Coaching — developing people by helping them think and grow rather than just directing them — is a powerful leadership capability. Here is what coaching your team well involves.
From telling to developing
Coaching represents a shift from directing to developing — from telling people what to do toward helping them think it through, solve problems, and grow their own capability. Rather than simply giving answers, a coaching leader asks questions, offers guidance, and helps people develop their own judgement and skills. This shift from telling to developing is at the heart of coaching, and it builds more capable, independent leaders over time, in contrast to a purely directive style that can keep people dependent and underdeveloped.
Investing in growth
Coaching takes genuine investment of time and attention in people's development — engaging with their thinking, helping them work through challenges, and supporting their growth, which takes more effort than simply directing. Leaders who genuinely invest in coaching their people, treating their development as a real priority, build stronger teams; those who see it as a distraction from 'real work' miss one of leadership's highest-leverage activities. This genuine investment in people's growth is central to coaching well and to building lasting team capability.
Knowing when to coach
Coaching is not always the right mode — sometimes a leader needs to direct, decide, or act quickly, and not everything is a coaching moment. Good coaching leaders have the judgement to know when to coach (developing capability, working through challenges) and when to direct (urgency, clear answers needed). Applying coaching where it develops people, while retaining the ability to direct when needed, is part of doing it well. This judgement about when to coach versus direct distinguishes skilled coaching leaders from those who misapply either mode.
Building a stronger team
The payoff of coaching is a stronger, more capable, more independent leadership team — leaders who think well, solve problems, and grow, rather than depending on being told. Over time, a leader who coaches builds a team that can take on more, decide well, and develop others in turn. This connects directly to building a high-performing team and to developing future leaders. Coaching is one of the most valuable ways a leader multiplies their impact through others.
Building a capable leadership team?
We help businesses build and develop leadership teams that are capable, independent, and ready to grow.
Building a Leadership Team →Frequently asked questions
What does coaching your leadership team involve?
Developing your leaders by helping them think, solve problems, and grow — through questions, guidance, and support — rather than just directing them. It takes shifting from telling to developing, genuinely investing time in people's growth, and the judgement to know when to coach and when to direct.
What is the difference between coaching and directing?
Directing is telling people what to do; coaching is helping them think it through and develop their own judgement and capability. Good leaders coach to build capability and independence, but retain the ability to direct when urgency or clarity requires it — applying each where it fits.
Related: Giving Feedback as a Leader · How to Build a High-Performing Leadership Team · Leadership Development & Succession
Ready to talk?
Whether you're planning a leadership search or simply exploring, we'd be glad to have a confidential, no-obligation conversation.
Get in touch

