Declan O’Connell – Coaching Individuals & Teams for High Performance – EP157
Declan is an experienced professional coach, trainer and facilitator. His areas of expertise include high performance, leadership, mental toughness, career management and team developmentDeclan brings a true passion for his coaching, offering a customised approach that targets the specific developmental needs of those with whom he works with. Declan offers bespoke training interventions derived from a detailed Organisational Needs Analysis. These interventions include bespoke leadership and management development programmes; team development programmes; and personal development and self-awareness programmes for general staff.Declan can cater for all organisational levels from C-Suite, Directors, Middle Management, New-to-Management and Graduates.Declan’s approach is focused on developing a trusted partnership with his clients through a challenging but supportive, empathetic style. He fully believes in the power of people’s potential and his approach is centred on supporting his clients navigate and achieve their desired goals. He is particularly adept at helping to create a transformational shift in the mindset and behaviour of individuals. Declan has a huge passion on people and performance. His goal and work is to help people and teams to solve problems, underpinning this work is developing emotional intelligence.Declan has 4 main focus areas in his work. These are:
Performance Consultant
Leadership Development
High Performance Teams
Performance under pressure
During the conversation, we dive into a number of areas of interest from Declan’s journey with lessons learned, tools for achieving high performance, and tips you can apply to help you and/or your team grow. If any of the below summary points are of interest, you’ll want to hear more!. Links to more on Mindflick and how to connect with Declan at the end.Key talking points we covered are:
Always having a burning interest in people, people psychology and mindset, initially through a sporting frame
Completed an Adult Education course in Sports Psychology which then lead to a masters in UCC in Psychology
Having a passion for and loving to work with people, 1-1 or in groups…
Where did this interest come from - Nature v Nurture and lifelong learning
Reading autobiographies that were full of lessons of life experiences
The importance of continuous learning
Feeling imposter syndrome when starting his master’s degree in Psychology
Seeking out rich learning experiences always and immersing himself in this world
Making the decision to step out and go out on his own?
What were the lessons learned from the early days of working for himself
Developing a process for tracking learning
With Coaching - the concept of non-attachment – knowing the process but not attached to any outcome….being clear on this
Knowing your own preferences is key
When do strengths tip over to become weaknesses?
Developing self-awareness
The master’s program in UCC was very focused on Self-Awareness and this was a big eye opener
Videoing coaching sessions and looking back on these that helped with self-awareness
Gaining a huge sense of who you were after this UCC course
Using the Spotlight framework from Mindflick
Trying to develop a sense of humility in individuals and teams
Once humility is developed, now focus on curiosity
At the top of the pyramid – allowing individuals and teams
How to develop humility
Behaviour styles frameworks using FLEX
The key to making things safe
Core principals of Spotlight – it’s a strengths-based tool
Adaptability – being able to look at things from different frames
Creating safety is key in a team environment
Self-regulation and being able to judge the room
The big 5 personality traits
Spotlights is key on adaptability
Personality is 70% of the environment
Reinforcement sensitivity theory
Evidence based practitioner is essential for the spotlight assessment
Mindset framework within Spotlight – COPE
Containment
Optimistic
Prudent
Engagement
The importance of practice in developing a mindset
Profiling Teams with Performance and Improvement
Spotlight Teams features
Level of psychological safety – key to high performance
Team dynamics of performance, engagement and effectiveness
Provides a plan to take the team to the next level
The COPE framework with a tech start-up example..
4 optimistic mindsets and 1 prudent mindset – this helps keeping things balanced
The vital need for psychological safety in the team – this is critical
Asking a difficult question in the boardroom is like being evicted from the tribe!
Making new habits stick in leadership teams
Having healthy tension within the group is key but it comes back to relationships
The power of being an outsider
Seeing tangible benefits is always a key breakthrough
Learning from assessments but not to box anyone into any frame – keeping loose and knowing the moving is ok
Premature evaluation – placing limits on the relationships
Key tools to use:
A reflective log – making a log on a daily basis and developing as a result of this
The Empty Chair Exercise – making sure the team look at areas that aren’t being looked at
De Bono Thinking hats
Making Teams fall in love as a tool…. Trust Exercise – Professor Arthur Aron – Human Intimacy – 36 questions
Staring at each other in the eyes for 4 minutes without talking!
Problem Cleaning & Pig wrestling
Problem Cleaning is a simple and effective process that enables people be more insightful, productive and impactful when dealing with the challenges that they face.
Starting to describe the problem from different frames..
New developments from Mindflick focusing on
SpotlightYouth
SpotlightX
SpotlightTeams – putting a metric on teams
The most standout thing you’ve learned in the last 12 months?
Non-attachment – confidence of delivering your
Pressure and Stress is a choice – managing yourself outside of this
The evolution of the reflection log – linking self-esteem to this ongoing and this is not sustainable always
Rest, Recovery, Reflection, Sleep, all are key – linked to self-esteem
Getting comfortable with some things that land and some that don’t!