In our Coaching Corner series, we share real-world coaching cases that come from our work with leaders.
The challenge
Jerome is a senior manager at a multinational headquartered in France. The organization is both dynamic and highly results-oriented, which has led over time to a cultural orientation that favors a certain competitiveness between teams and individuals. This is something understood more than overtly expressed, and intradepartmental collaboration and entrepreneurial spirit are highly encouraged by the senior leadership team.
As the organization approaches the end of the financial year, several project statuses were shared at a senior management all-hands meeting. One initiative, involving the integration of a recently acquired supplier company, has begun to flounder for various reasons, and Jerome’s CEO asks for input and support from team leaders. Performance and results have been consistently strong with his team, and he feels that he has the bandwidth to contribute time and energy to get this project back on track.
Jerome sees an opportunity for intra-departmental collaboration that will be of broader benefit to the organization – but only if he can help get this project across the finish line before the end of the year. Jerome takes the initiative but is careful to communicate clearly and be as transparent as possible about the challenges of completing the project while articulating his clear enthusiasm for the work and trying to instill some much-needed positivity around getting it done successfully.
His colleagues are less proactive about getting involved but still offer friendly words and smiles of encouragement. Buoyed by the challenge and the support of his peers, Jerome does the impossible: he turns the beleaguered project around and delivers results that surpass expectations, all before the close of the fiscal year. His CEO is delighted, but instantly it becomes apparent that his colleagues are less than pleased.
Word gets back to Jerome that other senior managers in his department have been talking behind his back, describing him as a “political player.” Instead of being seen by his peers as a collaborator, Jerome has been cast as someone hungry for success and promotion; someone who simply wants to rise through the ranks and stand out from the crowd.
Demoralized and confused by his department’s response, Jerome decides to seek out the support of an executive coach to unpack what has happened and better understand the dynamics at play.