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Archive for the ‘Life Coaching’ Category

"Life Coaching Club" – Video

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28-01-2012 16:38 mattmaddixstore.com

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February 2nd, 2012 at 6:43 am

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Episode 85 – Change Your Story Change Your Life – Joe White, Life Coach, Get Life Coaching – Video

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30-01-2012 17:02 Stuck in your stories of why you can't change? Check out this video. Get Life Coach's Joe White shares a powerful process to change the story that is keeping you from what you really want and hence change your life. http://www.getlifecoaching.com

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Episode 85 - Change Your Story Change Your Life - Joe White, Life Coach, Get Life Coaching - Video

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February 2nd, 2012 at 6:43 am

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Life Coaching Training Courses | NLP Training Courses | Personal Development – Video

Posted: February 1, 2012 at 12:54 pm


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31-01-2012 05:15 nlplifecoachtrainingacademy.co.za We, the NLP Life Coach Training Academy offer Live NLP Life Coaching Training Courses, DVD Home Study Programs in NLP, Life Coaching and Life Skills. It is a Powerful Combination of NLP (Neuro Linguistic Programming), Life Coaching, Success Mind Set Strategies and the most Advanced Positive Psychology. Currently we are South Africa's most Prestigious Training Company in NLP (Neuro Linguistic Programming), Life Coaching and Life Skills. Check out all our Video Testimonials of some of the Trainees that went through our Training. After you are Certified by us as a Life Coach and NLP Practitioner, you will be able to help Clients with Life Coaching, Mentoring, Counselling, Low Self Esteem, Anger Management, Depression, Trauma, Phobias, and much more... You will get all of this and more in one training.

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Life Coaching Training Courses | NLP Training Courses | Personal Development - Video

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February 1st, 2012 at 12:54 pm

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East Anglian Pulic Relations Agency Appointed for International Campaign

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PR agency The Write Impression, based in Brantham, Suffolk, has been appointed by the International Coach Federation to promote International Coaching Week in the UK. The aim of the Week, which runs from 5th-11th February, is to raise awareness of business and personal life coaching.

Brantham, Suffolk, uk (PRWEB UK) 31 January 2012

PR agency The Write Impression, based in Brantham, Suffolk, has been appointed by the International Coach Federation to promote International Coaching Week in the UK. The aim of the Week, which runs from 5th-11th February, is to raise awareness of business and personal life coaching.

“The International Coaching Federation has more than 19,000 members worldwide, including 1,000 members in the UK, and we are thrilled to have been selected to work with such a prestigious professional body,” said Kate Everett, co-founder of The Write Impression.

“This year’s International Coaching Week heralds the launch of the ICF Global Coaching Study, a survey of the phenomenal growth of the business and life coaching industry worldwide, based on 12,000 respondents from 117 countries. It follows the first survey in 2007, also undertaken by PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC), which was one of the largest pieces of research at the time.”

The Write Impression specialises in public relations and marketing services for clients ranging from manufacturers to hoteliers, and film-makers to life coaches.

For more information about The Write Impression please contact Kate Everett at http://www.thewriteimpression.co.uk.

# # #

Kate Everett
The Write Impression
0845 5272 801
Email Information

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East Anglian Pulic Relations Agency Appointed for International Campaign

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February 1st, 2012 at 11:45 am

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Coaching life

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Coaching life

By DIANE GASPER-O'BRIEN

dobrien@dailynews.net

She is as competitive as they come. Always has been. Always will be.

That's what growing up in a house with eight older brothers can do for you.

Rose McFarland, and everyone close to her, hopes that will to win and survive can help her beat her latest opponent -- cancer.

McFarland said thanks to the support and prayers from many, including the youth basketball team she coaches with her husband, Galen, she plans to be a mainstay in the stands once these players reach junior high and high school.

McFarland was diagnosed with uterine and ovarian cancer in November. After undergoing surgery later that month, she began chemotherapy treatments that take her several days to recover from.

But the setback hasn't stopped her from trying to lead a normal life.

A multi-sport athlete while growing up in Lenora in the 1970s, McFarland played basketball at Cloud County Community College in Concordia, then at St. Mary of the Plains College in Dodge City. And she never was one to miss games or practices.

