Leader Coaching: What Changes When You Invest in It
Leader coaching is the practice of working with experienced leaders, one-on-one or in small groups, to improve decision-making, commercial judgment, and team performance. Done well, it is one of the highest-return investments a marketing organisation can make. Done poorly, it is expensive therapy with a business card.
The difference between those two outcomes comes down to whether the coaching is anchored to real commercial problems or floating in a world of frameworks and personality assessments. Most organisations get this wrong, and they wonder why nothing changes.
Key Takeaways
- Leader coaching only delivers commercial value when it is tied to specific business outcomes, not general self-improvement.
- The biggest coaching gap in marketing organisations is not skill, it is judgment: knowing what to prioritise when everything feels urgent.
- Coaching works best when the leader being coached already has skin in the game and is not waiting to be fixed by someone else.
- Organisations that invest in coaching during growth phases outperform those that only reach for it during a crisis.
- The coach’s job is to create clarity, not provide answers. If your coach is giving you a playbook, you have hired a consultant.
In This Article
- Why Most Leader Coaching Fails to Move the Needle
- What Good Leader Coaching Actually Looks Like
- The Judgment Gap: Why Senior Marketers Get Stuck
- When to Invest in Coaching: Growth Phases vs. Crisis Moments
- The Commercial Case for Coaching Marketing Leaders Specifically
- How to Structure a Coaching Engagement That Actually Delivers
- The Relationship Between Coaching and Organisational Performance
- What Separates Coaching That Sticks From Coaching That Fades
Why Most Leader Coaching Fails to Move the Needle
I have seen two versions of leader coaching up close. The first version involves a well-credentialed coach, a series of psychometric tools, a lot of conversation about communication styles, and a 90-day plan that everyone forgets by week three. The second version involves someone who has operated at a high level, who asks uncomfortable questions, and who refuses to let you hide behind process.
The first version is far more common. It feels safe because it is structured and measurable in a superficial way. You can tick boxes. You can report back to the board that coaching is happening. What you cannot easily measure is whether the leader is making better commercial decisions six months later, and that is the only metric that matters.
When I was running an agency that was losing serious money, the last thing I needed was someone helping me understand my communication preferences. I needed someone who could sit across from me and say: you have too many people, your pricing model is broken, and your senior team is not pulling in the same direction. That kind of clarity is worth paying for. A personality report is not.
If you are thinking about leader coaching as part of a broader growth strategy, it is worth reading through the Go-To-Market and Growth Strategy hub first. Coaching does not exist in isolation. It has to connect to where the business is trying to go.
What Good Leader Coaching Actually Looks Like
Good coaching starts with a diagnosis, not a programme. Before any framework is introduced, a competent coach should be asking: what decisions is this leader getting wrong, and why? Is it a knowledge gap, a confidence gap, a structural problem, or a people problem? Those are four very different issues and they require four very different responses.
In my experience, the most common issue for senior marketing leaders is not that they lack knowledge. It is that they lack a structured way to think through ambiguous commercial situations. They know a lot. They have read the books, done the courses, attended the conferences. What they struggle with is translating that knowledge into clear decisions when the situation is messy, the data is incomplete, and the stakeholders are pulling in different directions.
That is a judgment problem, not an information problem. And coaching that addresses judgment looks very different from coaching that delivers content.
A few things that distinguish genuinely useful leader coaching:
- It starts from the leader’s actual situation, not a generic model of leadership development.
- It pushes back on assumptions rather than validating them.
- It creates accountability without creating dependency.
- It is honest about what the leader can and cannot change.
- It measures progress in commercial terms, not behavioural ones.
The Judgment Gap: Why Senior Marketers Get Stuck
Early in my career, I was handed a whiteboard pen mid-brainstorm when the agency founder had to leave for a client meeting. The room was full of people who knew the brand better than I did. My first internal reaction was something close to panic. But what I learned in that moment was that leadership is not about knowing the most. It is about being willing to make a call when the situation demands one.
That kind of judgment, the ability to move forward with incomplete information, to make a decision and own it, is exactly what coaching can develop. But only if the coaching is designed to put the leader in uncomfortable situations rather than comfortable ones.
BCG’s work on commercial transformation makes a similar point about the leaders who drive growth. They are not the ones with the most refined strategies on paper. They are the ones who can read a situation quickly, commit to a direction, and adjust as they go. That capability is learnable, but it requires practice in conditions that matter, not simulations.
The leaders I have seen get the most from coaching are the ones who already have skin in the game. They are not waiting to be developed. They have a specific problem they are trying to solve, a decision they are wrestling with, or a team dynamic they cannot seem to shift. They come to coaching with urgency, and they leave with clarity.
When to Invest in Coaching: Growth Phases vs. Crisis Moments
Most organisations reach for coaching when something has gone wrong. A leader is underperforming. A team is in conflict. A major pitch has been lost. That is understandable, but it is also the least efficient time to invest in development.
When I was scaling an agency from around 20 people to over 100, the pressure on leaders at every level was immense. We were hiring fast, winning new business, and simultaneously trying to maintain quality and margin. The leaders who struggled were not the ones who lacked technical skills. They were the ones who had never had to manage at that pace or at that scale before.
