Building a Strong Organizational Culture Through
Conversation Coaching Methods
Emilia Ramadhani and Humaizi
a
Universitas Sumatera Utara, Jl. Dr. T. Mansyur No. 9, Medan, Indonesia
Keywords: Corporate Culture, Communication Skills, Coaching
Abstract: In today's competitive era the company is required to have excellent performance so that it is not inferior to
the times. The most effective way to be able to adjust to the times is to build a strong organizational culture.
With a strong organizational culture, a company will have enough capital to compete in this uncertain era
(VUCA). In creating an organizational culture, leaders need to be careful. Culture is essential to the success
of a company. Yet culture tends to feel like a magic power that few know how to control. This makes most
leaders manage it according to their intuition. This paper offers an alternative that leaders can do to strengthen
the culture of organization by improving their soft skills through conversation coaching methods. By having
the ability of the leader as coach, it is hoped that the values contained in the organizational culture can be well
internalized.
1 INTRODUCTION
Interpersonal and intrapersonal communication is an
important thing that a leader needs to have. Ladegard
and Gjerde (2014) emphasized the importance of
companies focusing more on leadership development
programs on internal processes (soft skills) rather
than external (technical) competencies on the
grounds; Effective leadership increases along with
the internal development of the leader.
Communication skills are one of the internal
developments in question.
However, empirical research shows a gap
between the perception of the importance of
communication as a soft skill and its strong relevance
in organizations. In a recent study, the vast majority
(87.0%) of the 2,027 professionals working in
communication departments across Europe stated
that communication has become more important to
their organizations but only 14.8% of them reported
budget increases compared to other functions
(Zerfass et al., 2013).
Humans communicate with each other in a two-
way process, the sender and receiver of a
communication message. The senders ends
information, be it the data, feelings, or ideas they
a
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8520-9724
want to convey, and the recipient confirms that they
heard or saw the information. How recipients respond
to messages can change sender behavior (Tennant &
Toney-Butler, 2017).
This is where the importance of a leader has the
ability to respond in empowering himself and his
subordinates through coaching methods.
Conversational coaching communication skills are a
method of leadership development that contributes to
the performance of the company (Ladegard &
Gjerde, 2014.
The main purpose of coaching is to increase
personal awareness and strength, facilitate the
expansion of identity so that one has more choice
when responding to an event, focusing ahead and
thinking on a positive solution base, having a clearer
goal as well as a commitment to take action in
achieving it. Ultimately, people in an organizational
environment will see themselves as responsible and
in control of their choices. The basic principles agreed
upon by the parties supporting this process are self-
responsibility, respect, acceptance, confidentiality,
integrity, transparency, flexibility and neutrality.
The basic skills that a person who has coaching
expertise will use in facilitating the transition of
others, as well as in applying these principles, are;
active listening, meaningful questions, and
244
Ramadhani, E. and Humaizi, .
Building a Strong Organizational Culture Through Conversation Coaching Methods.
DOI: 10.5220/0011565100003460
In Proceedings of the 4th International Conference on Social and Political Development (ICOSOP 2022) - Human Security and Agile Government, pages 244-250
ISBN: 978-989-758-618-7; ISSN: 2975-8300
Copyright
c
2023 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. Under CC license (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)
presentations. To be able to fully apply these skills, a
leader acting as a coach must develop core and
authentic values and be involved in the process of
learning and self-development that is sustainable in
his or her life. A leader must also be confident inhis
or her ability to activate Self Regulation,
effectiveness, and transformation.
Coaching has become a new trend in the last 5
years as it is scientifically proven to have a positive
impact on increasing personal, professional and
organizational potential. But there are still many
parties who cannot distinguish between coaching and
other development methods. Maka need to agree in
advance the terms coach and 'coaching' which have
many definitions and are used by different parties for
different purposes.
Here are some definitions of coaching:
A coach transports a valued person from where
they are to where they want to be (Webster
Dictionary.
A pragmatic approach to help people manage their
acquisition or improvement of skills and can be
either directive or non-directive (David
Clutterbuck, 1998)
A collaborative solution -focused results-
orientated and systematic process in which the
coach facilitates the enhancement of performance,
life experience, self directed learning and personal
growth of individuals and organizations (Anthony
Grant, 2006)
The facilitation of learning and development with
the purpose of improving performance and
enhancing effective action, goals achievement
and personal satisfaction (Peter Bluckert, 2006)
Coaching is a change process that mobilizes the
strengths and realizes the potential of an
individual or an organization (Institute of
Coaching)
Unlocking a person's potential to maximize his or
her own performance. It is helping them to learn
rather than teaching them (Center for Creative
Leadership).