Although the effects of her chemo treatments have kept her out of some practices, McFarland hasn't missed a single game coaching her Hays Hoopsters sixth-grade boys' team.

That could change Saturday when the Hoopsters take part in a tournament in Norton.

It normally takes McFarland three or four days to recuperate from her chemo treatments, which she undergoes every three weeks, and her next scheduled treatment Wednesday in Kansas City, Kan.

Basketball therapy

"If I can go, I will," McFarland said, adding watching her son, David, and his teammates play basketball has been good therapy.

David's 12th birthday also happens to be Saturday. But, McFarland said, David knows his mom will be there in spirit even if she isn't able to make the trip.

"My main goal is to stay healthy right now. If I can't go, Galen will be there with them, and Kent (Werth) helps out, too," McFarland added about one of the team members' parents.

Other than feeling sluggish after she started chemo, McFarland said what she noticed the most was her hair falling out.

"It was coming out in bunches," said McFarland, who had her husband get out the clippers and cut it close to her scalp.

In support of their coach, the Hoopsters decided to do the same.

A couple of the parents of the players came up with the idea one day and asked the boys how they felt about it.

Some didn't give it a second thought.

"I've had mine this short before," Palmer Hutchison piped up.

Others weren't quite so sure.

"I didn't know at first," Cole Zimmerman, who said he never had his head buzzed that close before, said with a big grin.

"And Hunter was nervous," one of the players said about another team member, Hunter Brown.

"I was pretty nervous when I got mine cut off, too," McFarland admitted.

In the end, all 10 players bought into the idea.

"If one wouldn't have wanted to do it, we wouldn't have," Werth said.

Hoopsters 'all in'

So one Friday evening earlier this month, the Hoopsters gathered at the Werth home for a pizza party, and one of the mothers buzzed all the team members' heads before McFarland came to pick up her son.

"They had so much fun with it," Werth said. "And even some of the younger brothers wanted their hair cut, too."

Carrying a little lighter load, the Hoopsters went out the next couple of days and lost just one game en route to a third-place finish at the perennially tough Great Bend Tournament.

The McFarlands both have coached at the high school level, and Rose has college coaching experience, too. They stress fundamentals in their winter instructional camps they have run since David, their only child, was in first grade.

The McFarlands also hope the youngsters have fun while learning about basketball -- and other things as well.

McFarland said she believes she gets just as much in return.

"I just love coaching, at any level," McFarland said. "And things like this, you never forget. When they all came marching in one by one with their hair cut, and I realized they all had done it, I got really choked up."

"She thought it was pretty neat," Galen McFarland said, "that the kids would do that for her."

"All the prayers and support mean so much," added Rose, who expects to complete her chemotherapy treatments in April.

Lifetime memories

Werth said their coach's illness has brought the team closer together.

"These kids will remember shaving their heads more than games they won or lost," Werth said.

McFarland agreed, saying how much she appreciates all the contact from former coaches, players and acquaintances since learning of her illness.

"What's neat is that I've just met so many people through playing and coaching," she said. "Hopefully, these guys will, too. It's fun to see the kids progress, but also the bonds they've created.

"And," she added, "we all learn a few life lessons along the way."

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February 1st, 2012 at 11:45 am

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Sam Pagano set standard for family's rich coaching legacy

Posted: January 31, 2012 at 1:57 pm


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Those close to Sam Pagano wonder if there is room to cram anything more about football into his mind, life or daily routine. Even with an already-packed football portfolio, including 21 years as coach at Fairview High School in Boulder, Pagano now has to find room to keep track of the Indianapolis Colts.

That's because Chuck Pagano, Sam's older son, was recently named coach of the Colts. Sam Pagano is going to be more than just an interested observer. He's a grandfather, but he's not in any rocking chair when it comes to keeping up with his boys.

In Sam Pagano's case, the task is twofold. John Pagano, Sam's younger son, was recently named defensive coordinator for the San Diego Chargers.