Coaching during that growth phase would have been enormously valuable, not because the leaders were broken, but because they were being asked to operate in conditions they had not encountered before. That is the right moment to invest: when a capable person is being stretched into new territory, not when they are already failing.
BCG’s research on scaling agile organisations points to a similar dynamic. The constraint in most scaling situations is not process or technology. It is leadership capacity. The people who were right for the business at one size are not automatically right for it at the next size. Coaching is one of the most practical tools for closing that gap before it becomes a crisis.
Forrester’s work on agile scaling journeys reinforces this point. Organisations that build leadership capability proactively, rather than reactively, are significantly better positioned to sustain growth through transitions.
The Commercial Case for Coaching Marketing Leaders Specifically
Marketing leaders occupy a peculiar position in most organisations. They are expected to be creative and analytical, strategic and executional, commercially rigorous and brand-literate. They sit at the intersection of more competing demands than almost any other function.
That complexity creates a specific kind of pressure. Marketing leaders are often the ones who have to make the case for investment without perfect proof, who have to translate brand activity into commercial outcomes for a CFO who wants numbers, and who have to manage agencies, internal teams, and technology vendors simultaneously.
I spent years judging the Effie Awards, which are specifically designed to recognise marketing effectiveness. What struck me, reviewing hundreds of case studies, was how rarely the work that won was technically brilliant. What separated the winners was the quality of the thinking behind the brief, and the commercial clarity of the objective. The leaders behind those campaigns had learned to ask the right questions before spending a pound.
That is a coachable skill. It is not innate. It comes from being challenged, repeatedly, to justify your assumptions and sharpen your thinking before you commit to a direction.
Vidyard’s research on go-to-market team performance highlights how much pipeline potential is left unrealised by teams that are executing well tactically but lacking strategic coherence at the leadership level. Coaching that sharpens commercial judgment directly addresses that gap.
How to Structure a Coaching Engagement That Actually Delivers
If you are commissioning coaching for a marketing leader or a leadership team, the structure of the engagement matters as much as the quality of the coach. A few principles that hold up in practice:
Start with a commercial brief, not a development plan
Define what success looks like in business terms before the first session. What decisions does this leader need to make better? What outcomes should change as a result of the coaching? If you cannot answer those questions, you are not ready to commission coaching. You are ready to commission a review.
Choose coaches who have operated at the level they are coaching
There is a meaningful difference between someone who has studied leadership and someone who has led. Both have value, but they offer different things. For senior marketing leaders dealing with real commercial pressure, a coach who has run a P&L, managed a team through a crisis, or built something from scratch will ask better questions than one who has not.
Build in accountability, not just reflection
Good coaching produces decisions and actions, not just insights. Every session should end with something specific the leader is going to do differently. That does not mean a long list of tasks. It might be one conversation they have been avoiding, one assumption they are going to test, or one decision they are going to make by a specific date.
Review progress against commercial outcomes, not coaching milestones
At the halfway point of any engagement, ask whether the original commercial problem is getting better. Not whether the leader feels more confident or communicates more clearly, though those things may be true as well. Ask whether the decisions are improving and whether the team is performing better as a result. If the answer is no, change something.
The Relationship Between Coaching and Organisational Performance
One of the most consistent things I observed across the agencies and businesses I ran was that the ceiling on organisational performance was almost always set by the quality of leadership, not the quality of the strategy on paper. You can have a brilliant go-to-market plan and a mediocre leadership team and the plan will not survive first contact with reality.
When I turned around a loss-making agency, the strategic moves were not complicated. Cut costs, fix pricing, improve delivery margins, bring in stronger senior people, win new business. None of that required a genius. What it required was the willingness to make uncomfortable decisions quickly, to hold people accountable without losing them, and to keep the team focused on the right things when everything felt urgent at once.
Those capabilities are exactly what good coaching develops. Not in a theoretical way, but in the specific context of the leader’s actual situation, with real stakes attached.
If you want to understand how leader coaching fits into a broader commercial growth agenda, the Go-To-Market and Growth Strategy hub covers the full picture, from market entry and scaling to the team and leadership decisions that determine whether the strategy holds.
What Separates Coaching That Sticks From Coaching That Fades
The coaching that sticks is the coaching that changes how a leader thinks, not just what they do. Behavioural change without cognitive change is fragile. A leader who has been told to delegate more will delegate more for a few weeks and then revert. A leader who genuinely understands why their instinct to control is costing them capacity, and who has worked through that in a real context, will think differently about it next time a similar situation arises.
That depth of change takes time and it takes honesty. The leaders who get the most from coaching are the ones who are willing to be wrong in the room, to say out loud that they are not sure what to do, and to sit with that uncertainty long enough to work through it properly rather than defaulting to the nearest available answer.
Semrush’s thinking on market penetration strategy is a useful parallel here. The organisations that grow market share consistently are not the ones with the best tactics. They are the ones with the clearest thinking at the top. Coaching is one of the most direct investments you can make in that clarity.
The leaders I have seen fail to benefit from coaching tend to share one characteristic: they are looking for someone to validate their existing view rather than challenge it. They want a coach who will confirm that the problem is everyone else. That is not coaching. That is expensive agreement.
About the Author
Keith Lacy is a marketing strategist and former agency CEO with 20+ years of experience across agency leadership, performance marketing, and commercial strategy. He writes The Marketing Juice to cut through the noise and share what works.
