| Literature DB >> 32435218 |
Llewellyn E van Zyl1,2,3,4, Lara C Roll2,5, Marius W Stander2, Stefanie Richter6.
Abstract
Despite the popularity of the term Positive Psychological Coaching within the literature, there is no consensus as to how it should be defined (framed) or what the components of a positive coaching "model" should include. The aim of this systematic review was to define positive psychological coaching and to construct a clear demarcated positive psychological coaching model based on the literature. A systematic literature review led to the extraction of 2,252 records. All records were screened using specific inclusion/exclusion criteria, which resulted in the exclusion of records based on duplicates (n = 1,232), titles (n = 895), abstracts (n = 78), and criteria violations (n = 23). Twenty-four academic, peer-reviewed publications on positive psychological coaching were included. Data relating to conceptual definitions and coaching models/phases/frameworks were extracted and processed through thematic content analysis. Our results indicate that positive psychological coaching can be defined as a short to medium term professional, collaborative relationship between a client and coach, aimed at the identification, utilization, optimization, and development of personal strengths and resources in order to enhance positive states, traits and behaviors. Utilizing Socratic goal setting and positive psychological evidence-based approaches to facilitate personal growth, optimal functioning, enhanced wellbeing, and the actualization of people's potential. Further, eight critical components of a positive psychological coaching model were identified and discussed. The definition and coaching process identified in this study will provide coaches with a fundamental positive psychological framework for optimizing people's potential.Entities:
Keywords: coaching model; coaching psychology; performance enhancement; positive organizational interventions; positive psychological coaching; positive psychological interventions; strengths-based coaching
Year: 2020 PMID: 32435218 PMCID: PMC7218139 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2020.00793
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Figure 1Flow diagram of article selection.
Common elements from positive psychological coaching definitions.
| Identification, utilization, optimization and development of strengths and personal resources | 19 | 20.21 | ‘It focuses on helping clients to use their existing strengths to identify vision of what they want and turn it into reality [through focusing on] strengths, vision and dreams.' | Kauffman, |
| Facilitating personal growth, optimal functioning and enhancing wellbeing | 14 | 14.89 | ‘Coaching approaches that seek to improve short term wellbeing (i.e. hedonic wellbeing) and sustainable wellbeing (i.e. eudaimonic wellbeing) using evidence-based approaches from positive psychology and the science of wellbeing and enable the person to do this in an on-going manner after coaching has completed.' | Passmore and Oades, |
| Directed toward enhancing positive states, traits and behaviors | 12 | 12.77 | ‘[…] enhancing self-regulation, insight, resilience, self-efficacy and wellbeing by facilitating the establishment and pursuit of self-concordant goals.' | Grant and Spence, |
| Collaborative relationship between coach and client | 7 | 7.44 | ‘[…] action-orientated collaborative relationship in which the coach is the facilitator.' | Freire, |
| Actualizing client's potential | 6 | 6.38 | ‘[A process that…] encouraged [individuals] to seek positive things in life, harnessing the best in people and inspiring them to live out their potential.' | Freire, |
| Utilizing positive psychological evidence-based approaches | 5 | 5.32 | ‘Coaching can learn from positive psychology about research and scientific rigor.' | Linley and Kauffman, |
| Working with well-adjusted individuals | 5 | 5.32 | ‘The client is already “whole” and skilled.' | Kauffman and Scoular, |
| Socratic goal setting and achievement | 4 | 4.25 | ‘[It] is a Socratic, future- focused, collaborative conversation between a coach and the client, during which the coach uses open questions, affirmations, reflective listening, summaries, and information exchange to stimulate and encourage self- awareness, personal responsibility, and behavioural change thought likely to lead to improved wellbeing outcomes over time.' | Anstiss and Passmore, |
| Developing skills and capabilities | 3 | 3.19 | ‘Positive psychology applied to coaching […] creates the conditions for skill and capability development beyond the usual professional activities, or beyond the prescribed area of organizational role […]' | Castiello D'Antonio, |
| Focus on strengths not weaknesses | 3 | 3.19 | ‘They focus on strengths rather than on weaknesses and use a variety of assessment tools to explore character strengths, life satisfaction, and potential routes to peak performance.' | Tarragona, |
| Active listening | 2 | 2.12 | ‘Positive psychology coaches listen for strengths and assets that a client may not be aware of, reflect back what is going right, ask questions that elicit images of better futures, and help clients define action steps supported by wellbeing theories.' | Yeager and Britton, |
| Clients have the capacity to develop | 2 | 2.12 | ‘Coach who believes in the client's ability to cope and change in positive ways, and who can identify, value, and develop the client's “muscles.”' | Noble et al., |
| Developing a personal vision (strategy) | 2 | 2.12 | ‘It focuses on helping clients to use their existing strengths to identify vision of what they want and turn it into reality [through focusing on] strengths, vision and dreams.' | Kauffman, |
| Take ownership of growth | 2 | 2.12 | ‘Taking charge of his own career development (ownership) and life-professional project.' | Castiello D'Antonio, |
| Having a balanced view of the client's strengths and limitations | 2 | 2.12 | ‘A positive psychology theoretical base does not assume that clients are paragons of virtue or that everything goes smoothly.' | Kauffman et al., |
| Enhance professional development | 2 | 2.12 | ‘It is a relationship formed between a coach and the client for the purpose of attaining professional or personal development outcomes.' | Grant and Spence, |
| Aids in coping with work-demands | 1 | 1.06 | ‘Positive psychology–based leadership coaching also paradoxically assists leaders to grapple with the inevitable negative, toxic, or near-impossible demands of business life.' | Kauffman et al., |
| Continuous support | 1 | 1.06 | ‘[The coaching process helps clients] develop and implement solutions to ongoing challenges faced during goal striving.' | Grant and Spence, |
| Holistic approach to development | 1 | 1.06 | ‘[It] is a well being intervention approach in which clients are taught strategies and skills aimed at helping them to identify, pursue, and fulfill their most cherished needs, goals, and wishes in sixteen valued areas of life said to comprise human wellbeing or happiness.' | Frisch, |
| Short- to medium term relationship | 1 | 1.06 | ‘Strengths-based coaching is a short to medium term strengths focused developmental process aimed at harnessing the inner potential of a client in order to optimise his/her performance and to actualise his/her potential.' | van Zyl et al., |
Common elements from positive psychological coaching models.