In this paper itself will be used the definition of
coaching from the International Coaching Federation
(ICF) which straightforwardly states "Coaching is
partnering with clients in a thought provoking and
creative process that inspires them to maximize their
personal and professional potential.
After understanding the definition of coaching,
the next question is how is the practical application of
coaching different from other development methods?
In short, this difference can be explained as follows:
Training: Activities organized to provide
information and/or instructions to improve the
performance of the participants to enable them
to acquire a certain level of knowledge or skills.
Characteristics of Trainee-Trainer Interaction
Mentoring: Developed by more experienced
people and understands the context for
inexperienced people in the form of reference
coaching (usually success stories experienced
by mentors)
Tips: Activities that provide advice
(contributions, tips, suggestions, referrals) from
more experts to less experts in the form of
benchmark submissions / observation results as
observers without any context. Advice is often
confused with coaching even when coaching in
the sense that the book does not give advice to
practitioners at all.
Consulting: Completing activities to meet the
specific and contextual needs of organizational /
personal motivation in the form of complete
solutions in the form of research, plans,
strategies, in the current process. Typically,
consultants work in teams, from two people who
form a consulting firm due to the complex
nature of the work and the long spans of time
they face.
In addition to the four approaches developed
above, coaching as a method of constructive
empowerment needs to be distinguished by
counseling and therapy which is a specialized field
for psychiatrists and therapists. In general, coaching
is not allowed to use counseling and therapeutic
techniques that focus on correcting the client's past,
while coaching assumes everyone does not need
growth improvement (not fixing but developing) and
focuses more on the future (vision).
Thus it can be said that the requirement of being
a leader is no longer a matter of technical skills, but
human relations that are able to empower others so
that through teamwork, the organization can achieve
its goals through people and inter-independent
leaders.
Each organization has its own specifications, in
accordance with its vision and mission, as well as its
culture and values in its management. Nanus (1992)
put it, "A vision is a realistic, credible, attractive
future for your organization". A vision is a statement
containing clear directions about what the
organization should do in the future, in the vision of
providing targets and identifying opportunities. A
clear, consistent and in accordance with the needs of
the organization will be able to foster: employee
commitment to work and able to foster employee
morale, a sense of meaningfulness in employee work
Building a Strong Organizational Culture Through Conversation Coaching Methods
245
life, excellent work standards bridge the current and
future state of the organization.
Furthermore, Jackson (2000) stated that in terms
of role, vision as an aspirational statement for people
who work in organizations in order to plan their
activities oriented towards individual commitment
(personal commitment), service (service),
supervision, results (results), connected management
and response to change (change responsive). Failure
to translate vision into operational activities must be
avoided within the organization. Therefore, it must be
emphasized on how everyone involved in the
organization can apply the vision as a centerpiece to
its operational planning. The success of the vision can
be achieved if everyone in the organization is able to
describe the same intentions of fellow colleagues with
regard to the meaning contained in the formulation of
the vision and make the vision as a strategy for the
work activities carried out.
Jesper Kunde (2000), stated the importance of
vision, mission and values for companies in
organizational management: "For the future business,
the values behind the product is therefore becoming a
more important aspect for gaining a competitive
advantage in market competition. Mission and vision
will however remain empty words if the company is
not united around a set of values the corporate
religion. Corporate religion is the set of values that
unites the organization around a mission and vision".
From the statement, it can be concluded that the
management strategy of a form of business must be
guided by the vision, mission and values that must be
understood by everyone involved in the organization.
The vision and mission requires the help, support of
every individual who has reliable commitment and
competence. Commitment to the perspective of
behavioral science begins with the values developed
in the organization that form the basis for creating a
work culture.
Figure 1: Vision, Mission, and Strategy Differential.
Figure 2: Vision, Mission, and Strategy Differential
Michael Hyatt (2020) in his book The Vision
Driven Leader: 10 Questions to Focus Your Efforts,
Energize Your Team, and Scale Your Business makes
a mapping of how vision is connected to
communication, but theauthor believes that
communication and its impact are not limited to
vision alone, but also mission, and values that exist in
the organization.
Unlike the corporatism of communication that
focuses on communicating vision, mission and
strategy explicitly in achieving clarity, intrapersonal
communication in the work environment requires an
implicit activity (intrapersonal communication) that
reflects vision, mission and values in the form of a
conversational culture in building creativity,
responsibility and action commitment in order to
make it part of personal identity (intuitive).
Then what is the role of the leader in the
implementation of culture with the coaching ability
he has? In this case, youneed a real role of the leader
in managing the values of the organization (Peters
and Waterman, 2004). Leaders must also develop an
organizational culture that can support the
achievement of the vision and mission of the
organization that has been established (Trioctavia et
al., 2016). The role of organizational leaders as role
models involved in supporting, communicating, and
following up on subordinates (subordinates) becomes
important in the successful implementation of
ICOSOP 2022 - International Conference on Social and Political Development 4
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organizational culture (Alvesson and Sveningsson,
2008).
