Dave Lakhani in Boise, Idaho, for instance, works with salespeople to develop what he calls a “road map.” He says an ongoing relationship with a coach is like having a personal fitness trainer for one’s career and life outside work.
Lakhani’s Bold Approach coaching firm also donates some of its time to help people who are anything but successful - including battered women and struggling single mothers.
One man in San Francisco told VOA he meets with his life coach once a week in person, and they talk by telephone twice weekly. “My life coach and I work on the future me,” he said.
An association of life coaches has more than five thousand members around the world. It has a code of ethics, and it credentials members in four levels - up to “master coach.”
But others in the so-called “helping professions” are not thrilled about the life-coaching movement. They say that anyone, trained or untrained, can call himself or herself a life coach, and that slick promoters who mess with people’s lives can do more harm than good.
最新
2013-11-27
2013-11-27
2013-11-27
2013-11-27
2013-11-27
2013-11-27