Why is Coaching a Priority for Talent and Learning Executives?

What is coaching in the workplace? 

According to Parsloe, Coaching is a ‘process that enables Learning and Development to occur, and thus performance to improve.’ (Parsloe, 1999).

Coaching refers to an interaction between two people – a coach, and a coachee, with sessions specifically aimed at performance development. It places emphasis on empowerment, enhancing a coachee’s understanding of their own performance; building their confidence and, in turn, their ability to manage and develop themselves.

In this blog, we’ll explore why coaching is so high on the agenda for L&D, Talent, and Executive Development.

Coaching in action at an iVentiv event

Why are learning, talent, and leadership execs so interested in coaching right now?

For businesses, the recent increase in economic and global uncertainty and ambiguity has called on them to adapt with agility and speed if they want to outpace disruption. 

That includes the Global Heads of Learning, Talent, and Leadership who attended iVentiv events over the last year. Before each event, we sent them a questionnaire about their priorities. In the iVentiv Pulse Report, you can see the collated stats from every senior executive who completed those questionnaires. They show that:

  • For the 578 respondents from 435 companies that completed the questionnaire, 17% identified coaching as a key area for their function
  • That was especially true in the US: 23% of respondents in the US, 19% in the UK, and 11% in the rest of Europe selected coaching as a priority 
  • Leadership development was the most selected focus overall, especially for leaders who are interested in coaching: respondents selecting leadership, notably, were much more likely to select coaching as one of their priorities
  • In their comments, they talked about needing to develop “leadership capability” and a “culture of feedback and coaching to elevate talent”

There are several reasons why coaching might be on the minds of so many:

  1. Personalized development: Coaching provides a personalised approach to development, allowing individuals to work on specific goals and challenges in a one-on-one setting. This personalised approach can be especially beneficial for executives who may have unique leadership styles or specific development needs. 
  2. Growing demand: Coaching has become increasingly popular  in recent years (in the US alone, the coaching industry has grown by 30% in five years), and many executives may be interested in exploring this trend to stay competitive and meet the demands of their organisation.
  3. Focus on soft skills: Soft skills such as communication, emotional intelligence, and interpersonal relationships are becoming increasingly important in the workplace, and coaching can be an effective way to develop these skills.
  4. Remote work: With the rise of remote work, coaching can provide a valuable way for executives to stay connected with their teams and maintain a sense of community and support.
  5. Employee retention: Coaching can also be used as a tool to retain top talent by showing a commitment to employee development and growth.

Jay Moore, Global Learning and Culture Leader, GE references the importance of coaching at GE, how the company ‘spends a great deal of time with our most senior leaders for them to be better coaches’ and how it ‘continues to be a needed and necessary skill for leaders’. In essence, it is the tailored approach to development that coaching offers, that can help executives improve their leadership skills and achieve their goals, making it an attractive option for learning, talent, and leadership executives to invest in. 

How is coaching done effectively?

It’s easy to see why coaching might be appealing for learning and talent execs. Leadership is high on the agenda and the widespread understanding that learning from others and learning in work is more effective than classroom teaching means that HR teams are looking to develop talent in a more hands on way. 

Enter coaching. The key thing that many L&D, Talent and Exec Development teams like about coaching is that it is entirely non-directive; coaches are encouraged to limit the giving of advice and to instead focus on assisting coachees   in finding their own solutions to problems.

The theory is that through short, sharp meetings that talk about key goals, progress, and future actions, coaching maximises a coachee’s performance through learning, rather than teaching. It’s an approach designed to develop a coachee’s ability to take responsibility for, not only their own development, but also their performance.

Downey’s (1999) Spectrum of Coaching Skills suggests a number of key attributes of the non-directive coaching approach that sit on the ‘pull’ end of the spectrum (helping someone to solve their own problems):

  • Asking questions to raise awareness
  • Active listening
  • Paraphrasing
  • Summarising
  • Reflecting

By engaging in each of these activities, the coachee gains a sense of autonomy over their own performance, and develops an understanding of what it is they need to do to improve it.

Although it may seem that all of the responsibility to successfully develop employees falls on the coach, the prevailing wisdom is that there is also significant responsibility on the coachee to ensure they achieve their goals, retain knowledge, and apply their experiences. 

