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Most coaches think communication is about asking good questions.
COMENSA Behavioural Competency 2 goes much deeper than that.
It is not about speaking well.
It is about how you create awareness, autonomy, and behavioural change through every interaction.
In simple terms:
Great coaching communication doesn’t give answers — it creates thinking.
At the heart of COMENSA coaching is this principle:
Not to advise
Not to direct
Not to solve
But to:
Enable insight
Increase awareness
Strengthen client autonomy
Support behavioural change through reflection
This shifts the coach from being an “expert with answers” to a facilitator of thinking.
And that changes everything.
This is one of the most important distinctions in coaching.
If your communication creates reliance on you, you are not coaching — you are consulting.
Instead, effective coaching communication:
Asks questions that create reflection
Reflects patterns back to the client
Avoids giving solutions disguised as advice
Example shift:
❌ “You should wake up earlier.”
✅ “What impact does your current morning routine have on your energy and results?”
One creates dependence.
The other creates awareness.
Coaching communication is not rigid.
It is responsive.
A skilled coach adapts in real time:
Slow down when emotion rises
Simplify when confusion appears
Go deeper when insight emerges
Pause when silence is meaningful
This requires presence, not scripts.
A key coaching question becomes:
“What does this client need right now to become more aware?”
Not:
“What do I want to say next?”
Communication in coaching must do three things at once:
Clarity
Bring structure to chaos:
“What exactly is the challenge here?”
“What does success look like?”
Safety
Create space for honesty:
“Take your time with this.”
“There’s no right answer here.”
Accountability
Build ownership, not pressure:
“What action feels realistic for you?”
“How will you know you followed through?”
Notice what is missing:
There is no forcing. No commanding. No controlling.
Only ownership.
This is the ethical foundation of coaching.
Non-directive communication means:
You do not impose your opinions as truth
You do not lead clients toward your preferred answers
You do not replace their thinking with your own
Instead, you consistently return ownership:
“What feels right for you?”
Even when you have insight, the role is not to insert it as instruction — but to use it as reflection.
This is where coaching becomes mastery.
Most people listen to respond.
Coaches listen to understand what is unspoken.
This includes:
Tone shifts
Emotional energy
Pauses and silence
Contradictions in language
Avoidance patterns
Example:
A client says:
“I’m fine with my job”
But their tone is flat. Their energy drops.
A coach doesn’t accept or correct.
A coach explores:
“Something shifted when you said that — what’s happening there?”
Beyond listening is pattern recognition.
Coaches begin to hear:
Repeated behaviours
Limiting beliefs
Identity statements
Emotional loops
For example:
“I always fail under pressure”
“I’m just not disciplined”
“I can’t stay consistent”
These are not problems.
They are belief systems running behaviour.
And coaching works at the level of awareness — not instruction.
Surface problems sound like:
“I struggle with time management”
Identity-level statements sound like:
“I am not good enough to stay consistent”
This is the turning point in coaching.
Because:
Behaviour can be coached
Identity must be made conscious
A powerful coaching reflection:
“That sounds like a belief about yourself, not just a situation — where do you think that comes from?”
If you strip everything down, COMENSA Behavioural Competency 2 is built on one rule:
Say less so the client can think more.
Not:
Fixing
Advising
Directing
But:
Listening deeply
Reflecting meaning
Creating awareness
Returning ownership
Great coaches don’t sound impressive.
They sound present.
They don’t dominate conversations.
They create space where clients hear themselves clearly for the first time.
That is COMENSA Communication Competency 2:
Not communication as performance.
But communication as transformation.
Below are 30 COMENSA-style competency questions focused on coaching communication, listening, ethics, and behavioural competence. Each has 4 options (A–D). Answers are listed at the end.
A client says: “I always fail when things get hard.” What is the BEST coaching response?
A. “You should try to be more disciplined”
B. “Why do you always fail?”
C. “What do you notice happens when things start getting difficult?”
D. “That’s not true, you’ve succeeded before”
What is the PRIMARY purpose of coaching communication?
