Anonymous wrote:Okay. I'll bite. I'm a credential life coach through the International Coaching Federation (ICF). However, I don't do private coaching. I work in a medical school and use my coaching skills to coach medical students, residents, and faculty. I'm not a hustler and can't imagine building my own business around this, but the coaching skills I've gained through certification have helped me be more effective in the support I offer in my professional role.
Coaching them on WHAT, though? How to manage the credentialing process? Do you do the credentialing for them or just tell them to do XYZ?
Everyone I know who works as a wellness coach does so for one of the following reasons:
1. They are trained in some school/tradition that doesn't have a "real" professional credential (e.g., indigenous healing traditions from around the world)
2. They are actual therapists working as parenting coaches on a cash basis vs. "family therapy" with insurance for legit reasons
3. They are trying to be therapists without the education, mandatory clinical training, supervision, and practice oversight associated with being a therapist
I know a lot of executive coaches who are former therapists as well as a lot of who are former business people. The ones who are not in #3 above are offering subject-matter expertise. I will assume that's what a credentialing coach would do in a medical school, but maybe I am not clear on what you do.