Business Performance Advisory
v Business Coaching
What you need to know about Business Coaching
The Business Coaching industry has grown significantly over the last 15 year. According to
IBIS world in the US it is estimated the Business coaching industry generates about $10b per annum in
revenue, employing approximately 79,000 people.
Over that time the business coach has slowly crept into the standard pool of advisers a
business owner considers to engage to help grow their business.
How is a business coach different? Not so long ago the only source of advice was a Tax and
compliance firm that offered “Business Consulting” as an add on service, a Sales Consultant that advised on
your sales pitch and marketing or a Human Resources consultant that advised on legal requirements of managing
staff. However none of the above focused on what mattered most to the business owner. How do I get the best
out of myself and my business? As ultimately it is the business owner who makes the final decisions, it is
imperative the business owner has the tools techniques and mindset to get the best out of themselves and
their team.
Just like a good athlete gets regular advice on technique, physical and mental conditioning to
perform at their best. A business owner also benefits from challenging at their marketing, selling, staff
motivation, service delivery practices and financial management techniques. There is only one constant rule
in business, nothing stays the same forever.
Challenges with Business Coaching:
Putney Breeze focuses on Business
Performance. As a result many of our clients made similar comments, “we use to have a business coach, you are
like them with one main difference, you can actually tell me what is going on in my business”. After receiving
this feedback I met with a number of Business Coaching firms to learn more about what they
do.
What I discovered was in the short rise of the business coaching industry, the majority of
business coaches tend to have sales as their professional trade, although there seems to be no prerequisite
for work background. I discovered that in a large business coaching group, their business coaches had
backgrounds as varied as school teachers, to photographers to former IT consultants. I asked the Head of this
business coaching group, so how do these new business coaches with varied backgrounds get their head around
best practice, strategic planning, business modelling, trend analysis, performance measures and staff
development? His answer was, “We send them on a 10 day training course”!!
I can tell you there are plenty of Tax accountants who know a lot about Tax legislation, but
ask them to give advice on business performance best practice their knowledge is limited to ad-hoc, anecdotal
one liners’ and improvised calculations based on a text book they once read at university many moons ago. But
at least there is some formal training that had occurred once upon a time. Yet the Business coaching group
was going to let loose a ‘business coach’ on your business after a 10 day training course. The head of the
business coaching group was a great salesman and I admire his powers of persuasion. However there were a
couple of things I wasn’t comfortable with;
1) The business coaches in this group
were disparate, had inconsistent experience and skills.
2) The Business Coaching Group was
happy for their coaches to operate under different business names. Again this left questions about the
history of their brand and the broader group of people. Would McDonald’s let you open a store and use all
their knowhow and practices but operate under another name? Short answer no, so why would a business coaching
group allow this to occur? It didn’t pass the sniff test.
3) I pressed on the question of the
revenue split of the group. What was the percentage of revenue from joining fees of new business coach’s
verses business coaching revenue? I didn’t get a straight answer, so I had to assume they made just as much
or more money from selling business coaching ‘partnerships’ than from business coaching, i.e. it was possible
their core business was selling Business coaching partnerships and not actually business
coaching.
The benefits they provided any new business coach was the access to workflows, templates,
methods, infrastructure and coaching advice for business coaches. I could see the value of their
infrastructure for new Business Coaches. There were some very good operators in the group, they were being
let down by head office who accepted new business coaching partners who should never have been allowed for
the sake of new partnership revenue.
Business Coaches for Business Advisors!
Then there is the growing niche industry of business coaching for Business Advisors. Yes, if
you are receiving business coaching from a Tax firm, there is a good chance they themselves are being coached
to coach you! There are a couple of business coaching groups who focus on Tax accounting firms and do
reasonably well. They then suggest to the Tax firm that the business model they advocate can be applied to
their clients. However, if you aren’t a professional services business like a Tax firm. You have a completely
different business model, for example, your business sells products people may "want to have" rather than
"compulsory to have" (Tax returns). How effective might their advice be? In this circumstance there is a high
potential for ineffective advice as your market dynamics are completely different to
theirs.
Tax Advisors are great at what they are trained to do. They are a key player in your advisory
team. The paradox for the tax advisor stretching across to business performance is when you try to
be everything for everyone you can end up doing nothing well for anyone. Some Tax advisors have managed the
challenge successfully however many don't to the detriment of the client.
Our Philosophy
A central philosophy of Putney Breeze is to create a Living Asset. That is creating a
business that is capable of providing you with income without having to work in the business. If you create a
Living Asset you are then in a position to sell the business and cash out with your capital
rather than simply close the business on retirement. The philosophy of creating a Living
Asset was not considered a key long term outcome of another business coaching group. They were quite
happy to leave you languishing in self-employment with no other option than to walk away from the business
you may have spent 10, 15 or 20 years building. An opportunity wasted I’d suggest.
Questions to consider
when appointing a business coach or business performance advisor.
1) What is the work background of the
business coach or business advisor, what are the core skills they bring to the table? Not just the templates,
one liner, book lists and feel good pats on the back. Is it Sales, Tax advice, IT consulting or HR, how
relevant are their skills in providing holistic business performance advice?
2) Can you communicate with your
business coach? Can they explain what is happening in your business in terms that you can absorb and
action?
3) Do they have a process or method
for improving your business, or do they just bring a hose for the daily fire fight?
4) What are their beliefs? What is
their central philosophy on business improvement and business destination? Does that reconcile with
yours?
5) Do they themselves bring a body of
knowledge and experience or is that knowledge borrowed from elsewhere? Can they prove they have their own
body of knowledge and experience, for example have they published a book?
6) What is their history of business
performance improvement can they provide examples of their own work not just work of others in their
company?
7) Have they ever fully owned and
operated an independent company successfully and have been responsible for the outcomes of the
business?
8) How do they update their skills
and where do they source their new knowledge? Do they make sure their advice is at the cutting edge and not
yesterday’s noise?
Beyond Business Coaching
Putney Breeze is a business performance advisor who goes beyond business coaching. We
can;
i) Facilitate your business
destination,
ii) Provide genuine insights on
product profitability
iii) Provide clarity of focus for
your marketing resources
iv) Enhance the collaboration and
effectiveness of your sales force
v) Redesign your KPI reporting to
create business value
vi) Analyse and construct your
business model and provide insights on business trends,
vii) Redesign your accounting
systems, forecast your cash flow requirements
viii) Ingrain a positive business
culture.
ix) Improve the effectiveness of your
staff
All of the above
are core skills of a business performance advisor focused on Maximising Profit for Growth. A business
owner benefits from challenging their marketing, selling, staff motivation, service delivery practices and
financial management techniques. Leverage the one constant rule in business, ‘nothing stays the same forever’ for
your benefit. Consider speaking to a business performance advisor today.

Consultation Request
E: info@putneybreeze.com.au
T: 03 9395
1118
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