A. Giving expert advice
B. Creating client dependence on the coach
C. Enabling client awareness and insight
D. Solving the client’s problems directly
A coach interrupts a client frequently to offer solutions. This is:
A. Effective coaching
B. Directive coaching style
C. Poor listening and reduces client autonomy
D. Advanced intervention technique
Which statement reflects identity-level listening?
A. “You struggle with time management”
B. “You are bad at planning”
C. “I notice a pattern where you say you are ‘not good enough’ in this area”
D. “You need better tools for planning”
What is MOST important when a client is silent?
A. Fill the silence quickly
B. Move to the next question
C. Allow space for reflection
D. Give advice to help them move forward
Which question best demonstrates non-directive coaching?
A. “Have you tried waking up earlier?”
B. “What do you think you should do?”
C. “What options are you considering?”
D. “Why haven’t you fixed this yet?”
A coach notices emotional tension in a client’s voice. The BEST response is:
A. Ignore it and continue
B. “What’s wrong with you?”
C. “I notice a shift in your tone—what’s happening for you right now?”
D. “Calm down and continue”
What is the role of reflection in coaching?
A. Repeating exactly what the client said
B. Interpreting and summarising meaning and emotion
C. Giving advice based on what was said
D. Challenging the client aggressively
Which behaviour violates COMENSA ethical coaching?
A. Asking powerful questions
B. Suggesting a strategy as the only solution
C. Helping client explore options
D. Reflecting client awareness
What does “hearing what is NOT being said” mean?
A. Guessing client thoughts
B. Focusing only on silence
C. Noticing emotional gaps, avoidance, and contradictions
D. Ignoring client words
A client says: “Everything is fine” but avoids eye contact and speaks flatly. The coach should:
A. Accept the statement at face value
B. Explore possible underlying emotion
C. End the session
D. Give advice
What is the risk of giving too much advice in coaching?
A. Client becomes more independent
B. Client loses ownership and becomes dependent
C. Client improves faster
D. Session becomes shorter
Which is a powerful coaching question?
A. “Did you try harder?”
B. “Why did you fail again?”
C. “What patterns do you notice in how this keeps happening?”
D. “Don’t you think you should change?”
What does “creating psychological safety” mean?
A. Avoiding all difficult topics
B. Making client feel judged so they improve
C. Creating a space where client can speak honestly without fear
D. Leading client toward correct answers
What is the BEST response to a limiting belief?
A. “That’s wrong”
B. “You are not thinking correctly”
C. “Where do you think that belief comes from?”
D. “Stop thinking like that”
A coach should primarily focus on:
A. Their own expertise
B. The client’s awareness and thinking process
C. Giving instructions
D. Solving problems quickly
Which statement shows pattern recognition?
A. “You are stressed today”
B. “You always fail”
C. “I notice this tends to happen when pressure increases”
D. “Try harder next time”
What is the role of silence in coaching?
A. Something to avoid
B. A tool for reflection and insight
C. A sign of poor coaching
D. A reason to give advice
What does “non-directive communication” mean?
A. The coach leads the session
B. The coach avoids all questions
C. The coach does not impose solutions
D. The coach teaches skills directly
A coach reflecting meaning should focus on:
A. Exact words only
B. Emotional and underlying meaning
C. Giving feedback on grammar
D. Correcting the client
Which is a coaching trap?
A. Asking open questions
B. Over-listening
C. Jumping into problem-solving
D. Reflecting emotion
What does “listening beyond words” include?
A. Only verbal content
B. Tone, emotion, pauses, energy
C. Advice opportunities
D. Coaching techniques only
What is the best way to handle a client contradiction?
A. Ignore it
B. Challenge aggressively
C. Explore gently with curiosity
D. Correct the client
A coach’s behaviour should primarily serve:
A. Their coaching model
B. Their personal opinion
C. Client awareness and growth
D. Session efficiency
Which reflects identity-level language?
