What are the Core Competencies?
The ICF Core Competencies were developed to support greater understanding about the skills and approaches used within today’s coaching profession as defined by ICF.
The ICF defines coaching as partnering with clients in a thought-provoking and creative process that inspires them to maximize their personal and professional potential. The Core Competencies are grouped into four clusters according to those that fit together logically based on common ways of looking at the competencies in each group. The groupings and individual competencies are not weighted—they do not represent any kind of priority in that they are all core or critical for any competent coach to demonstrate.
What are the ICF Groupings?
A. Setting the Foundation
B. Co-Creating the Relationship
C. Communicating Effectively
D. Facilitating Learning and Results
A. Setting the Foundation
2. Establishing the Coaching Agreement
B. Co-Creating the Relationship
4. Coaching Presence
C. Communicating Effectively
D. Facilitating Learning and Results
Understanding of coaching ethics and standards and ability to apply them appropriately in all coaching situations.
Ability to understand what is required in the specific coaching interaction and to come to agreement with the prospective and new client about the coaching process and relationship.
Ability to create a safe, supportive environment that produces ongoing mutual respect and trust.
Ability to be fully conscious and create spontaneous relationship with the client, employing a style that is open, flexible and confident.
Ability to focus completely on what the client is saying and is not saying, to understand the meaning of what is said in the context of the client’s desires, and to support client self-expression.
Ability to ask questions that reveal the information needed for maximum benefit to the coaching relationship and the client.
Ability to communicate effectively during coaching sessions, and to use language that has the greatest positive impact on the client.
Ability to integrate and accurately evaluate multiple sources of information and to make interpretations that help the client to gain awareness and thereby achieve agreed-upon results.
Ability to create with the client opportunities for ongoing learning, during coaching and in work/life situations, and for taking new actions that will most effectively lead to agreed-upon coaching results.
Ability to develop and maintain an effective coaching plan with the client.
Ability to hold attention on what is important for the client, and to leave responsibility with the client to take action.