"I stay abreast of what's going

University of Denver Men's Football Coach John Roning with Sam Pagano #68. Sam Pagano is the subject of a Colorado Classic column. He's a former coach at Fairview High School. His son Chuck Pagano as just named head coach of the Indianapolis Colts. John Leyba, The Denver Post

on with them," Pagano said. "I like to watch practice sessions, and my wife (Diana) and I have watched both of their teams quite a bit. When Chuck was coaching with the Baltimore Ravens, I was able to sit in on some of their team meetings. We look at it as showing support."

Sam Pagano's passion for football blossomed when he was at Pueblo Central High School and playing for Sollie Rasso. His high school coach was a mentor, and Sam carried Rasso's counseling with him throughout his career.

After Pueblo Central, Pagano continued his playing career at the University of Denver, where he was a linebacker and guard for coach John Roning. DU dropped football after the 1960 season, a year after Pagano departed.

"I went to the first tryout camp the Denver Broncos had out at Colorado School of Mines," Pagano said of his immediate time after college. "I tried out as a kicker but was cut before the first preseason game. I didn't get to wear the striped socks."

The first Broncos uniforms featured vertically striped socks that were widely ridiculed throughout pro football. With the quick exit from the Broncos camp, Pagano turned to his lifelong ambition. He had known from an early age that he wanted to coach. After assistant coaching stops at Adams State College in Alamosa and Boulder High School, Pagano moved to Fairview High School in 1969 as head coach.

While there, he coached both of his sons. Chuck Pagano went on to the University of Wyoming after high school, and John Pagano moved on to Mesa State in Grand Junction.

"It was easy coaching them in high school," Sam Pagano said. "I was involved more with the offense, and they both played quite a bit on defense. It was more nerve-wracking watching them playing in college."

While at Fairview, Sam Pagano helped develop one of the top programs in the state. The Knights won outright state championships in 1979 and 1987 and gained a co-championship with Westminster in 1978. Through the years, Pagano's Fairview team was known for its epic battles with coach Fred Tesone and Cherry Creek.

"It was a great rivalry," Pagano said. "The only problem was Fred won most of them, and he and Cherry Creek got most of the attention."

Tesone called the Fairview game the toughest on Creek's schedule.

"I couldn't sleep the whole week before the Fairview game," he said.

Pagano got his reward in 1987 when the Knights beat the Bruins in the state championship game. Pagano left the football coaching job after the 1989 season and retired from teaching in 1994. His final coaching record was 164-58-4, a mark he attributes to great players and assistant coaches. Two years before he retired from teaching, he joined the growing hotbed for American coaches teaching American football in Europe. His first stop was Bergamo, Italy, and his team in 1994 went 14-1 and was runner-up in the Italian Super Bowl.

"I was ready for something different, and I really wanted to coach in Europe," he said. "We had some language problems, but a lot of the players spoke English, and we got along that way."

After a coaching stop in Taipei, Pagano returned to Europe and coached in Germany and France. He returned to Bergamo in 2002 and closed out his coaching career with a 16-0 team and the Eurobowl Championship.

"I had enough," Pagano said of his tenure. "I still go to Fairview games when I can."

The pace will pick up this fall. His game plan now is scheduling the best times to be in cities such as San Diego and Indianapolis to watch his sons' teams play. And maybe there will be a weekend that Fairview's schedule fills an opening.

After all, one of the country's top football coaching families is headquartered right here in Colorado.

Irv Moss: 303-954-1296 or imoss@denverpost.com

Pagano bio

Born: Jan. 2, 1938, in Pueblo

High School: Pueblo Central

College: University of Denver

Family: Wife Diana, daughters Connie, Cathy (deceased), Carrie, Jennifer; sons Chuck, John.

Hobbies: Walking, meeting with friends.

On the schedule: Watching a college game at West Point and the Naval Academy.

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Sam Pagano set standard for family's rich coaching legacy

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January 31st, 2012 at 1:57 pm

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Egypt McKee (Author, Speaker, and Life Coach) – Video

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02-01-2012 22:26 Egypt McKee (Author, Speaker and Life Coach). I'm most passionate about instilling character and integrity in the lives of young adults, and am ready to be your Speaker or eMcee for your next event. Your young adult audience will never be the same again ..... If I can't inspire your audience, then pay me nothing, but when I do, pay attention! http://www.egyptmckee.com http://www.facebook.com/egyptspeaks http://www.twitter.com/egyptmckee

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Egypt McKee (Author, Speaker, and Life Coach) - Video

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January 31st, 2012 at 1:26 am

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Local baseball coaching legend to retire

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SOUTHWEST MIAMI-DADE, Fla. (WSVN) -- The man behind one of South Florida's most well respected youth baseball programs is set to retire.

