Coaching Vs Therapy: What are the differences?
While there is a lot of overlap
between coaching and therapy, they are very distinct from each other in terms
of their focus and what clients can get out of sessions. The main difference is
therapy aims to resolve or reduce emotional and psychological distress and
coaching focuses on enhancing performance. One of our psychotherapeutic
counsellors, Ross Herron, discusses the differences between coaching and
therapy, and the benefits of having a coach with a therapeutic background.
What clients want from
coaching
Clients often seek coaching when
they feel ‘stuck’ in some way. They may be stuck in a career or a life they
don’t want. Or they feel they have reached a plateau and want to get to the
next level, but they can’t figure out how to do it. Helping them move forward
often involves going deeper. “Coaching is not just changing a lifestyle, it’s
about digging deep and trying to find out what’s going with on with that
client, what is blocking them, and what is stopping them from living the life
they want,” says Ross.
Sometimes, clients don’t know
what they want or need, particularly if they don’t fully understand the
differences between coaching and therapy. That’s where having a coach with a
therapeutic background can be helpful.
“I think a lot of people go for
therapy when they should be going for coaching and vice versa. A lot of my
coaching friends are executive coaches who don’t have a therapeutic background.
They really struggle when a client starts to cry or they bring emotional
content up in sessions. The line between coaching and therapy can get blurred
and that’s why I think it’s really helpful to have a coach who understands
where that line is,” says Ross.
Five years after completing his
diploma in psychotherapeutic counselling, Ross attended university to study
coaching. While he has found that adding the coaching element to his skills
allows him to provide clients with practical solutions to their problems,
sometimes he discovers early on that therapy is what they need.
“Understanding what someone needs
at that time is really important because people want to get the right support
for their issue. If I’m working with a client and we agree we are going to do
coaching, then they end up requiring therapy, we pause the coaching and move
into therapy. A coach without a therapeutic background wouldn’t necessarily
know when to refer someone on, or who to refer them to,” adds Ross.
The differences between
coaching and therapy
Coaching is always about
increasing performance
One of the main differences
between coaching and therapy is that the focus of coaching sessions is always
on enhancing performance. Usually, someone will go for coaching when their
lives are stable, things are going well, and they want to move to the next
level. Even in situations where someone seeks help for a professional situation
at work and there are emotions involved, emotions won’t be the focus. The focus
will always be on how can coaching move them out of that situation and increase
their performance. Ross likens it to the way a sports psychologist might work
with a sportsperson.
“You’re going to be dealing with
emotions at some point, but the focus is on how you can help the sportsperson
to perform in the best way possible for them,” says Ross, “I saw a documentary
recently about the snooker player Ronnie O’Sullivan. He is working with a
psychologist because he has to have a good feeling when he is playing. If he
doesn’t, he gets into this really negative mindset. The psychologist is helping
him work on those emotional blockers and unhelpful patterns while coming up
with strategies to get him out of that negative mindset.”
Coaching sessions have a more
rigid structure
The first few coaching sessions
are all about getting to understand the problem. Then the coach can plan and
strategise. Every session is almost a mini entire coaching experience which is
very much goal and process driven. With therapy, it’s possible to hold a
structure but be more loose with it.
“In coaching sessions, I’ll ask
the client if they have got what they needed from the session and how they know
that they got what they needed. You still need to build a rapport and allow
them to be heard, but if you find yourself slipping into conversation, you need
to move the focus back. With therapy, it’s possible to meander around things a
bit more,” says Ross.
The role of a coach is
different from a therapist
One of the most fundamental
differences between coaching and therapy is the role of the coach and the
therapist. A therapist is there to walk alongside someone and a coach is there
to help them think, plan, and strategise. Often people get stuck in patterns of
behaviour which is linked to their past. While the therapist will focus on
this, the coach acknowledges that but they won’t stay there. Their focus is
restructuring and reframing these behaviours to improve performance.
What coaching and therapy have
in common
Clients have to be engaged
For coaching or therapy to be
effective, clients have to be engaged in sessions. Ross says he has seen people
for coaching who have not really wanted to be there. “Sometimes people have
been referred for coaching by their employer and they can see it as being
remedial. They aren’t performing, so they are sent for a bit of coaching. It
can occasionally be the same with counselling for occupational health. Some
employees feel they have to go through
the motions to show their employer that they are doing something about the
issue. That’s why it’s important to have that open dialogue from the start and
ask people if they really want to be here,” says Ross. There’s then an
education piece that our business team can undertake with the employer to make
sure that the people who are referred are those that are keen to engage in
therapy. Fortunately, the vast majority
of employers understand this, so we’re able to hit the ground running in
therapy.
Coaching and therapy can be
integrated
Ross uses EMDR with some coaching
clients to help them overcome emotional blocks. “EMDR works well with coaching,
especially when people are blocked or stuck because those feelings are often
linked to past trauma,” he says. “I like to think of it like this; therapy
deals with healing the past, counselling deals with present issues, and
coaching solves future problems. But they all overlap in some sense.”