Upcoming Events
Upcoming Teleclasses
Wednesday, Nov. 19
7 Steps to a Successful Career Change
with
Chris Posti on Nov. 19 at 8:00
a.m. ET
Secrets of Internet Marketing
Effectiveness; What Works and What Wastes
Time and Money with
Bill Weil on Nov. 19 at 10:00
a.m. ET
Deciding What You Want: How to Get Off the
Fence, Drive Through the Fog of Uncertainty
and Commit with
Tom Volkar on Nov. 19 at 11:00 a.m. ET
Recession-Proof Your Business; Move Ahead
While Others Slow Down with Freddie
Cecchini on
Nov. 19 at 12:05 p.m. ET
Taking Time to Learn
with Diana Fletcher
Nov. 19 at 1:00 p.m. ET
How to Think Like a Leader: Explore the
Essentials to Experience your Potential
with Maria
Berdusco on Nov. 19 at 3:00 p.m. ET
Goal or Dream. Learn How to Make Them
Really Happen! Successful Goal Setting in
Three Easy Steps with Barbara
Schwarck on
Nov. 19
at 7:00 p.m. ET
Click
for info and to register
PCA Member Networking Call
Wed., Nov. 26
Click for info and to register
We are interested in your
feedback. Just
click on reply to this newsletter and send us
your
ideas.
Quick Links
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Welcome to Coaching in Action - For
news and events from the Pittsburgh Coaches
Association, dedicated to moving you forward
with clarity, action and results. People work
with a coach to produce extraordinary results
in their personal or professional lives. For
more information, and to register for events,
please visit www.PittsburghCoaches.org
Here are upcoming events - join
us!
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Speaker Focus: LUNCH & LEARN MEETING Nov. 12 - Four Speakers Coaching, Therapy, Coaches and Therapists
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Please join us for lunch and a lively panel
discussion about the distinctions between
these fields, as well as the overlap. Learn:
- How to determine the best candidates for
coaching;
- When therapy is a prerequisite to
effective coaching;
- Limits and benefits of the "Medical
Model";
- Inherent assumptions in coaching and
therapy;
- How coaches deal with clients who have a
both great coaching goals and mental health
issues;
- Challenges and opportunities
professionals have as they "make the switch"
from therapist to coach.
This month's gathering serves as an open call
to all mental health professionals who are
considering moving into the coaching field,
as well as "newly-minted" coaches.
Panelists will include:
Sharon Eakes, Executive Coach and owner of
HOPE LLC
Susan Moore, Coach/Therapist and owner of
Life Dimensions
Rosemarie Perla, MA, Psychologist and Coach
Moderator: Bob Groman, Therapist and Coach
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Teleclass Close-up: FREE TELECLASSES Nov. 19 - Bill Weil Secrets of Internet Marketing Effectiveness
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In addition to coaching and speaking, members
of the Pittsburgh Coaches Association conduct
workshops and seminars and for several years
have also conducted teleclasses on a regular
basis. These teleclasses are now held
monthly, and are an opportunity for
Pittsburgh coaches to share some of their
coaching
knowledge and experience with
participants, as well as their passion for
helping others to move forward and reach new
levels.
Teleclass topics range from sales and
marketing to
creating space, leadership, and
finding your dreams, and can help people to
make important changes and take steps to
reach their potential.
This month we're featuring Bill Weil from Socius
Web Marketing. What web marketing
activities drive results? Do we really need a
website, a blog, a Facebook page, an email
newsletter? What would it take to get viral
exposure? What's better, SEO or pay-per-click
ads? What can we do to have our website be
more effective? These, and all your
questions, will be addressed in a Q&A-driven
session led by 23-year marketing veteran,
Bill Weil. Be sure to check
out: Secrets of Internet Marketing
Effectiveness; What Works and What Wastes
Time and Money.
This month's teleclasses are on Nov. 19. Join
us for a great learning experience with
Pittsburgh coaches. Teleclasses take place
throughout the day and are free to anyone who
registers. Click here to register for one
or all of
the teleclasses. Registration takes just
a few seconds and is
FREE. A
conference
call number will be immediately sent to you
via e-mail.
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COACH SPOTLIGHT Bob Groman
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Bob Groman is a Coach/Therapist who
specializes in working with married couples
and people with AD/HD. He has operated a
private practice in Cranberry Township, Pa.
for twenty years, following a seven-year
employment with Western Psychiatric Institute
and Clinic. Bob holds two Masters degrees
and has had considerable additional training,
including with the Coaches Training
Institute. His transition to coaching began
four years ago and he continues to offer both
services. In 2009, Bob will beginning to
offer full days of coaching in the outdoors
(hiking, snowshoeing, canoeing) for both
couples and individuals. Interested parties
may contact Bob at (724) 776-1871
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SPECIAL by Dave Wheitner - Use Economic Tough Times as an Opportunity: Have You Balanced Your Life Investment Portfolio?
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Use Economic Tough Times as an
Opportunity: Have You Balanced Your Life
Investment Portfolio?
By Dave Wheitner idealistcoach.com
I recently wrote an article on an ABC 20/20
episode that compared the happiness levels of
various countries and attempted to explain
why these differences might exist. Among the
conclusions was that more materialistic
wealth doesn't necessarily lead to more
happiness. This got me thinking about how our
current economic recession may-or may
not-impact happiness levels. I believe that
much is up to us, and that downturns can
provide us with a great deal of
opportunity-not just for financial investing,
but also for "life investing." This requires
proactive consideration of what's really
important to us, combined with the courage to
define our investment goals.