A. “I missed a deadline”
B. “I am someone who always fails under pressure”
C. “I had a bad day”
D. “I need better tools”
What is the danger of leading questions?
A. They create clarity
B. They impose the coach’s thinking
C. They increase awareness
D. They improve accountability
What is the BEST coaching response to emotion?
A. Fix it
B. Ignore it
C. Acknowledge and explore it
D. Stop the emotion
What does accountability in coaching mean?
A. Pressure to perform
B. Client ownership of actions and decisions
C. Coach controlling outcomes
D. Setting strict rules
What is the primary role of a coach in communication?
A. Expert advisor
B. Problem solver
C. Awareness facilitator
D. Instructor
Which statement BEST reflects COMENSA coaching ethics?
A. “I will guide the client to the right answer”
B. “I will help the client discover their own insights”
C. “I will tell the client what works best”
D. “I will correct the client’s thinking”
Because it explores the pattern and awareness, not advice or judgment. It helps the client reflect rather than reinforcing failure identity.
Coaching is about creating awareness and insight, not solving problems or giving answers.
Interrupting with solutions breaks client autonomy and deep listening, which are core coaching standards.
This reflects identity-level listening and shows awareness of belief systems, not surface behaviour.
Silence is often where processing and insight formation happens. Interrupting destroys reflection space.
This keeps responsibility with the client and opens exploration instead of directing action.
Good coaching notices non-verbal/emotional shifts and gently brings awareness to them without interpretation or judgment.
Reflection is not repetition—it is meaning-making + emotional summarising to deepen awareness.
Suggesting a single “best solution” shifts into advising/consulting, which violates non-directive coaching.
Coaching requires awareness of hidden emotional signals, avoidance, contradictions, and gaps between words and energy.
Flat affect + “I’m fine” = likely mismatch. Coaching explores what is underneath the surface statement.
Too much advice creates dependency, where clients stop thinking for themselves.
This question explores patterns and self-awareness, not blame or correction.
Psychological safety means the client can speak openly without fear of judgment, correction, or punishment.
Coaching does not argue with beliefs. It explores where beliefs come from and how they operate.
The coach is a facilitator of thinking, not an expert solving problems.
This identifies a repeatable behavioural/emotional pattern across situations, which is key coaching insight work.
Silence is a processing tool, not a gap to fix.
Non-directive means the coach does not impose solutions or control outcomes.
Meaning includes emotion, belief, identity, and context, not just words.
Problem-solving too early reduces awareness and keeps clients dependent on external answers.
Listening beyond words includes tone, pauses, energy shifts, emotional cues, and contradictions.
Contradictions are awareness opportunities, not mistakes to correct.
Everything in coaching is in service of client awareness and growth, not the coach’s framework or ego.
“I am…” statements reflect identity-level beliefs, which drive behaviour more than surface events.
Leading questions subtly insert the coach’s thinking, reducing client ownership and autonomy.
Emotion is not fixed or removed—it is acknowledged, held, and explored for meaning.
Accountability in coaching is about ownership, not pressure or enforcement.
The coach’s role is to facilitate awareness and thinking, not instruct or advise.
This is the foundation of COMENSA ethics: client self-discovery and autonomy over dependency or direction.
Across all 30 questions, COMENSA is mainly checking if you:
Stay non-directive
Prioritise awareness over advice
Listen for identity and patterns
Maintain ethical client ownership
Create reflection instead of instruction
In the COMENSA framework, Communication & Behavioural Competency is not just “how well you speak” — it is how effectively you create understanding, trust, psychological safety, and behavioural change through interaction.
Below is a complete, practical breakdown of what a coach is expected to know and demonstrate.
