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Relationship Coaching Boot Camp:
New Hope for Singles and Couples
David Steele MA, LMFT, CLC Founder, Relationship Coaching Institute
It doesn’t matter where you’ve been…
What matters is where you’re going…
And how you will get there.
Program Overview
Part I: About Coaching and Relationship coaching Part II: Relationship Coaching for Singles Part III: Relationship Coaching for Couples Part IV: Therapist as Coach
Part V: Building a Successful Relationship Coaching Practice Part VI: Conclusion/Q&A
From Couples Therapist to Relationship Coach
Comparing Coaching and Therapy
Similarities include:
• An ongoing, confidential, one-to-one, fee-for-service, relationship
• Working with clients who want to change
• Assuming change only occurs over time
• Use of verbal dialogue as the primary service activity
• Regularly scheduled sessions
Comparing Coaching and Therapy
Therapy Coaching
Assumes the client needs healing Assumes the client is whole
Roots in medicine, psychiatry Roots in sports, business, personal
growth venues
Works with people to achieve self-
understanding and emotional healing
Works to move people to a higher level of
functioning
Focuses on feelings and past events Focuses on actions and the future
Explores the root of problems Focuses on solving problems
Works to bring the unconscious into
consciousness Works with the conscious mind
Works for internal resolution of pain and
to let go of old patterns Works for external solutions to overcome
barriers, learn new skills and implement
effective choices
Five Types of Helping Professionals
1. Therapists
2. Counselors
3. Educators
4. Consultants
5. Coaches
The Case for Relationship Coaching
• More singles than ever - 101 million in the U.S., 46% of the adult
population
• More than 90% of all adults marry at least once
• Over 25% of households are single occupant households
• Marriage rate decreasing - at its lowest in 30 years
• Divorce rate has remained stable since 1988 (55%)
• Co-habitation has skyrocketed by 1,200% in the past 30 years:
– 85% fail and increases failure rate of marriage
• Majority of first-born children are now conceived by, or born to,
unmarried parents
• Half of all children will spend time in a single parent family:
– experience higher rates of juvenile delinquency, domestic violence, drug
and alcohol addiction, school dropout, mental and emotional problems,
suicide, unemployment, etc.
Ten Guidelines of Relationship Coaching
1. Relationship Coaching is not consulting or therapy
2. A Relationship Coach helps the client focus on the bigger picture
3. A Relationship Coach shares knowledge, experience, and information without attachment
4. A Relationship Coach assumes a relationship is part of the journey, not the destination
5. A Relationship Coach assumes that the most important relationship is the one you have with yourself
Ten Guidelines of Relationship Coaching
6. A Relationship Coach does not judge a relationship as right or wrong, good or bad
7. A Relationship Coach does not seek to get personal needs met with clients or prospective clients
8. A Relationship Coach addresses their clients’ sabotaging attitudes and choices without making them wrong
9. A Relationship Coach is neutral about the outcome for pre-committed relationships, and an advocate for committed relationships
10. A Relationship Coach “walks the talk” by continually addressing his or her own personal and relationship development, challenges, and goals
14 Compelling Reasons to Use a Relationship Coach
1. You Value Relationships Highly
2. You are Committed to Success
3. You Want Results
4. You are Willing to Learn
5. You are Ready for Action
6. You are Open to Mentoring/Support
7. You Want Fulfillment
14 Compelling Reasons to Use a Relationship Coach
8. You Want to be True to Yourself
9. You Want to be Proactive
10. You Want to Go Beyond Your Limits
11. You Want to Take Responsibility
12. You Want to Live Authentically
13. You Want Balance in Your Life
14. You Want New Possibilities For Your Relationships
The Coaching Triad
Attitude
Choices Skills
The Coaching Triad
1. Attitude
Definition: Beliefs, interpretations, points of view, stories,
positions, etc, that get acted out in our behavior.
Attitude precedes outcome.
Behavior and its consequences will inevitably
follow attitudes.
The Coaching Triad
2. Skills
Definition: Learned habits/patterns of adaptive behavior.
We are not born knowing how to have a successful
relationship.
Skills are learnable and teachable.
Most of what we do in a relationship (or life) is a pattern of learned behavior that we can modify if we choose to.
The Coaching Triad
3. Choices
Definition: Decisions made in the moment that result in an
action.
We are always at choice.
The functional, successful adult takes responsibility and
does not blame others for undesired outcomes.
Five Stages of Relationship Coaching
Stage 1: Readiness Addresses: "Who am I?" "What do I want?" "How do I get what I want?" Coaching activities may include: • Relationship history • Personality assessment (traits, values, preferences, etc) • Identification of goals and needs • Clarify Vision, Requirements, Needs, and Wants • Develop profile of desired Life Partner • Develop "Relationship Plan" to manifest/attract Life Partner
Five Stages of Relationship Coaching
Stage 2: Attraction
Focuses on effective dating attitudes, skills, and choices
Coaching activities may include:
• Where and how to meet potential life partners
• Becoming ready for a committed relationship
• Effectively meeting people, developing networks, sorting
• Staying on track with your Relationship Plan
Five Stages of Relationship Coaching
Stage 3: Pre-Commitment Helping new couples be conscious and objective about the future of
their relationship.