David Kolb suggests that while the coach’s role is to assist coachees to move around the experiential learning cycle, it is up to the coachee to actively participate in the process, take responsibility for their own decisions, complete agreed actions, reflect on and review experiences, and manage their own ongoing development. That constant emphasis on practical application to real tasks and real business goals seems to be making coaching all the more appealing.

What are the benefits of coaching?

Learning leaders agree that the overall goal of a coaching session is for the coachee to gain a greater understanding of their own work and how that contributes to the organisation. For many, it not only helps to further learning and solidify it, it gives the coachee dedicated time to focus on performance development, making them more satisfied with and effective in their role.

And the benefits are wide-ranging:

  • Stress reduction
  • Increased motivation
  • Increased confidence
  • Increased self-awareness and self-management skills. 

For the organisation, coaching builds better working relationships in that issues are shared in an environment that is psychologically safe, it enhances the transfer of learning to the workplace as well as the retention of knowledge within the organisation. 

However, while this suggests that effective coaching has a crucial part to play in organisations, coaching advocates also argue that there are barriers that prevent it from being as effective as it could be:

  • Lack of top-down support
  • Resentment felt by those not involved in the scheme or the perception of favouritism
  • The blurring of role boundaries 
  • Leadership and management styles of the organisation – a smaller organisation, for instance, may have more directive approaches to leadership and management, which make the introduction of a different ‘style’ more difficult
  • Cost
  • Coachee commitment

Are you implementing coaching in your organisation? Is it one of your top priorities? Read more about this and the other top priorities for decision makers in learning, talent, and leadership, in the iVentiv Pulse 2023 Report.
 

More Insights

As AI rapidly reshapes how work gets done, Leadership Development is facing a defining moment. If knowledge, once the cornerstone of leadership capability, is becoming increasingly commoditised, that could mean that judgement, the ability to make sound decisions, align people, and lead through uncertainty, will matter far more. 

In this interview, Abilitie’s Bjorn Billhardt, Founder and CEO, and Alex Whiteleather, Managing Director for Europe, at Abilitie explore how AI-enabled leadership simulations are transforming development by immersing leaders in realistic, high-stakes decision environments that build critical thinking, business acumen, and cross-functional collaboration.

For Chief Learning and Talent Officers navigating organisational change, flatter structures, and accelerating decision cycles, this perspective could offer a practical framework for rethinking Leadership Development in the age of AI, and a compelling case for why judgement, not knowledge, could provide the true competitive advantage. Watch the interview now and read about how Abilitie is shaking the world of Leadership Development with their brand new Case Challenges experiences.

Learning, Talent, and Executive Development, and the businesses they serve, are undergoing rapid change. AI is changing the way that employees work and learn. External disruption means that the markets businesses operate in are nothing like they were ten years ago. And the expectations on Learning and Talent leaders are enormous.

As a leader in L&D and Talent, what should you prioritise? iVentiv has surveyed almost 500 Global Heads of Learning, Talent, and Executive Development from 394 companies in 16 cities across 8 countries on three continents to find out what they are focusing on in their work. Together, their views provide a unique perspective on the state of Learning and Talent in 2026.

Read the full report for a detailed breakdown of the top topics, with expert comment from some of the leading thinkers in Learning and Talent Development. In this blog, we share some of the headline takeaways.

In this conversation, iVentiv’s Richard Parfitt (Marketing Director), Hannah Hoey (Content Director), and Kristy Kitson (L&D Strategist) share three key learning and development trends that they predict could shape the 2026 agenda for Chief Learning Officers.

Drawing on insights from conversations with Global Heads of Learning, Talent, and Executive Development across industries, they explore how L&D is moving into organisational design, why skills-based approaches are becoming standard practice, and how the AI conversation is evolving from experimentation to responsible, human-centred integration. 

Informed by conversations with Heads of Learning and Talent at hundreds of companies, this conversation is a unique perspective on what might be in store in 2026 for Learning leaders navigating the future of work. Read the blog now.

Artificial intelligence is no longer a project, an initiative, or a phase of digital transformation. It is fast becoming the environment in which modern organisations operate. 

That is the central message of the Udemy Business Global Learning & Skills Trends Report; a data-rich analysis built from more than 17,000 global enterprises and 85,000 instructors and brought to life in a recent iVentiv interview with Gráinne Wafer, Global Head of Field Enablement at Udemy Business.