A coach must be able to:
Communicate in a way that enables insight, not dependence
Adjust behaviour to serve the client’s awareness and growth
Create clarity, safety, and accountability through interaction
Maintain ethical, non-directive communication (coaching vs advising)
Listening beyond words (tone, emotion, pauses)
Hearing what is NOT being said
Identifying patterns in language and belief systems
Not interrupting or “fixing”
Reflecting meaning, not just content
Key skill: Listening to identity-level statements (“I am not good enough”) vs surface problems (“I struggle with time”).
Open-ended questions (not yes/no)
Questions that create awareness shifts
Avoiding leading or biased questions
Using:
Clarification questions
Exploration questions
Assumption-challenging questions
Future-pacing questions
Example:
Weak: “Did you try planning better?”
Strong: “What makes planning difficult for you in this situation?”
Paraphrasing client statements accurately
Mirroring emotional content
Summarising sessions without distortion
Helping client “hear themselves”
Comfortable with pauses
Allowing reflection time
Not rushing to fill gaps
Using silence as a thinking tool
Staying grounded under emotional intensity
Not reacting to client emotion
Maintaining neutrality and calm authority
Managing personal triggers
No moralising or labelling
Accepting client worldview without resistance
Separating behaviour from identity
Adapting style to client needs
Matching energy appropriately (calm vs energetic)
Shifting approach based on emotional state
No manipulation
No dependency creation
No imposing beliefs or frameworks
Respecting client autonomy
Changing perspective without giving advice
Turning “problem statements” into “learning statements”
Example:
“I keep failing” → “What is this pattern trying to teach you?”
A coach must identify:
Repeated limiting beliefs
Identity statements (“I am…”)
Absolutes (“always”, “never”)
Externalisation (“they make me…”)
Naming emotions accurately:
frustration
fear
shame
resistance
Helping client connect emotion to behaviour
Gently questioning contradictions
Holding up a “truth mirror”
Interrupting unhelpful narratives without aggression
Example:
“You say this is important, yet your actions suggest otherwise — help me understand that gap.”
Knowing when to:
slow down
intensify
pause
redirect
Client feels safe to:
admit truth
express emotion
challenge themselves
No fear of judgement or correction
Trust is created by:
Consistency
Accuracy of reflection
Emotional attunement
Integrity of communication
A COMENSA-aligned coach typically follows:
Set safety and intention
Clarify focus
Deep listening
Questioning
Reflection
Reframing
Pattern identification
Client-driven decisions
No prescribing
Summarise insights
Confirm commitments
Strengthen ownership
Giving advice disguised as coaching
Over-talking or dominating sessions
Asking closed questions repeatedly
Jumping to solutions
Diagnosing or labelling clients
Emotional rescuing
Leading the client toward your preferred outcome
A COMENSA coach must continuously monitor:
“Am I speaking to help them or to prove myself?”
“Am I listening or waiting to respond?”
“Am I neutral or attached to an outcome?”
“Am I coaching or consulting?”
A highly competent coach:
Says less but creates more insight
Speaks in ways that increase client autonomy
Makes the client more aware of their own thinking
Communicates in a way that reduces dependency over time
These four ideas sound abstract until you translate them into repeatable communication behaviours. Below is a practical breakdown of how to actually do each one in a coaching session, with language patterns, mindset shifts, and examples.
You are not trying to be the source of answers. You are trying to be the mirror that helps the client generate their own insight.
❌ Dependence:
“You should try waking up earlier.”
“What you need to do is…”
✅ Insight:
“What have you noticed about your energy when you wake up early vs late?”
“What options have you already considered?”
Ask questions that force reflection:
“What’s really driving this pattern?”
“What would happen if nothing changed?”
“What are you avoiding here?”
Client: “I always procrastinate.”
Coach:
“You’re noticing a pattern of delay when pressure increases. What do you think that delay is doing for you?”
This turns dependence into self-discovery.
You don’t stick to a fixed coaching style. You shift your behaviour moment-by-moment based on what expands the client’s awareness.
Emotional client → slow, calm, grounding tone
Intellectual client → structured questioning
Confused client → simplify and reflect
Resistant client → slow down and explore resistance
You don’t talk more — you intervene precisely when needed:
“Can I pause you there?”
