Ask Sue Knight

SubjectFromDate
how to startchatura s ranatunga 23 Dec 2003 05:22
Coach , NLP and Psychology Therapycharles fu 16 Dec 2003 05:15
Advocates and NLPambreen 10 Dec 2003 08:35
Being a Good Trainer in NLP?charles fu 06 Dec 2003 04:58
CopyrightKatharina Van Gend 04 Dec 2003 02:30
NLP CertificationNeena Bhattacharjee 04 Dec 2003 08:20
Multiple Partsjonathan lee 03 Dec 2003 03:30
General Semantics & NLPKay Rudisill 30 Nov 2003 02:12
NLP Practitioner Training and CertificationRamaswamy 19 Nov 2003 05:13
Logical Levels of Experiencemamohale 12 Nov 2003 11:35
 
Coach , NLP and Psychology Therapy — charles fu — Tuesday, December 16, 2003

I have ever been knowen few coaching and training. For example, Coaching for business, Coaching for management and Coaching for personal living skill. I like to be a NLP practitioner,also want to be a coach after knowing some coaching. But I don't know how to choose between Coach and NLP practitioner.

Could you tell me the difference of that, including psychology therapy? and which people could be a good NLP practitioner?

Wishes to you enjoy!

charles fu

 
 
Sue's Answer

Dear Charles,

This is a very topical question as so many people are now open to learning to be a coach. The NLP Business Practitioner programme that I run includes and is very much based on simultaneously learning to coach, I find the two inseparable but I do believe that NLP based coaching is often very different from other forms of coaching in that it concentrates on enabling the subject to learn to model themselves and others as a way of finding their own form of excellence. A practitioner and master practitioner training therefore equips my delegates to be very effective NLP coaches but it is good to check with the training school that you might be thinking of using to find out if they have the same approach and thinking. And you ask who makes a good practitioner - well I think that anyone who is open to feedback and learning and prepared to let go of structure and 'right' answers so someone who can embrace the unknown with naivety and humility.

I hope that helps you.

Yours sincerely,

Sue Knight