Coaching activities may include:
• Become clear about whether this relationship is right for you
• Getting a reality check, being accountable for what you want
• Developing strategies for testing, decision-making
• Addressing emotional and compatibility issues
Five Stages of Relationship Coaching
Stage 4: Coupling Helping a committed couple to co-create a functional Life Partnership Coaching activities may include: • Getting a committed relationship off to a good start • Effective communication and conflict resolution skills • Discovering and overcoming issues and obstacles around parenting,
domestic responsibilities, finances, etc. • Identifying and negotiating mutual wants, needs, and goals
Five Stages of Relationship Coaching
Stage 5: Bliss Helps a committed couple with a functional relationship deepen their emotional intimacy, trust, love, and connection Coaching activities may include: • Increasing authentic expression of thoughts, feelings, wants, needs • Ownership of emotional reactivity • Increasing mutual support, trust, safety around emotional
vulnerabilities and intimacy • Developing skills, rituals, and practices for deepening emotional,
physical, and spiritual connection and fulfillment
Relationship Coaching for Singles
Key Concepts for Coaching Singles
• Vision
• Purpose
• Relationship Requirements, Needs And Wants
• Readiness
Requirements Coaching Exercise
Step One: Recall your last significant relationship break-up
Step Two: List reasons why relationship didn’t work for you
Step Three: Choose the top “relationship-breaker”
– Write it down as a positive, measurable, behavioral relationship event
Step Four: Apply the ‘first’ requirements test:
– If you met someone, fell in love, and you REALLY wanted relationship to work, but this requirement was missing, would you break it off?
Step Five: Apply the ‘second’ requirements test: – If you answered yes to # 4, attempt to find an exception - imagine a
scenario in which you could live with requirement not being met.
Requirements Coaching Exercise
Conclusion:
1. If you COULD NOT STAY in a relationship without the above, it is most likely a requirement.
2. If it IS POSSIBLE for you to be in a relationship without the above, it is most likely a need.
Ten Principles of Conscious Dating®
1. Know who you are and what you want
2. Learn how to get what you want
3. Be the "Chooser"
4. Balance your heart with your head
5. Be ready and available for commitment
Ten Principles of Conscious Dating®
6. Use the “ Law of Attraction"
7. Gain relationship knowledge and skill
8. Create a support community
9. Practice assertiveness
10. Be a "Successful Single"
Relationship Readiness
If you were to meet your soul mate today,
would you be ready and available
to enter into a relationship with him/her?
Relationship Readiness Quiz
Relationship Readiness Coaching Exercise
1. Client chooses one of the ten items on the quiz for coaching
2. Coach asks questions about item for 5 minutes (Coach is transparent- NO statements, advice, feedback,
mirroring, suggestions, opinions, etc)
• Coaching Questions might include: – What do you want your life to be like in this area? – What would that look like for you? – What does _____ mean to you? – What needs to happen for this area to be a “ten” for you? – What do you know you need to do about this area? – What steps are you willing to take in this area in the next
week, month, year? – What likely obstacles can you think of? – What support do you need to do this?
3. Choose another item on quiz and repeat process
Dating Traps in the Comics
Three Types of Dating Relationships
1. Recreational Dating
– Readiness status: Not ready for a committed relationship
– Purpose: To have fun and satisfy social needs
– Goal: To meet short-term needs while working towards long-term goals beyond the relationship
Recreational Dating in the Comics
Three Types of Dating Relationships
2. Committed Dating – Readiness status: Ready for a life-long committed relationship
– Purpose: To find your life partner
– Goal: To have a long-term, desired future by finding a partner
who meets all of your requirements
Three Types of Dating Relationships
3. Mini-Marriage
– Readiness status: Unclear
– Purpose: To meet physical, social emotional needs prior to a committed relationship, or when commitment is not desired
– Goal: To meet short-term needs when you're unclear about the future of the relationship
Be “The Chooser”
“Choose your life’s mate carefully,
from this one decision will come
90% of your happiness or misery”
-- H. Jackson Brown Jr.
Life’s Little Instruction Book
Relationship Coaching for Couples
Couples in the Comics
YOU ARE NOT IN A COMMITTED RELATIONSHIP IF:
• Your partner is not aware your relationship is committed
• You are wondering if this relationship is committed
• You and your partner have differences of opinion about the status of your relationship
• Your family and friends have different perceptions about the status of your relationship
• You and your partner have not acted to explicitly formalize your commitment in some way
• You are relying on verbal promises without a significant track record of them being kept
Pre-Commitment vs. Commitment
• A commitment is explicit and unambiguous. A commitment is a
formal event of some kind between two people. A commitment is something you DO over time. A real commitment is usually legally enforceable and there are consequences for breaking it.
• For a relationship to be truly committed, there are no exits- mentally, emotionally, or physically. When the going gets rough, you make it work.
Pre-Commitment vs. Commitment
What is Commitment?