“What meaning are you making right now?”
“What just shifted for you as you said that?”
If you are trying to:
be impressive
finish a model
show competence
You lose awareness focus.
Instead:
“What is this client becoming aware of right now?”
Your communication should make people:
think clearly
feel safe to be honest
take ownership of actions
Use structure in your questions:
“What is the exact challenge here?”
“What specifically is not working?”
“What does success look like for you?”
Avoid vague talk.
Safety is created by:
not judging
not rushing
not correcting
Example language:
“Take your time with this.”
“There’s no right answer here.”
“Say more about that.”
Instead of:
❌ “Will you commit to doing this?”
Use:
✅ “What action feels realistic for you from here?”
✅ “How will you know you’ve followed through?”
Then:
“What might get in the way?”
“How will you handle that?”
This creates ownership, not compliance.
You do NOT:
tell people what to do
insert your opinion as truth
steer outcomes toward your preference
You DO:
help them think clearly enough to decide
❌ Advice:
“You should change your business model.”
✅ Coaching:
“What possibilities have you considered for your business model?”
“What feels most aligned for you right now?”
If you sense yourself leading:
“What do YOU feel is the right next step?”
“What decision are you leaning toward?”
You can share observations, but not directions:
✔ Allowed:
“I’m noticing a pattern where you hesitate after clarity moments.”
❌ Not allowed:
“So you need to stop hesitating.”
Before speaking ask:
“Am I helping them think… or telling them what I think?”
If it’s telling → don’t say it.
Ask questions that make them think.
Adapt to what expands clarity.
Create space, structure, and ownership.
Never replace their thinking with yours.
This is the core of coaching mastery—and it becomes real when you turn each principle into observable behaviour in session. I’ll break it down into what to do, what to listen for, and exact phrases you can use.
You are listening to:
Tone (defensive, flat, excited, uncertain)
Emotion under words (fear, shame, frustration)
Pauses (thinking vs avoiding vs emotional processing)
Instead of following the story, track:
When voice tightens → discomfort
When speech speeds up → anxiety or excitement
When silence appears → processing or emotional blockage
“I noticed your tone changed when you said that… what’s happening there?”
“You went quiet there—what came up for you?”
This pulls hidden emotion into awareness.
Your job is NOT to respond quickly.
It is to observe longer than you speak.
Rule:
Listen 80%, speak 20%
You listen for:
contradictions
missing emotion
avoided topics
vague language hiding truth
Example:
Client: “I’m fine with my job” (flat tone, no energy)
Coach:
“You said you’re fine—but it didn’t feel fully convincing. What’s underneath that?”
Watch for:
changing topics quickly
over-explaining
intellectualising emotion
Then gently interrupt:
“I notice we moved away from that quickly—what felt uncomfortable there?”
When something feels emotionally charged but unclear:
pause
go deeper into THAT moment
You are listening for repeated mental structures, not just stories.
Examples:
“I always…”
“I can’t…”
“People don’t…”
“It’s just how I am…”
These are belief systems in disguise.
Client:
“I always procrastinate under pressure”
Coach recognition:
Pattern: identity-linked avoidance under stress
Response:
“This sounds like a consistent pattern for you under pressure—what do you notice about when it starts?”
Look for:
blaming external factors
fixed identity narratives
repetition without learning
Then interrupt:
“What’s the pattern you’re noticing across all these situations?”
You are NOT:
solving
correcting
advising
rescuing
Before responding:
pause 3–5 seconds
ask internally: What is being revealed here?
When client struggles:
resist filling silence
resist giving solutions
Instead:
“Stay with that for a moment—what’s coming up?”
❌ “You should try planning better”
✅ “What happens when you try to plan consistently?”
You don’t repeat their words.
