| New Shrink Gig: Executive
Coach
By KATHLEEN KINGSBURY
Published on Sunday, Feb. 5, 2006
See
this article in Time.com ››
You don't have to be Freud to figure out that the $1 billion
executive-coaching industry is an opportunity. So psychoanalysis
is expanding off the couch and into the boardroom. It's a specialty
that requires no special training--anyone can be a coach--yet
fees reach $1,000 an hour. At the American Psychoanalytic Association's
annual meeting last month, nervous newcomers quizzed established
coaches on everything from confidentiality to marketing. "Much
of it goes against our training, having to focus on group dynamics
instead of the individual," says Kerry Sulkowicz, a psychiatrist.
Another presenter, Kathleen Pogue White, says a constant challenge
is patients who show up only because the boss orders it. In
one case, she had to figure out how to nudge a manager to improve
his sales numbers after his supervisor, another client, confided
that the manager would be axed otherwise.
With such built-in conflicts, executive coaching
is a "total, chaotic mess," says Kenneth Eisold,
a psychologist. But Eisold says his commodity-trader clients
can already see a difference. "When they talk to me, they
listen to themselves," Eisold says, "and they trade
much better."
Copyright © 2006 Time Inc. All rights reserved.
Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited. |