Red Berry, the South Florida baseball staple, has decided to retire after managing Red Berry's Baseball World for 46 years.

Berry's career began with a love of the game and a vision. "I've always ate, drank and slept baseball," he said. "I worked 25 years out of the trunk of my car, leasing facilities and traveling around like a vagabond, and I always dreamt about this. God made it come true."

That dream saw Berry coach in three college world series, helping lead the Miami Hurricanes to a national championship in 1985 as their pitching coach. "His love for the game, his love of God, the way he shares his values, the way he relates baseball to real life is special," said coach Otto Williams.

But what he considers his greatest accomplishment is the 46 years spent teaching thousands of kids and their parents about more than just hits and runs. "Family values-- it's not just baseball, it's not just winning. It's about helping the child develop how to learn how to win, how to lose, how to become friends with people and how to develop better character," said parent Todd Botner.

Players past and present have a lot to be thankful for since learning under Berry. "It changed my life completely, complete 180," said former player Manny Negrin. "He taught us about life values, how to respect by trying hard in life in general. It was great."

"He makes it fun because he talks to us, and he like, pitches to us," said player Don Darcangelo. "It's sad because I won't see him."

The great run in South Florida baseball is now coming to an end after Berry announced this season will be his last. "I'm shocked," said parent Angie Toffoli. "When I got the letter Saturday, I cried."

Many others feel the same way about Berry. "I was devastated. I've know Red since I was in high school here in Miami and his passion for baseball here," said Richard Rump. "Now I have my grandson here, and I find out he's closing the place and my grandson loves it here, and I was just totally devastated."

Parents broke the news to their young baseball players that Baseball World would be no more. "He cried for two hours," said parent Janette Rizo. "And he went back to coach Berry to ask him why, and then he told this is the best place to play baseball."

There's no doubt about it, Red Berry's retirement will leave a void in South Florida youth baseball. "It's time to move on and see what the Lord has for me," said Berry. "I'm real proud of the generation of youngsters, the many generations that have come through Baseball World, and they've made me better too. I'm still throwing 12 innings a week. That's not bad for a 39-year-old guy."

Berry's last day will be March 31. Red Berry's Baseball World property will be sold to the church next door to be turned into a youth center.

(Copyright 2012 by Sunbeam Television Corp. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

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Local baseball coaching legend to retire

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January 31st, 2012 at 1:26 am

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Coaching couple learn about love, life and basketball side-by-side

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MEG WOCHNICK STAFF WRITER • Published January 30, 2012 Modified January 30, 2012

OLYMPIA – Like any husband and wife who are in the same profession, Mychael and Monica Heuer understand each other’s triumphs and struggles.

Not much needs to be said when one arrives home late after a loss; stats and facial expressions tell the story of a game and a sport they’ve coached for 20-plus years. Yet, a victory can spark a mutual excitement for the other one’s success.

But once they arrive at their home on Olympia’s west side, they set aside their titles as head women’s college basketball coaches – Monica at The Evergreen State College and Mychael at South Puget Sound Community College. They’re simply husband and wife, and dad and mom to their 7-year-old son, Alex.

“We have to make sure we’re a family first,” Mychael Heuer said.

Basketball isn’t a 24-hour-a-day subject with the Heuers, but it is part of their daily lives – consummated when Mychael proposed to his wife in 1993 at a high school girls basketball game in California where they were coaching against each other.

“My team knew, but I didn’t know (about the proposal),” Monica recalled. “I thought, ‘Oh, great, everybody came to this game today.’ ”

CHALLENGES AND SUCCESS

Up until two years ago, Monica, 43, and Mychael, 44, were the wife-and-husband coaching tandem for the Evergreen women’s program, serving as head coach and associate head coach, respectively, for eight seasons. They’ve coached side-by-side for almost all of their 17 years of marriage. They still work on Evergreen’s campus where Monica is the assistant athletic director and Mychael is the acting director of the college’s career development center.