You reflect:
emotional meaning
underlying belief
identity layer
Client:
“I struggle with time management”
Surface reflection:
“You struggle with time management”
Deep reflection:
“It sounds like time feels like something you’re constantly chasing rather than controlling”
“There seems to be frustration underneath this”
“This feels heavy for you”
“There’s a sense of pressure in how you’re describing this”
“I’m noticing a pattern where you start strong, then lose momentum when pressure builds”
This is the highest coaching skill level.
“I struggle with time”
“I need better discipline”
“I’m not productive”
“I am not disciplined”
“I am someone who fails under pressure”
“I am not good enough to stay consistent”
I am not good enough
I am bad at this
I am always like this
These are identity locks
“You said ‘I’m just not good at this’—is that how you see yourself in this area?”
“That sounds like a belief about yourself, not just a situation”
“Where do you think that belief started?”
“How has that identity been shaping your actions?”
Under the COMENSA Behavioural Standards framework, Communicating refers to how the coach listens, responds, questions, reflects, and facilitates meaningful dialogue with the client.
It usually includes behaviours such as:
Active listening
Deep listening beyond words
Clarifying and summarising
Asking effective questions
Using appropriate silence
Reflecting feelings, values, and assumptions
Demonstrating empathy and presence
Checking understanding
Communicating clearly and directly
Using language appropriate to the client
Observing non-verbal communication
Helping clients articulate thoughts and emotions
Encouraging exploration without leading
Challenging respectfully and appropriately
Remaining client-centred during conversations
Avoiding advice-giving unless explicitly contracted
Managing emotional conversations professionally
Demonstrating cultural sensitivity in communication
Using tone and pacing effectively
Supporting client self-expression
Maintaining focus on the client’s agenda
Typical behavioural indicators under “Communicating” often include:
The coach listens more than speaks
Questions provoke reflection and awareness
Responses are concise and purposeful
The coach does not interrupt unnecessarily
The coach notices patterns and contradictions
Communication creates clarity and insight
The client feels heard and understood
This category overlaps strongly with:
Active Listening
Presence
Powerful Questioning
Direct Communication
from frameworks such as the International Coaching Federation PCC and MCC competencies.
Here’s a structured breakdown of all 9 behavioural standards and their criteria from the framework.
Able to:
Listen actively
Use open questions
Provide direct feedback that serves the client.
Gives attentive responses
Uses similar language and nuance to client
Questions mainly gather information
Sometimes asks leading questions
Follows both spoken and unspoken communication
Uses questions to explore deeper meaning
Tracks what is said and unsaid
Begins generating broader thinking
Uses questions that:
challenge assumptions
create insight
raise self-awareness
facilitate learning
Uses questions to generate entirely new awareness
Communicates with high precision and presence
Able to:
Establish trust
Maintain safe space
Discuss fear and doubt openly.
Adjusts tone/pitch/pace empathetically
Enables sharing of some fears and concerns
Enables deeper sharing
Client expresses emotions more freely
Coach empathises consistently
Helps uncover unrealised concerns and hopes
Notices absence of trust
Discusses trust openly and directly
Creates deep psychological safety
Able to:
Provide meaningful insight
Help clients recognise impact of thoughts/feelings
Use own experience appropriately.
Fairly direct but softens feedback
Invested in own interpretations
Sometimes imposes meaning
Stimulates some new thinking
More direct with insight
Sometimes hesitates to challenge fully
Invites awareness of impact
Shares experience in detached way
Shares insights freely without attachment
Trusts client’s own responses
Creates space for insight emergence
Comfortable with uncertainty
Connects deeply without imposing
Values connection over methods
Able to:
Develop coaching plans
Maintain focus
Promote ownership and accountability.
Co-creates action plans
Defines outcomes and steps
Uses measurements
Tracks timelines
Builds clarity and purpose
Links actions to client values/meaning
Encourages management of gaps
Reinforces accountability
Designs evaluation into execution flow
Promotes self-governance
Helps client understand strengths/weaknesses
Encourages resilience and ownership
Able to:
Understand own strengths/weaknesses
Identify bias/prejudice
Take responsibility.