| Strengths profiling and feedback | Developing insight into strength use | 3 | ‘The coach helps the staff member to appreciate the power and opportunities that his or her dominant strengths give them. This often comes by the staff member reflecting on how their strengths have already helped them to be successful or in some cases have made certain jobs more difficult. We filter the world through our strengths either knowingly or unknowingly, so this is another aspect of strengths that coaches discuss.' | Dyess et al., |
| Strengths diagnosis and providing feedback to client | 11 | ‘It is therefore imperative in this phase to make the coachee aware of his/her strengths through either (a) strengths based psychometric assessments, (b) strengths-based inquiry and (c) strengths-based identification initiatives.' | van Zyl et al., | |
| Strengths profiling based on present/past successes | 4 | ‘Exploring with the client the kind of activities he or she currently finds engaging, the things she or he used to find engaging but have stopped doing.' | Anstiss and Passmore, | |
| Diagnosing quality of Life and wellbeing | 4 | ‘Quality of Life should be tested throughout planning and evaluating the [coaching] intervention.' | Frisch, | |
| Developing strengths and enhancing competencies | 3 | ‘The main function of this phase is to develop the coachee's competence through strengths enhancement, building and utilisation activities. The coachee is encouraged to [develop strengths] in the current work-related reality.' | van Zyl and Stander, | |
| Realistic goal setting, strategizing, and execution centered around strengths | Establishing specific personal/work related goals and means to achieve such centered around the client's strengths | 17 | ‘The last step in the coaching process is to help establish staff goals and determine how the staff member will invest in the development of their talents and strengths by using them more effectively in their work. Coaches help staff see how their strengths can be used to achieve their career goals by investing in activities that build on their strengths.' | Dyess et al., |
| Identify available resources and formulate a utilization plan | 2 | ‘The coaching process facilitates goal attainment by helping individuals to […] identify personal resources and formulate action plans.' | Grant and Spence, | |
| Framing solutions and action plans to address problems | 3 | ‘This phase involves developing or framing solutions and action plans to current challenges and developmental areas. This is done through solution-building conversations.' | van Zyl et al., | |
| Empowerment (reframing, reinforcement) | Strengthen affirmative capability | 3 | ‘Strengthen affirmative capability to build hope and sustain momentum for ongoing positive change and high performance.' | Gordon and Gucciardi, |
| Reframing the victim- to a survivor mentality | 3 | ‘Encouraging coachees to retell their stories as survivors, rather than victims. This aids in altering the coachee's perspectives of the presented problem and establishes a sense that numerous possibilities exist to understanding the problem […] which aids the coachee to shed the victim mentality.' | van Zyl and Stander, | |
| Motivating client by highlighting strengths use to build self-efficacy | 4 | ‘Enhance motivation by identifying strengths and building self-efficacy.' | Grant and Spence, | |
| Empower clients | 3 | ‘Establishing a positive connection between coach and client. Leading the client to a more empowering perspective. Affirming a sense of the possible. Cultivating and supporting the cilent's belief in a positive future.' | Gordon, | |
| Building sustainable resilience | 3 | ‘Build a level of resilience which will fortify the internal psychological barriers which buffer against reoccurrences in the future.' | van Zyl et al., | |
| Creating the relationship ( | Establishing rapport and creating a conducive environment | 12 | ‘In order to establish rapport, the coach needs to attend to any physical barriers which might impact or interrupt the process. The coach should create a calm and trusting environment in order to establish the perception that the coach is providing his undivided attention to the coachee. The coach should […] present genuine unconditional positive regard, free from judgement. This in turn establishes the perception that the coach is more attentive, empathic and caring. Further, a process of active listening needs to be invoked in order to show that the coach comprehends, retains and responds to what the coachee is presenting.' | van Zyl and Stander, |
| Clarifying expectations between all stakeholders | 3 | ‘The purpose of this phase is to clarify the expectations between (a) the coach/coachee, (b) coach/senior management, (c) coach/direct manager and (d) coachee and his/her direct manager, in order to establish rapport, transparency of expectations and to include the organizational context (e.g. vision/mission/strategy) into the coaching process.' | van Zyl et al., | |
| Creating a positive relationship | 1 | ‘Strengthen and deepen the positive relationship with the client.' | Anstiss and Passmore, | |
| Developing an ideal vision ( | Creating a vision of the best possible self | 7 | ‘Help the client create a clear vision of a positive future that stretches beyond the limits of their current comfort zone and level of performance.' | White and Barnett, 2013 |
| Identify future-orientated desired outcomes | 1 | ‘The coaching process facilitates goal attainment by helping individuals to identify [future-orientated] desired outcomes.' | Grant and Spence, | |
