Coaching World Issue 15: August 2015 | Page 11

Core Competency #3 Establishing Trust and Intimacy with the Client Ability to create a safe, supportive environment that produces ongoing mutual respect and trust. Kelvin Lim, PCC Kelvin is the founder and principal coach of Executive Coach International. A professional coach since 1997, Kelvin has worked with more than 20,000 people in China, Singapore and internationally. Follow him on LinkedIn. With the proliferation of the Internet, smartphones and social media, the borders of the world are collapsing. We are reaching out to a lot more cultures and sometimes, we meet people from backgrounds that we never expected to encounter. As a coach, it is important to prepare yourself for this inevitability. It’s human to hold certain assumptions about cultures different from our own. Every person has a different context that has been shaped in part by his or her political, social and economic background. Some of my clients from India, for example, grew up in rural communities but, by furthering their education, obtained positions in “modern” industries, such as the IT sector. My clients from China are experiencing the effects of living in a nation that modernized recently and rapidly; as a result, they are always looking for opportunities to find and leverage a trend in order to stand out, be different and be heard. Many of my clients from the United States evince the “Declaration of Independence” mentality: They know that they are in pursuit of their own happiness, and they really go after that. From the Toolbox Coaching Across Cultures Sometimes in a coaching engagement, these different contexts can clash. I owe everything I know about cross-cultural coaching to all my clients who are from different cultural backgrounds, who gave me an opportunity to work with them. They educated me on how they would like to be coached. Unders х