
Say What You Mean: The Communication Problem Showing Up in Coaching Sessions
There is a pattern showing up in coaching sessions that has nothing to do with the coaching itself. Clients are vaguer, harder to pin down, quicker to deflect. Getting a direct answer out of people is harder than it used to be, and the effects are landing in the room whether coaches are ready for them or not.In this episode of The Coaching Clinic, John Ball and Angie unpack why direct communication is eroding, what is driving it, and why coaches, of all people, cannot afford to let it slide in their own practice.The conversation gets personal. John connects the topic to his own experience of staying quiet about his identity for fear of making others uncomfortable, and the broader principle it points to: keeping yourself small to protect other people's feelings is not kindness. It is a slow tax on your effectiveness.What you will take away from this episode:Why avoidance and indirect communication are showing up more frequently inside coaching sessionsThe difference between being direct and being abrasive, and why conflating them weakens coachesHow to frame challenging questions so clients feel safe enough to go deeperWhen to push and when to read the room and ease offWhy social media culture may be partly responsible for the erosion of honest conversationHow a coach's own willingness to say the uncomfortable thing directly shapes what clients are willing to bring to sessionsJohn's personal reflection on staying quiet to protect others' comfort, and what it cost himCHAPTERS:00:00 The Challenge of Direct Communication02:53 The Impact of Technology on Communication05:33 Navigating Vulnerability in Coaching08:28 The Fear of Being Direct11:25 Authenticity in Coaching Conversations14:24 OutroFAQ SECTIONFrequently Asked QuestionsWhy are coaching clients becoming more avoidant and indirect in their communication?John Ball and Angie discuss on The Coaching Clinic that avoidance in coaching sessions reflects a broader cultural shift rather than a coaching-specific problem. They identify increased reliance on text-based communication, the erosion of direct conversation through technology, and the chilling effect of social media pile-ons as contributing factors. Clients who have been burned by direct expression or who have absorbed cultural norms around indirect communication bring those patterns into the session. The result is deflection, resistance when challenged, and a reluctance to say what is actually on their mind.What is the difference between being direct and being abrasive as a coach?Angie addresses this distinction on The Coaching Clinic, noting that many people equate directness with aggression because they have experienced directness delivered badly. Being abrasive typically involves accusatory framing, false sweetness wrapped around a criticism, or a bluntness that disregards the other person's state. Being direct means saying what is true clearly and without evasion, while still holding the relationship. John Ball adds that trying to soften every uncomfortable truth does not protect the client; it weakens the coach's position and reduces the quality of the work.How should coaches frame difficult or sensitive questions to keep clients engaged?John Ball shares a specific approach on The Coaching Clinic: when a client mentions something emotionally charged in passing, flag it without forcing it. His framing is to name what the client said, acknowledge it may or may not be comfortable to explore, and ask directly whether they want to go there. This gives the client agency while keeping the topic alive. Angie adds that coaches should set expectations at the start of the relationship that sessions may go to uncomfortable places, while acknowledging that clients cannot always anticipate what that will feel like until it happens.How does a coach know when to push a client harder and when to back off?Angie's position on The Coaching Clinic is that coaches need to actively monitor the client's discomfort level rather than pressing consistently regardless of response. She suggests treating discomfort as a dial rather than a binary: pushing a client to an eight out of ten without recognising it and adjusting will damage trust and rapport. The skill is in reading the signals that a client is approaching their limit and navigating differently, rather than stopping entirely. John Ball echoes this, noting that clients who have asked to be challenged still need to retain the right to indicate when something is too much for that session.Why does staying silent to avoid making others uncomfortable weaken a coach's effectiveness?John Ball reflects on this directly in The Coaching Clinic, connecting it to his own experience of not mentioning his identity or his husband in professional contexts to avoid making others uncomfortable. His conclusion is that self-censorship in any form keeps you small and reduces your authenticity. Applied to coaching, a coach who avoids saying the uncomfortable thing, who softens every challenge, who withholds a direct observation to protect the relationship, is coaching with one hand tied behind their back. Authentic, direct communication is not a style preference; it is a professional standard.Want to contact the show? You can leave us a voicemail. It's free to do, and we might feature you on our next episode. All you need to do is go to https://speakpipe.com/thecoachingclinicpodcast and leave us a message. You can also find our clips and full episodes on the exclusive Coaching Clinic YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@coachingclinicpodcastYou can send us a video or voice message on LinkedIn:John's LinkedIn Profile or go to PresentInfluence.com for coaching enquiries with JohnAngie's LinkedIn Profile or visit AngieSpeaks.com2023 Present Influence Productions Coaching Clinic: scale your business, acquire high ticket clients & master coaching skills 98