| Identify coaching themes | 3 | ‘The focus is to determine the coachee's areas of development through understanding the current challenges in his/her current work-related reality (van Zyl and Stander, | Stander, | |
| Action tracking and continuous evaluation ( | Tracking the progress of goal achievement | 2 | ‘[Continuously]…monitor and evaluate progression towards goal attainment.' | Grant and Spence, |
| Continuous assessment of wellbeing | 3 | ‘Evaluation of the process should continue throughout the coaching intervention in order to ensure that the developmental strategy is on track.' | van Zyl and Stander, | |
| Revisiting or modifying existing action plans | 1 | ‘Modify action plans [when necessary].' | Grant and Spence, | |
| Learning transfer ( | Provide client with “Home-Work” to reinforce learnings | 2 | “‘Instruct” our clients about topics that are relevant to their situation, comment on evidence, share findings, or recommend a book or a video by an expert on the topic we are discussing.' | Tarragona, |
| Identify appropriate positive psychological self-administered interventions | 2 | ‘Using evidence-based approaches from positive psychology and the science of wellbeing- and enable the person to do this in an on-going manner after coaching has completed.' | Passmore and Oades, | |
| Look for opportunities for active skill development | 1 | ‘Support coachees in handling essential but difficult emotions as well as continuing to develop methods to increase their experiences of joy, contentment and hope through active skill development.' | Sims, | |
| Concluding or re-contracting ( | Evaluating and re-contracting the relationship | 3 | ‘Evaluated against the initial objectives [at the onset of the coaching process], both the coach and coachee needs to determine the success of the intervention. In the scenarios where the expectations have not been met, or if the coachee presents a need for further intervention, a re-contracting process could be initiated.' | van Zyl et al., |
Figure 2The positive psychological coaching model.
Positive psychological coaching phases and brief description.
| Phase 1 | Creating the relationship | The purpose of this phase is to establish a positive, open, trusting, supportive, non-judgemental and collaborative relationship with the client. This is done through establishing rapport and clarifying expectations between the client and other stakeholders (direct line manager, and the coach). In this phase the coach needs to develop a thorough understanding of the client's environment. |
| Phase 2 | Strengths profiling and feedback | The purpose of this phase is to aid the client to explicitly identify, develop insight into and facilitate the use/development of his/her strengths. This is done through employing strengths diagnostic tools, -interviews or techniques to identify strengths and to provide active, and constructive feedback. Wellness and Quality of Life needs to be assessed to track overall effectiveness of the coaching intervention. |
| Phase 3 | Developing ideal vision | The client develops a clear picture of the perfect version of him/herself in the future. It can be described as an ideal future state that will stretch the client in a process to optimize his/her potential. |
| Phase 4 | Realistic goal setting, strategizing, and execution centered around strengths | Clients need to set specific, measurable, attainable, realistic, and time bound goals that are aligned to their strengths and that builds up to their ideal vision. These goals need to be translated into a clear strategic-operational plan, which needs to be easily implementable. |
| Phase 5 | Concluding or re-contracting | At the end of the coaching process, the effectiveness of the intervention needs to be assessed. Clients need to evaluate if goals were achieved and if so, he/she needs to be prepared for terminations. If goals were not achieved, new goals can be set, and the coaching relationship can be re-negotiated. |
| Continuous process 1 | Learning transfer | Learning from the coaching process should be transferred to the work environment while the client takes ownership of the learning process. The focus is on actively transferring or “practicing” learnings from the coaching process in real world scenarios. Positive psychological evidence-based intervention strategies are selected that are aligned to the strengths of the client in order to maximize the efficiency and benefits associated with deliberate practice. |
| Continuous process 2 | Action tracking and continuous evaluation | The purpose is to determine how success of the coaching process will be measured and to develop a means to actively track the effectiveness of the intervention. Both goal achievement and wellbeing are actively monitored and tracked. |
| Continuous process 3 | Empowerment (reframing, reinforcement) | The purpose of this phase is to aid the client to feel connected to the proverbial bigger picture, reaffirm their confidence in their abilities, to aid the client to experience a sense of control over initiating and regulating behavior and to make the client feel like they are making a difference in their context. The focus is on reframing challenges as opportunities, and to find the positive in negative experiences. The coach focuses on what went “right” rather than on what went “wrong” in order to empower the client to take ownership for his/her personal development. |