Coaching
for a better life
Berks woman helps clients fulfill personal and professional goals.
By Carole
Simpson Reading Eagle Correspondent
Are you tired of being disorganized, overwhelmed, under-appreciated, and
lacking focus and direction in your life? Are you stuck in the same old
problem patterns with your career, money-management, commitments and stress?
If you
want to redesign your life to be more simpler, more flexible and more
enjoyable, you may want to consider signing up for life coaching. It's a new
and fast-growing business that helps you set personal and professional
goals.
“Coaching
is about change,” said Marsha D. Egan, a certified life coach. “Coaching
helps people close the gap between where they are and where they want to be
by setting better goals and then helping them reach those goals.”
Egan, 51,
is president of her own life coaching business, Leadership Lights Inc.,
which she began three years ago. She completed 200 hours of Internet
training seminars through
Coachu.com. and is certified by the
International Coaching Federation, an organization of personal and business
coaches which claims 6,000-members.
She works
evenings and weekends from her Cumru
Township home, coaching clients over the phone and by e-mail. Her Web site
is www.leadershiplights.com.
Egan said
her fees range from $300 to $1,000 a month for 90 minutes of coaching (three
30-minute calls or two 45-minute calls) and unlimited e-mails. Business
clients contract with her for a monthly retainer.
Who hires
a coach?
“People
from all walks of life turn to life coaching because they want more or less
of something,” Egan said. “They want to grow and accomplish things more
easily.
“Life
coaching gives people the motivation to look at their inner needs, wants and
desires. It gives them the support to do more than they would do on their
own.”
Life
coaching is similar to consulting, but it isn't therapy, according to Egan.
Coaches don't work on “issues,” get into the past or deal with understanding
human behavior. And they don't give medical or financial advice.
Unlike
sports coaching, life coaching is not competitive or based on winning or
losing.
“And
coaching is different from having a best friend to talk to,” Egan said.
“Would your best friend be a professional adviser whom you would trust to
work with on the most important aspects of your life or business? Probably
not.”
Egan, a
graduate of Kutztown High School and Duke University, has been active as a
community volunteer, serving on the board of United Way of Berks County,
president of the Junior League of Reading, and chairman of Leadership Berks
and the first Berks County Day of Caring. She received the Athena Award from
the Berks County Chamber of Commerce and is a recipient of the Dale Carnegie
Distinguished Graduate Award.
As a
manager at Encompass Insurance, Egan was the first woman to serve on the
executive committee of the 30,000-member Chartered Property Casualty
Underwriters Society. She went on to serve as the organization's president.
A member of the National Speakers Bureau, she travels around the country
giving addresses at business meetings and seminars. She also publishes
The Leadership Light, a bi-weekly life coaching magazine on the Web,
Egan said
she has a life coach herself.
“I love
being challenged and helping other people challenge themselves and improve
their lot in life,” she said.
And she
practices what she preaches. She said she and her husband, Robert A. Egan,
who is president of Egan Sign and Awning Co., are working to achieve their
life goal - to retire to Nantucket, where his family roots lie.
The
10-Second Life Coaching Reality Check:
Leaders continually grow.
They
embrace and enjoy new things.
By
growing, they thrive and add value to their lives.
Are you
continually growing?
How often
do you try new things?
How many
new books have you read?
Do you
listen more than talk?
Source:
The Leadership Light, bimonthly Web magazine produced by Marsha D. Egan
A case
study in coaching
From our
news staff
Editor's note: Marsha D. Egan related the following case study of her
life coaching work. The client's name and address are changed.
A year
ago, Bill M., 33, of Memphis,
Tenn.,
was demoted from a management position in a large, bureaucratic company. The
experience hurt his confidence, and he doubted he had any future with his
employer.
With a
wife and two small children to support, Bill needed to re-evaluate his
career goals.
After
talking it over with his wife, Bill decided to contact Marsha D. Egan, a
business friend who also is a certified life coach.
“He knew I
could navigate the corporate waters well, and he trusted my advice,” Egan
said. “I began by asking Bill to complete a questionnaire and to take the
DiSC Personal File Test, a motivational analysis assessment.”
The
questions Bill tackled included: What excites you about life? What are your
personal and professional goals? How far have you gotten in reaching those
goals? What's blocking you from reaching those goals? Where are you most
irresponsible? What are you most proud of in your life and work?
“Bill
wanted to get his life back in balance.” Egan said. “He knew something
wasn't working but he didn't know how to begin to solve the problem. For
most people, life coaching isn't about one simple fix. It's getting people
to see the bigger picture in their life.”
The test
analysis helped Egan get a sense of what Bill really wanted to do in his
life. And she helped him develop a career plan to achieve his professional
goals and to understand better his strengths and weaknesses.
Egan also
introduced Bill to the guiding principles from Dale Carnegie's book “How to
Win Friends and Influence People”: Don't condemn, criticize or complain. You
are in charge of your own attitude.
“Bill was
critical of people around him,” Egan said. “He was a loner at work. He ate
lunch at his desk. He needed to be more sincere and caring and to develop
friendships on the job.”
Over three
months of coaching with Egan, Bill began to develop new friendships with his
co-workers. He joined new friends for lunch. And he developed a more caring
attitude at work. His efforts paid off when he got a promotion.
“Today,
he's the guy who throws picnics for friends at his home,” Egan said. “He's
happy now with the direction of his life. His is a life-coaching success
story.”
Let us work with you to ignite your potential so that you
can achieve what you want in life!