Affirmations
Are you a Hedgehog or a Fox?
A Better Way to Change
Bifocal Vision
The CEO's Trusted Advisor
The Changing Context of Business
Charisma
The Coach as Shaman
Coaching across Cultures
A Coaching Typology
The Coming Shake-Out in the Coaching World
Competing Commitments
Conscious Incompetence
Context - a powerful tool for change
Current Reality - Telling the Truth
Desire and Addiction
The Dangers of Executive Coaching
Ecopsychology and "Green and Away"
Emergence and Coaching
Endings
Energy
Excellence in Executive Coaching
Faulty Thinking and the ABC Model
The Future Landscape of Coaching 06/07
The Future Landscape of Coaching 07/08
Guilt is Good for You!
Happiness
Hassleme!
"I turned my face for a moment ..."
Inner Leadership and Psychosynthesis
In Praise of Ignorance
The Integral (AQAL) Model
Integral Leadership
Limitation Celebration
Managing Progression and Regression
Mentoring, Coaching, etc.
MBTI and Coaching
The Miracle Question
On Valuing
The One Thing You Need to Know
The Paradox of Choice
Parallel Worlds
Playing at Leadership?
Playing to our Strengths
Presence
Reflections on Being 50
Resilience
Shifting Stuck Patterns
The Set-Up-To-Fail Syndrome
Social Business
Sustainable Business
Time Management
Transformational Coaching
Values Priorities
What really makes people happy?
What I do
What is the Job of a Manager?
What is Success?
Which Mentor?
Working Identity
 

Coaching across Cultures
Elsewhere in this website, I presented some results from the Myers Briggs Type Inventory (MBTI). One of the benefits from knowing your own particular type preferences on an instrument of this kind is the insight it can give you into how you are in the world. Another equally important benefit is recognising that other people may have very different (and equally valid) ways of being in the world. Recognising these differences can help us value, work with, and even welcome people's diversity.

At a cultural level (ie, at the level that distinguishes one group of people from another, rather than one individual from another), it is equally important and valuable to be aware of differing preferences. Coaches or managers wanting to work across cultures need to know what the key dimensions of difference are. A new book (Coaching Across Cultures: New Tools for Leveraging National, Corporate and Professional Differences by Philippe Rosinski) presents an integrative model, the Cultural Orientations Framework (COF) that maps 17 key dimensions of the cultural territory (see diagram).

For example some cultures have a preference for direct communication (as in the United States), saying what they mean and meaning what they say. Their cultural orientation then is "direct communication" - in contrast with Asians' typical indirectness where much may be left unsaid and only hinted at. Rosinski uses as an example of the indirect approach the scene in The Godfather, Part II where Michael Corleone, played by Al Pacino, is on trial and about to be accused by a witness of mafia activities. But Michael Corleone's men bring the witness's brother with them to observe the trial. Nothing is said but the witness immediately gets the message "If you testify, your brother will suffer". He doesn't testify!

A sensitivity to these cultural dimensions is increasingly important as we seek more frequently to manage and coach across cultures. The COF lays out the primary ways in which people's worldviews differ and hence provides a way of challenging cultural assumptions and enabling more effective work across cultures - both internationally and when working with people from various organisations and backgrounds.

 
 
 
Copyright © 2008. Dr M H M Munro Turner. All rights reserved