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All of our training is delivered via webinars and The Executive Coaching University Online Training Center.
In the training center you find discussion groups, class materials, webinars, assignments, and more!
ICF Accredited for CCE Hours! We are proud to have earned the CCE (Continuing Coaching Education Provider) designation from ICF.
We are honored to have been Certified by SHRM’s HR Certification Institute.
Matt Jones - Vice President, LMEC
Hey there! Thanks for your curiosity. Here’s a bit more about what makes me tick.
As a thought leader in the mindfulness space, I enjoy working with select individuals like you that are focused on personal and leadership development. We do this by an in-depth exploration of human performance both psychological, and physiological.
Focusing on your unique movement to a life
… Read More Are you a business leader who:
As your Millennial Mentor Coach I can help!
As an Entrepreneur I have led diverse teams for over 25 years. I came to understand that my business success ALWAYS
… Read More Jenna Forster, Mastermind Executive Coach
Director of Operations and Training. Teacher, Corporate Facilitator, Speaker, Author
Are you a female executive who:
I get it, I’ve been there!
Working with women leaders to solidify their contribution to this world is my life’s work.
We will drill down and focus on behavioral shifts that increase your level of success.
After 27 years in business I know how imperative it is to consistently fine tune your offerings for what is relevant for your clients, you and your business. Working as an Executive Coach the needs landscape is constantly changing. Through listening to the needs of our clients we change what we offer in our suite of services accordingly. One area that is a constant and is consistently on the rise in the world is stress in life and business.
Stress is like an odorless gas. It seeps in and slowly begins to asphyxiate us. Before we know it the symptoms of stress show up in our relationships, work quality, and our physical body. We treat these symptoms in a variety of ways from medicine, to escapism and everything in between. These treatments however do not take care of stress itself as the core issue.
My colleagues Drayton Boylston, Jenna Forster, and Greg Styles and I at the Executive Coaching University have committed to taking on this stress epidemic. Each of us has our specialties in coaching clientele ranging from high level executives, business owners, women in business, high performance athletes, engaging the millennial workforce and serving fellow coaches. The brain trust at ECU is constantly seeking ways to serve the highest number of people, for the greater good of all, in areas that have the most impact in behavioral change, for the best results in life and business.
Consider these facts:
By attacking the root of this stress issue we are helping our clients find:
Over the next few months we will be offering a one day Oregon Stress Slayer Workshop and a Colorado Stress Slayer Workshop to kick off our dedication to increasing the happiness level in our clients, by reducing stress in our lives and businesses through mindfulness. We want to lessen this common link of stress and replace it with higher quality of living for you! Keep watch for other offerings as we continue to serve the greatest number for the greatest good through coaching. Take the time to invest in yourself and join us to help reduce your stress. It may just save your life!
To register for the workshops in Salem, Oregon or Denver, Colorado click the links above. For more information about other locations and dates or to bring us into your organization or city please contact us here: 1.800.251.1696 or email us.
I am often confronted with the question “Why are you sending these blogs to me? I’m not an executive!” from those non-business executives to whom I forward ECU blogs. After all, we are the “Executive Coaching University”, so all our material is targeted only to those seen as business executives, right? Wrong!
In my mind the term “executive” is more adjective than noun – it describes how someone approaches her life rather than who she is and is synonymous with “peak performer”…someone who desires to live life at the highest level possible.
An executive/peak performer:
An executive/peak performer:
An executive/peak performer:
An executive/peak performer:
An executive/peak performer:
An executive/peak performer:
High level performers wear many different hats and hold many different roles within our society. Yet, they share the characteristics outlined above.
If you are reading this you are an executive regardless your official “title”!
Welcome executive – now pass it on to your brother and sister high performers!
Find out more about Greg here.
We just received word that our flagship Executive Coaching Training Program (CMEC) was approved by the International Coach Federation! We can now award 15 CCEUs (credit hours) toward coaching certifications with the ICF. This is a wonderful compliment to our SHRM certifications.
This is such a beautiful reflection on our entire team. Congratulations to all of you!
Many thanks to all of you for your support over the years. We are so blessed…
You can find details here:
http://www.executivecoachinguniversity.com/
Warmly,
Drayton
Founder and CEO
According to Gallop (and other leading survey firms) here is the reality:
What do you think of these smelling salts?!
Coaching can address all of these issues…in fact; it may well be the ONLY thing that can cure these workplace “ills.”
If you don’t have a coaching strategy in your organization, I can guarantee you one thing—these statistics will not go down…
Coaching is the “cure.” Isn’t it time you used coaching to focus on your most important asset…your people?
A. Drayton Boylston
Founder and CEO
Executive Coaching University
© 2013 and beyond Executive Coaching University. All rights reserved.
Are Leading or just Managing?
Pretty sad facts.
Guess what? They more than likely apply to your organization too.
And...
If you manage people, you own this!
What’s happening within our workforce to make these statistics a reality?
In the United States employee engagement only averages 30%. That's it.
Why?
It comes down to poor leadership.
We have spent so much energy creating “good managers” that we have become disengaged with what it means to be a good leader.
Managing comes from a need to produce an outcome, which of course, is important. However, when we can move to a place of leading those around us the organizational momentum transforms. More than anything employees want to make a contribution. Once they feel that they are, they stay...and they stay engaged. Which boosts your bottom line.
If you have the management skills without the leadership skills your career will plateau at some point. That is a fact.
The soft skills that good leaders possess are going to be in high demand as the battle for top talent continues to increase. Are you ready?
Click here to find out more about Jenna.
Want to learn how to become a better leader? Click here for details.
Coaching In The Workplace - Training for Executives, Managers, and HR Professionals
© 2014 and beyond Executive Coaching University. All rights reserved.
While our time together progressed, my client must have glanced towards, or checked in some way, her “smart phone” three or four times over the course of our first fifteen minutes.
I commented on her split attention and asked her to turn off the phone and just be focused on our time together for the next forty five minutes – fully focused upon our work. The look on her face would have lead someone not knowing my request, to think I had asked her to do something exceptionally distasteful…maybe even illegal!
Through our discussion around my request it became quite clear that she had NEVER turned off her phone – it was always on. This meant she was always connected, always available, always “on.”
She explained that this level of being available and connected was the status quo at her corporation and essentially had been the status quo since she was at University. “What if I miss something really important?” she asked. “I’m not productive if I’m not juggling a number of issues, projects, or conversations at once!” she stated.
This multitasking misconception arises quite often, especially with high performers who see their success as driven by the ability to do many tasks at the same time.
Yet, there is a downside to always being “on.” Consider:
Is it possible that any of the above might contribute to the 33% worker productivity rate in the U.S? 33%!!!
There are also other, more personal costs. This particular client was referred to me due to increasing conflicts between her staff and those in her chain of command – she had become “hard to work with” and was close to losing the job she so valued.
Additionally, her marriage was on the verge of divorce and she had been diagnosed with digestive/intestinal issues primarily caused by stress.
Coincidence? Not likely!
Sound familiar? Chances are if you are reading this then you have experienced, or know someone close to you who has experienced, a very similar chain of events.
Take time to focus within the moment, express gratitude, and disconnect at least once daily. You will find you are actually more productive, healthier, and happier. Then lead all those around you to do the same!
Greg Styles
Director of Special Projects
© 2013 and beyond Executive Coaching University. All rights reserved.