For senior executives, the implications are becoming impossible to ignore: AI fluency, not just AI skills, is emerging as the defining strategic capability for the years ahead.

Watch our interview now and read Udemy’s report here.

The topic of Artificial Intelligence has been impossible to escape in L&D over the past few years. For some, it stands to displace the entire function and render most of its skills and roles obsolete. For others, it represents an opportunity for Learning to reach more employees in more meaningful ways than ever before.

In this blog and report, we look in more detail at what Heads of Learning say they are really doing about AI

In a world where the shelf life of skills is shrinking from years to mere months, the question facing every Learning leader is no longer if we move to a skills-based model, but how fast. For Comcast, the answer has been a bold, enterprise-wide journey called Skill Forward.

Spearheaded by Sara Dionne, Chief Learning Officer at Comcast, Skill Forward is a data-driven approach that redefines how the business identifies, develops, and embeds skills. What began with conversations with just over 1,000 business leaders has grown into an integrated system shaped by more than 3,000 voices, weaving skills into hiring, strategy, and day-to-day operations.

But transformation at this scale is never simple. How do you balance enterprise-wide consistency with the needs of individual business units, or even individual learners? How do you make assessment meaningful at volume? And how do you keep pace when skills are being redefined almost quarterly by technologies like AI?

In this blog, we explore Sara’s insights from leading Comcast through this transformation, and what every L&D leader can learn about scaling skills, converging human and digital capabilities, and preparing the workforce for constant change. Read it now.

At Boehringer Ingelheim, the “university” concept has been reimagined as a global ecosystem serving every one of the company’s 54,000 employees.

In conversation with iVentiv, Martin Hess, Chief Learning Officer at Boehringer Ingelheim, outlined how his team has created a federated model that unites more than 500 contributors worldwide, built a skills-based approach that directly connects capability to business goals, and implemented a vendor management system that reframes L&D as a value creator rather than a cost centre. The impact, he says, is measurable in both euros saved and credibility gained.

This blog explores Martin’s perspective and Boehringer Ingelheim’s journey, offering insights on skills, ROI, and personalisation that are directly relevant to anyone leading learning at scale. Read it now.

In August, iVentiv brought together a group of Chief Learning Officers and senior learning leaders in Foster City, California. Against the backdrop of Silicon Valley—arguably the global epicentre of technological disruption—the group explored a central question:

How can learning enable organisations to move from AI experimentation to enterprise-wide impact?

Over two days of candid dialogue, Collaborative Cafés, and breakout sessions, CLOs reflected on what it really takes to scale AI, reimagine skills strategies, foster learning cultures, and prepare leaders for disruption. What follows is a synthesis of their key insights, designed to help CLOs worldwide think about the opportunities and challenges ahead.

Read more.

For Michelle Agnew, Global Head of Learning, Engagement, and Culture at CNH Industrial, the work of L&D goes far beyond delivering skills training. It’s about creating an environment where “people want to come to work, and they’re excited about that and giving it back.”

With more than 20 years of experience in HR and Talent Development which includes senior roles at the American Red Cross, Michelle has built a career around connecting learning to culture, engagement, and ultimately, business performance. 

In this conversation, Michelle shares her views on where L&D is headed, how to link learning to ROI, and why human connection may become the ultimate differentiator in the age of AI. Read it now.

“Every single leader, especially in Germany and Europe, will realise they need to invest in their people — otherwise they will lose this competition.”
- Katrin Marx, Head of Corporate Learning, Bosch

The race for talent is no longer about recruitment alone. For multinationals navigating economic changes, AI disruption, and intensifying competition, the real differentiator is how fast organisations can reskill and transform the capabilities of their existing workforce. 

This was the core message from a recent conversation between iVentiv’s Hannah Hoey, Katrin Marx, Head of Corporate Learning, Bosch and Charles Jennings, Co-Founder of the 70:20:10 Institute. Both leaders agree: traditional learning models — designing courses, pushing content, and measuring satisfaction — are obsolete. The new mandate is to create performance-driven ecosystems where skills development is continuous, embedded in work, and tightly linked to business outcomes.

Curious to learn more? Read and watch now.

Pages