Economic recessions can easily trigger
insecurity and fear. Robert Arkin, a
psychology researcher at Ohio State,
previously found that insecurity about our
futures can lead us to pursue more
materialism, apparently in an attempt to ease
our anxieties. Tim Kasser, author of The
High Price of Materialism, suggests that
such pursuits have an adverse impact upon
numerous areas of our lives-family
well-being, general psychological health, the
environment, and so on. Michael Eysenck
discusses people who are trapped on a
"hedonic treadmill," where we try to buy more
and more to increase our happiness, but then
need to work more and more to pay for our
possessions. This leads to more discontent,
which leads to more frivolous spending, as
the treadmill spins faster and faster and faster.
The United States has some of the
fastest-spinning hedonic treadmills, as
previously discussed in books including
Take Back Your Time and Work to Live.
Labor statistics show that we are near the
bottom of the barrel when it comes to
vacation time and time spent with family,
because we often are so busy pursuing the
"American dream." (This may or may not
correspond with our personal unfulfilled
dreams!) Just one example of this is our
ever-growing thirst for larger houses-which
some would argue has been a core component of
the economic downturn. U.S. Census data
indicate that the amount of square footage of
home space per U.S. person has nearly
doubled over the several decades. This
means that each of us is paying for
additional building materials and labor,
additional energy to maintain the living
space, additional infrastructure that goes
along with connecting larger houses to the
sewage and energy grids, and so on. That's
just the tip of the iceberg.
Thus, it was with shock that I read Linda
Stern's article, "A Recession Handbook," in
this week's Newsweek. She outlines
several topics including "Protect Your Job,"
"Protect Your Portfolio," "Protect Your
Pocketbook," and "Protect Your Psyche." While
several pieces of advice in the article seem
perfectly sensible, a few of the ideas a "New
York headhunter" shared with her made me
cringe: "Stay visibly busy... The first
employees to go during a recession are the
high-maintenance slackers. Come in early,
leave late, eat lunch at your desk..." In other
words, turn the insecurity-driven treadmill
up three or four notches!
Now if you love what you're doing, are
currently in your dream job where work feels
like play, and feel that your work isn't
already eating into the important things in
your life, there may be nothing wrong with
following the above advice in moderation.
However, if you're not in such a place, then
you might utilize this opportunity to
consider what's really important to you in
your life. Otherwise, you may find yourself
miserably competing with co-workers to prove
who's the most devoted to the job, simply
adding to the fear-driven downward spiral
that perpetuates our overworked culture.
Fortunately, Stern also advises getting your
resume out there if you're ready for a
change-of course, this is most helpful if
you've already taken the time to clearly
define the new life you wish to create.
These issues are nothing new; for years,
thinkers in the "voluntary simplicity"
movement have proposed solutions such as
taking a much closer look at what we really
value in life, and then getting rid of some
of the unnecessary elements. We often find
that we have a lot of things that cost us a
great deal of our time and energy, but that
add relatively little value to our lives. One
option we have during a time of recession is
to be proactive and consider how to remove
such "clutter" from our own lives. Where do
we really want to be in the future? Can we
live with just a little bit less, or can we
get rid of a few things that will allow us to
pursue something that will really add value
to our lives? (This could be time for a
hobby, more weekends with family, pursuit of
a childhood dream, and so on.) The other
option, of course, is to be reactive from a
place of fear, clinging desperately to what
we have, without stepping back to consider
whether it's all really that valuable to us
anyway.
If the economic recession has catalyzed some
serious thinking for you, one of the best
investments you can make is to balance your
"Life Investment Portfolio." You're likely to
find it much more uplifting - and empowering
- than mourning over recent retirement fund
reports. As you consider the dimensions of
your life in the chart below, how much are
you currently investing in each? Are your
time and energy investments diversified and
balanced? Are any of the elements
underperforming? Where would you like each
dimension to be a year from now? Are you
holding onto other things that are keeping
you from investing in these areas?
Most importantly, when do you wish to start?
While the NASDAQ may remain difficult to
predict, life investing allows you to
determine when the upswing begins.

© Copyright 2008 Dave Wheitner
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Creating a Sustainable Organization - Nov. 13
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Check out the exciting forum offered by HR
Leadership Forum and Duquesne University:
Creating a Sustainable Organization:
People, Planet, Profits - a full day
working with local and national experts on
creating sustainable strategies with special
focus on HR's role. Cranberry, PA.
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Calling all Coaches - Join the Pittsburgh Coaches Association
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We invite experienced coaches, as well as
those new to the profession, to join the
Pittsburgh
Coaches Association (PCA). This is an
exciting time
to
be a member! We are a 501(c)6 professional
organization, and an
International Coach Federation (ICF) chapter.
Additional benefits for member coaches
include networking opportunities with other
professional coaches, a profile on PCA's
'Find a Coach' website directory, discounts
for monthly luncheon meetings featuring
interesting and relevant speakers, a forum to
offer teleclasses on coaching-related topics
of your choice, and special events to raise
the profile of coaching within the community.
There are many more benefits; please don't
hesitate to become a part of one of
Pittsburgh's best professional associations.
Effective July 1st, join for 2008 at the
prorated fee of only $65 as a PCA Member, or
only $55
as a PCA Associate Member. You can now
register to
become a member online at www.pittsburghcoaches.org.
Join today.
We would love to hear from you! Just hit
Reply to this
newsletter with your ideas and feedback.
Suggestions
are very welcome, don't hesitate.
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New: Professional Memberships for Non-Coaches
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Not a Coach? Now you can join PCA as an
Associate for only $55 prorated for the
balance of the year. We invite all
professionals in the Pittsburgh area to join
us. Are you interested in meeting coaches,
supporting coaches but are not a coach? Join
us now as an Associate Member of the
Pittsburgh Coaches Association.
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