I attended the 3rd International coaching supervision conferences at Oxford Brookes University yesterday – and very good it was too. There was a real range of speakers from all over the world, and it struck me that coaching supervision was now becoming much more of an mainstream activity instead of an peripheral add-on. Coaches now get that having supervision is part of the deal if you expect to practice and there is now much more of a pull for services.
However, I also think there is a way to go to help coaches understand how to use a supervisor effectively – a bit like there is often a journey to help coachees understand how to use a coach. Here I don’t think the word ‘supervision’ helps us – it smacks too much of the autocrat overseeing and inspecting a minion’s work. The trouble is nobody seems able to come up with a better word. As Prof Peter Hawkins quipped – there is a case of champagne waiting for someone who can think of a better descriptor.
Coach supervision is of course, in part about quality control, but it is also about support and development for the coach. Great supervision should be about helping the coach to see more and be able to do more in service of their clients. Now why wouldn’t you want that?