Respects diversity
Accepts different viewpoints
Shows flexibility
Moves process through partnership
Reflects openly with client
Open to being impacted
Builds resonance with client
Maintains curiosity
Trusts coaching process deeply
Demonstrates groundedness
Operates without needing certainty
Able to:
Seek feedback
Commit to lifelong learning
Participate in supervision and CPD.
Meets supervision requirements
Meets supervision requirements
Meets CPD requirements
Fully maintains supervision and CPD requirements
Demonstrates advanced professional development commitment
Able to:
Be fully present
Manage emotions
Separate own agenda from client agenda.
Sometimes distracted by own performance/emotions
Attempts to stay present
Chooses appropriate coaching tools
Remains present while guiding toward solutions
Fully connected with observer mindset
Focuses on whole client
Learns from client
Remains present regardless of what arises
Able to:
Work with diversity and culture
Address prejudice and bias
Adapt coaching style to context.
Respects diversity
Accepts differing viewpoints
Recognises systemic context
Notices prejudice and bias
Adapts coaching style
Explores system impact
Examines behavioural impact of bias
Challenges assumptions and values
Explores worldview and paradigms
Handles ambiguity and complexity
Understands systemic relationships deeply
Personalises coaching while integrating contextual awareness
You can also refer directly to the uploaded framework:
Contracting → pages 1–2
Communicating → pages 2–3
Trust/Rapport → page 3
Awareness/Learning → pages 3–4
Actions/Accountability → page 4
Self-Management → pages 5–6
Diversity → page 7
In the International Coaching Federation framework, “communication” is not a single competency on its own. It is embedded across several core competencies in the ICF Core Competency Model (updated 2021).
Below are the exact competencies that make up “communication in coaching” and how they are defined in practice.
Communication begins with how you show up ethically in conversation:
Clear agreements about coaching role and boundaries
Honest communication about process and expectations
Maintaining confidentiality
Avoiding misleading claims or promises
👉 Communication here = integrity in what you say and don’t say
This is internal communication that shows up externally:
Staying curious instead of judgmental
Managing your own internal reactions before responding
Not imposing your beliefs or agenda
Being fully present in dialogue
👉 Communication here = presence behind the words
Communication is used to:
Clarify coaching goals
Define session outcomes
Confirm understanding of what is being worked on
Re-contract when direction shifts
Key skill:
“What would you like to focus on today?”
👉 Communication here = structuring clarity through dialogue
This is one of the most important communication competencies.
It includes:
Active listening without interruption
Acknowledging emotions and perspectives
Respecting client identity and experience
Using language that is non-judgmental and supportive
Allowing silence
👉 Communication here = emotional safety through language and presence
This is subtle but deeply communicative:
Fully engaged listening (not thinking ahead)
Responding to what is happening in the moment
Not rushing or filling silence
Adjusting tone and energy to match client state
👉 Communication here = how you respond in real time
This is the closest direct “communication skill” in ICF.
It includes:
Listening for meaning, not just words
Hearing emotions, values, and beliefs
Noticing patterns and contradictions
Reflecting back what is heard
Key ICF expectation:
The coach listens more than they speak.
👉 Communication here = deep listening + accurate reflection
This is where communication becomes transformational.
It includes:
Asking powerful, open-ended questions
Using silence effectively
Sharing observations without judgment
Helping the client connect dots
Example:
“What do you notice about how you show up in these situations?”
👉 Communication here = questions that create insight
Communication is used to:
Support decision-making
Encourage reflection on learning
Help client design actions
Strengthen accountability
👉 Communication here = turning insight into action through dialogue
ICF does NOT treat communication as:
speaking well
giving advice
being persuasive
Instead, communication is spread across 5 key abilities:
Weak understanding
ICF communication
Talking well
Listening deeply
Giving advice
Evoking awareness
Explaining ideas
Asking questions
Solving problems
Creating thinking space