CRITERIA #1:
Promises made to each other about the permanent nature
of the relationship that are kept
CRITERIA #2:
Explicit, formal, public declaration
CRITERIA #3:
Unambiguous to partners and others
• Regular, Safe, Good Sex
• Companionship
• Intimacy
• Family
• Economics
• Community
• Mental/Emotional/Physical Health
Benefits of Committed Relationships
Fact vs. Attitude
• What is a “Fact?”
• What is “Attitude?”
• The Power of Attitude
The “Marital Endurance Ethic”
Linda Waite (The Case for Marriage) found that 2/3 of unhappily
married spouses who stayed married reported that their marriages were happy five years later. She coined the term "Marital Endurance Ethic;" stating that "marriages got happier not because partners resolved problems, but because they stubbornly outlasted them."
Types of Couples
Type 1: Both are pre-committed in fact and attitude (“Is this ‘The One?” “Should I should make a commitment to this relationship?”)
Type 2: Pre-committed in fact with a committed attitude (“We’ve been dating for 3 months, and we’re real committed!”)
Type 3: One or both have a prematurely committed attitude (“We are committed to each other and will be married as soon as s/he gets a divorce.”
Type 4: Both are committed in fact and attitude (no exits)
Type 5: Committed in fact, one or both have a pre-committed attitude (“We’ve been married for 10 years and have two kids, yet I’m not sure this is the right relationship for me.”)
The “Coachable” Couple
Each partner:
• Has a committed attitude
• Takes responsibility for choices/outcomes
• Self-regulates emotional reactivity (accepts 90/10 principle)
• Supportable to coach
• Responsive to partner
• Absence of “Four Horsemen” (Gottman) – Criticism (negativity about partner) – Contempt/Belligerence (sarcasm, mocking, sneering, hostile
humor, provoking, demeaning, threatening) – Defensiveness (a way of blaming partner) – Stonewalling (Avoidance, tuning out, ignoring)
Pre-Commitment Coaching
• Pre-Commitment Mindset
• Role of Coach: Neutral about outcome of relationship
• Developing contract/Designing coaching partnership
• Attachment vs. Detachment
• Assessing and addressing unsolvable problems
• Vignette: “He likes beer”
Coaching Committed Couples
• Commitment Mindset
• Role of Coach: Advocate for relationship
• Developing contract/Designing coaching partnership – Stage 4: Coaching for functionality – Stage 5: Bliss Coaching
• Assessing for unsolvable problems – Four alternatives for solving an unsolvable problem:
o Stay and be unhappy o Leave o Let go of problem o Compromise
• Developing individual and shared Vision
• Developing coaching agenda (Wheel of Relationship Life)
• Addressing relationship skills (Communication map)
Wheel of Relationship Life
Committed Couples in the Comics
Committed Couples in the Comics
Therapist as Coach
• Fees
• Insurance billing
• Liability
• Service Delivery
• Combine coaching with therapy?
Building a Successful Relationship Coaching Practice
Step 1: Get relationship Coach Training
• Be careful of your filters
• Coaching is a specific methodology
• Credibility comes from qualifications
• Set yourself up for success by doing it “right”
Building a Successful Relationship Coaching Practice
Step 2: Choose a Specialty and Niche
• Profession vs. Specialty vs. Niche
• Inch wide, mile deep = “Own” your niche
• Be unique, follow passion, be an expert
• More effective for attracting prospects and convincing them to hire
you
• More fun, unleash creativity, create legacy
Building a Successful Relationship Coaching Practice
Step 3: Design Service Delivery System for Niche
• Secret to guaranteed success- Market Research
• Sell packages and programs, not sessions!
• Provide choices and group services
• Passive revenue, multiple revenue streams
Building a Successful Relationship Coaching Practice
Step 4: Apply Marketing Strategies to Develop Prospects
• Marketing is communicating what you do
• You can market til the cows come home and not get any clients! Primary outcome of marketing is to develop prospects
• 3 Primary forms of marketing
– Speaking
– Writing
– Networking
Building a Successful Relationship Coaching Practice
Step 5: Apply Enrollment Strategies to Convert Prospects to Clients
• Focus on benefits and results
• Build relationship, provide and prove value
• Offer a (biggest goal or problem) coaching session
• Apply strategies for closing, overcoming objections, addressing common questions (see www.BYIPTIPS.com)
• Follow up, Follow up, Follow up
10 Benefits of Being a Relationship Coach
1. You make a tremendous difference in the lives of your clients,
everyone they know, and the world.
2. You make a living doing what you love
3. Your services will always be needed and valued
4. Easiest coaching niche to market
5. More potential clients than you'll ever reach
10 Benefits of Being a Relationship Coach
6. Enhances your own life and relationships
7. Endless possibilities for specialization and niches
8. Who you are, your background and experiences are essential to your work
9. There's always more to learn and new possibilities for relationships
10. You can get training and support from Relationship Coaching Institute unparalleled in any coaching niche or helping profession
Thank you for joining us!
For more information-
Visit www.RelationshipCoachingInstitute.com
or call- 888-268-4074
contact@relationshipcoachinginstitute.com
Free Relationship Coach Career Consultation!
www.MeetWithRCI.com
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