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7 Characteristics of the Relationship-Driven Coach

June 23, 2014 • By Stack.com

7 Characteristics of the Relationship-Driven Coach

By: Rod Olson

Provided by: - Stack.com




Pro sports organizations value coaches who build relationships and demand accountability from every player on their teams.

Pete Carroll, head coach of the Super Bowl-champion Seattle Seahawks, is a prime example of a coach who isn't afraid to build personal relationships with his players, and not just on a surface level. Carroll is truly committed to making his players feel cared about and loved.

Pete Carroll, head coach of the Super Bowl-champion Seattle Seahawks, is a prime example of a coach who isn't afraid to build personal relationships with his players, and not just on a surface level. Carroll is truly committed to making his players feel cared about and loved.

As I consult with high school and collegiate athletic directors who are in the process of hiring a coach, the most important questions that arise are "Can he or she relate to the athletes?" and "Is he or she a relationship-driven coach, or a win-at-all-costs coach?"

READ MORE: NFL Coach of the Year Bruce Arians on "Winning Big in Relationships"

Here are the seven characteristics we teach coaches who wish to become relationship-driven leaders:

1. They See Themselves as Mentors, Not Just Coaches

They not only coach the technical and tactical aspects of the game, they also focus on developing the whole person. Mentors seek to have lifelong relationships. They are relational and they hold their athletes accountable.

2. They are Teachers, Not Screamers

They are process-driven rather than results-driven, and they constantly teach while being "easy to please and hard to satisfy." They may be loud and get excited, but they are not mean-spirited screamers who are always looking at the scoreboard.

RELATED: How Coaches Build Team Trust

3. They Develop Trust, Not Fear

Relationship-driven coaches constantly cultivate trust with their athletes through consistency. They refuse to do anything that will dissipate trust, such as using shame and intimidation to motivate their athletes.

4. They Get Personal With Players

They have healthy and appropriate personal relationships with their players. They call them by their first names or give them positive nicknames that bespeak greatness.

5. They Walk Through the Locker Room Without Invoking Fear

The best coaches create a climate and culture in which the players welcome their coach's presence in the locker room. They also know when to give a player some space.

RELATED: Understanding the Coach-Player Relationship

6. They Make Every Player Feel Safe, Secure and Significant

Relationship-driven coaches lead in such a way that makes every player feels safe, secure and significant within the team structure.

7. They Develop the Whole Person

Today's top leaders realize that for optimum performance, they must develop the entire person—not just his or her technical skills. These leaders hit all the components—developing the physical, mental, social, emotional and spiritual qualities of each individual.

Rod Olson
Rod Olson - After a 20-year college coaching career that included stints at Oklahoma State University and Appalachian State University, Rod Olson founded the Coaches of Excellence Institute...

 

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