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Do You Need a Trainer or a Coach?
March 15th, 2021
by Bill Boyajian

Training and coaching are two entirely different things.

A trainer is an expert with knowledge you want imparted to you or your employees. Examples would be sales training, learning a new software system, or conveying techniques to improve performance in any given area. It usually involves someone with expertise and experience to provide direct information to others with something specific to learn. Think of it as a teacher-student relationship.

Coaching, on the other hand, involves advisory work usually between two people who often have similar knowledge and experience. Good coaches recognize the intelligence and giftedness of those they coach. They use questions to help their clients think through their performance and how to handle various situations that arise, often in management. Coaches are valued more for the variety of questions they ask than for the information they impart.

Coaching questions are designed to get the person to think more carefully about the way they’ve handled interactions, the way they consider alternatives to major decisions, and the way they can improve overall performance. Questions raise awareness and cause introspection to improve outcomes.

Great leaders are often good coaches. Rather than move quickly into teaching and training, they ask questions to make those they lead think more clearly about their actions and reactions to business and life circumstances. Knowing how to ask the right open-ended questions is a terrific skill and often leads to the best learning.

Think carefully about what you need in your business because the fundamentals of teaching and coaching are very different and produce different results.



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“I needed help orchestrating a succession plan for our business. I had heard that Bill Boyajian specialized in assisting owners to transition their business to the next generation. He knows how to bridge the generation gap and deliver what each needs to hear. I would recommend Bill to any business owner who needs advice on succession planning from a trusted outside professional.”

–Charles Denaburg,
Managing Partner,
Levy’s Fine Jewelry
Birmingham, AL

"Our family needed some guidance on business transition and succession planning. We asked Bill Boyajian to help us because we knew we could trust him to tell us what we needed to hear. Bill became a valuable resource for our company and our entire family. He has the ability to meet each of us where we’re at and it has served us very well."

–Ceylon Leitzel
Leitzel Fine Jewelry
Hershey & Myerstown, PA

“We needed a plan to transition our business to a non-family member and we asked Bill Boyajian to help us. His experience in the area has really paid off, but we didn’t expect the added value of putting us together with a financial planner who helped organize our retirement needs. We now have the fundamentals to transition our business successfully, and we have Bill to thank for it.”

–Ernie & Debbie Cummings
Kizer-Cummings Jewelers
Lawrence, KS