Organizational culture is an unwritten rule and has
even become a habit that lasts since the beginning of
the establishment of a company. Organizational
culture can also be a trademark of a company if the
rules applied are very unique. This is certainly very
simple, but many people and even an HRD in a
company do not understand and understand that
organizational culture plays a very vital role.
Organizational culture is related to the value
(value) of a company. With value, it can be known
how much responsibility the people in a company
(Guiso et al., 2015)(Barth & Mansouri, 2021; Guiso
et al., 2015). Every company or organization has an
organizational culture. Company /organizational
culture plays an important role in creating smoothness
in all aspects that run in the company. Organizational
culture is a foundation that contains norms, values,
ways of working employees and habits that boil down
to the quality of organizational performance
(Fiordelisi et al., 2019; Franzoni, 2013). Leaders as
coaches are considered capable of internalizing the
values contained in organizational culture.
The focus of the problem in this literature review
is as follows:
1. Leadership means what the organization
expects in strengthening the company culture
2. What factors affect the strength of the weak
corporate culture
2 LITERATURE REVIEW
Open communication is considered one of the key
factors towards effective coaching methods (Park et
al., 2008). This dimension refers to the effective use
of communication techniques to establish good
relationships with employees and facilitate personal
as well as professional potential and performance
(Gilley et al., 2010).
In particular, leaders as coaches engage in formal
or informal conversations using techniques such as
asking strong questions, and active listening,
empathetically, and lovingly (Whitmore, 1992;
Graham et al., 1994; Gilley et al., 2010). Framing of
questions is considered important as a coaching-
based leadership behavior that encourages employees
to think about their problems (Ellinger et al., 2003).
The question that voke is the question that stimulates
motivation and further gives rise to deeper awareness
and self-reflection (Kemp, 2009). Likewise, the right
level of empathy, understanding, compassion, and
acceptance creates an environment in which
employees can feel free to express their emotions and
ideas (Graham et al., 1994; Grant and Cavanagh,
2007a; Kemp, 2009). With the help of leaders,
employees gain awareness, engage in reflection, and
improve their ability to take responsibility for their
self-development (Darrat et al., 2011)
In a meta-analysis of leadership impacts, Avolio
et al. (2009) define leadership intervention as
focusing on leadership manipulation as an
independent variable through training, assignment, or
other means. These researchers show that the most
common goal of these interventions is leadership
training and development. Further research has
suggested that leadership intervention programs
should focus on knowledge and skills that can
improve leader effectiveness (Amagoh, 2009). These
interventions generally involve training in a
workshop format, participation in executive
coaching, or a combination of these two approaches
(Kelloway and Barling, 2005).
There are some questions about how leaders can
be directed to display a coaching-based leadership
style. In particular, the leader as coach program aims
to improve the quality of leadership in organizations
by providing coaching skills training (Graham et al.,
1994; Hagen, 2012; Grant and Hartley, 2014). The
increasing demand for leaders with coaching skills is
generally associated with many ofthe benefits that are
recognized to be felt, such as improved employee and
organizational performance (Liu and Batt, 2010;
Ellinger et al., 2011; Kim et al., 2013; Tanskanen et
al., 2019).
In addition, previous research has also identified
leaders as coaches as powerful developmental
interventions to motivate, develop, and retain
employees in organizations (Ellinger et al., 2011).
Although leaders are often expected to apply the
principles of coaching in the workplace, and many of
them express a desire for further training, these
development programs do not always focus on
specific coaching skills . In fact, in order for
operations not to be disrupted, training needs to align
these skills with personal and professional goals
(Milner et al., 2018)
The second approach involved in leadership
intervention is executive coaching, which is an
increasingly popular approach to help executives
develop leadership skills or behaviors and improve
their performance and, overall organizational
performance (Feldman and Lankau, 2005; Gray,
2006). The number of organizations using executive
coaching to develop leaders is increasing every year
as it is considered one of the dominant methodologies
for developing effective leaders (Grant, 2001). An
Building a Strong Organizational Culture Through Conversation Coaching Methods
247
effective way to support leadership development in
organizations is with a strength-based executive
coaching approach (MacKie, 2014). This approach is
based on the discipline of positive psychology, which
focuses on developing positive qualities, rather than
dealing with negative aspects such as weakness and
pathology (Seligman and Csikszentmihalyi, 2014).
