what’s most important. Rated “Excellent” by PC Magazine, we make it easy to pay employees fast, we automate all payroll taxes, and we even keep all your HR and benefits organized and compliant.

Our award-winning customer service includes an accuracy guarantee, deep integrations with popular accounting software, and we’ll even enter all your employee information for you — whether you have five employees or 500. Take a closer look to see all the ways we can save you time and money in the back office.

Follow OnPay on LinkedIn, Facebook and Twitter.

Tagged With: ILEC, Intelligent Leadership Executive Coaching

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