Strength-based coaching is based on the
identification, development, and use of personal
power to drive positive outcomes such as goal
achievement, optimal function, fulfillment, and well-
being (Linley et al., 2010b). Inleadership
development, this approach provides a structure that
includes strength awareness and balance, pairing
strength with leadership skills, and aligning it with
personal or organizational goals (Williams & Parker,
2016).
The use of coaching behavior as a method of
improving performance has gained popularity in
organizations (Boyatzis et al., 2013; Chendikia et al.,
2016). However, relatively few empirical studies
have tried to test the efficacy of training and
development of leaders as coaches (Grant, 2001).
This is surprising because researchers have
previously reported that leadership interventions can
be useful in developing and improving coaching skills
(Styhre, 2007; Ellinger et al., 2011). In another study,
David and Matu (2013) found the positive impact of
managerial coaching programs on improved
coaching skills reported by managers themselves and
by external observers. Similarly, research conducted
by Cummings et al. (2005) through quasi-
experimental studies, about the attitudes and
intentions of leaders to become coaches improved
significantly after taking workshops on how to train
their employees.
In the face of rapid change and uncertainty, the
company realizes that managers cannot be expected
to have all the answers and that command-and-control
leadership is no longer viable. As a result, many
companies are moving toward a coaching model
where managers facilitate problem solving and
encourage employee development by asking
questions and offering support and guidance rather
than giving orders and making judgments. The
authors explain the benefits of different types of
coaching—directive, non-directive, and situational—
and note that sometimes there is no appropriate
coaching at all. They explain how managers can use
the four-step GROW model to become more skilled
at listening, asking questions, and drawing insights
from the people they oversee. The paper concludes
with a recommendation to make coaching an
organizational capacity—influencing cultural
transformation by articulating why coaching is
valuable to both companies and individuals, ensuring
that leaders embrace and model it, build a coaching
culture across the board, and remove barriers to
change.
3 RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Corporate culture certainly affects the behavior of
members or individuals and groups within a
company. The company culture that exists in the
company can be strong and can also be weak.
Corporate culture is said to be strong if these shared
values, attitudes, and beliefs are understood and
embraced firmly and high commitment, so that a
sense of community can be created. Conversely, if the
company culture is weak, it is reflected in the lack of
commitment of workers to shared values, beliefs and
attitudes that are usually carried out or agreed upon
(Siswanto and Sucipto, 2008: 146).
The company culture must be in accordance with
the vision of the company's mission. This is useful so
that the vision of the company's mission can run well.
The company culture is a reflection of the behavior of
the higher-ups in the company. Many employees do
not understand very well about the meaning of the
company's culture correctly. What many people think
of, company culture is an attitude or behavior shown
by leaders in the place where they work. Not only
that, company culture is also the identity of a
company. With a strong corporate identity, a
company will not be affected by the culture outside
the company. Even the company culture is very
influential in the expected performance of its
employees. A good corporate culture is able to make
employees work optimally without feeling pressured
and forced
Wallach, (1983) argues that "Organizational
culture is a shared understanding of beliefs, values,
norms, and philosophies of how things work". The
company's ability to perform in a way that
competitors cannot, is a competitive advantage the
company can achieve by creating a culture in which
employees believe in performance (Schein, 2004). A
strong organizational culture increases employee
productivity by motivating them to achieve common
goals and objectives (Schein, 1990; Voon et al.,
2011). Many empirical studies have found that
organizational culture has a significant positive
impact on employee productivity (Barney, 1991;
Duckworth et al, 2007; Ojo 2009, 2010).
A great culture is not easy to build – which is why
a high-performance culture is a strong competitive
ICOSOP 2022 - International Conference on Social and Political Development 4
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advantage. But organizations that build big cultures
are able to meet the demands of the fast-paced,
customer-centric, and digital digital world we live in.
More and more organizations are beginning to realize
that culture cannot wait for opportunities. Leaders
should treat cultural building as an engineering
discipline, not a magical one.
Leader as a coach as one of the abilities that must
be possessed by leaders is considered able to form a
strong organizational culture by incorporating values
in the company culture through everyday
conversations and in coaching sessions. Through
coching, leaders can form the right level of empathy,
understanding, compassion, and acceptance thus
creating an environment where employees can feel
free to express their emotions and ideas. With the help
of leaders, employees gain awareness, engage in
reflection, and enhance their ability to take
responsibility for their own development based on the
values that exist in the company culture.
4 CONCLUSIONS
From the results of the literature study that has been
done, it can be concluded as follows:
1. It takes a leader who has the ability to coching to
be able to internalize the values contained in the
organizational culture. Organizations can make
shorts with the leader as coach or executive
coaching program.
2. Leaders are a major factor in shaping a strong
organizational culture. But leaders need to
reformulate the communication values contained
in organizational culture so that they can be
applied in coaching conversation methods.
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