Both grew up playing basketball - Mychael at El Cerrito High School in Oakland, Calif., against future NBA superstar Gary Payton, and Monica at Redwood Christian in nearby Castro Valley, and later as a four-year player at Cal State Hayward (now Cal State East Bay).

Their paths first crossed in Sacramento during a summer 3-on-3 national high school basketball tournament. A player each coached separately introduced them in 1992. They were married two years later.

Not long after, they both took to the college ranks.

Dave Weber, the former Evergreen athletic director (2000-10), coached against Mychael and Monica in high school. And when Weber was hired as the AD and men’s coach at nearby Patten College (now Patten University), he hired the Heuers to start a women’s team from scratch in 1995.

Monica was there for two seasons before being lured to San Jose State and San Francisco as an assistant for an NCAA Division I program. Soon after, Mychael took over as Patten’s coach, leading that school to a 21-11 record in 1999-2000, and one victory away from making it to the NAIA national tournament.

A year after Weber headed north to take the AD position at Evergreen in 2000, he hired both Heuers to coach the Geoducks’ women in basketball.

“I definitely wanted someone who could do it, and they could do it,” Weber said. “They did a terrific job down there.”

The challenge of being a husband-and-wife coaching tandem wasn’t their only obstacle early on in their careers.

While at Patten, the Heuers were still newlyweds. They were learning how to be married, in addition to coaching an NAIA women’s basketball team in its first year of existence, as well as trying to make it all work with 8-to-5 jobs. And in Mychael’s case, he also was going to school.

“You have to figure all of that out at one time,” Monica said. “Moving forward to coming here (to Evergreen), we had figured out some things. It wasn’t perfect; it was still challenging.”

SIDE-BY-SIDE COACHING

In the Heuers’ eight years together on the bench at Evergreen (2002-10), the Geoducks’ best season came in 2004-05 when the program posted its best record in the 15-year history of the program at 16-14 overall, 10-8 in the Cascade Collegiate Conference.

Mychael calls the first few seasons a “learning process,” learning to be an assistant under his wife. By the end of their tenure together, “they worked really well together”, Evergreen forward Danielle Swain said.

There were trying times for the Heuers off the court.

Their second season in 2003-04 was especially difficult. After a kitchen fire they temporarily moved in with friends. Mychael’s father died. Monica’s mother was diagnosed with cancer.

And in April 2004, the couple became parents when Alex was born.

“We strengthened our relationship since coming here,” Mychael said. “We really relied on each other to make it through that tough time. How you focus on basketball goes back to getting in that zone. That’s our comfort zone.”

JUGGLING LIFE, JOBS

Now, the two run their own separate college programs.

In 2010, Mychael was hired to coach at SPSCC, only to see the program forfeit its final 10 games when roster numbers dwindled to dangerous proportions because of injuries and eligibility issues. This season, the Clippers are playing a full NWAACC West Division schedule of games – with moderate success (3-13 overall record).

Evergreen just returned from weekend games at College of Idaho and Eastern Oregon, both losses. The Geoducks are 4-18, and trail Southern Oregon by a game to get into the conference tournament in three weeks.

It is that time of year. Weekends are a scheduling grind. Weeknights are not much better with practices and sometimes SPSCC games.

And when one parent does have free time, it usually means getting Alex off to practice – in soccer, not basketball.

“I never thought I’d be a soccer mom … in the rain,” Monica said. “I know he’ll come around.”

The Heuers have succeeded in finding the right balance among basketball, personal relationships, their careers and family.

“You don’t go through 17 years of marriage without bumps and tribulations, but we’ve survived it,” Mychael said. “It’s nice to have somebody to share the understanding of what you’re going through and being able to have your spouse be able to also love what you do.”

Meg Wochnick: 360-754-5473 mwochnick@theolympian.com

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January 31st, 2012 at 1:26 am

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Coaches Worldwide Celebrate International Coaching Week 5th-11th February 2012

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The phenomenal growth of the business and life coaching industry worldwide is being celebrated during International Coaching Week, 5th-11th February 2012, with the release of the ICF Global Coaching Study.

London, UK (PRWEB UK) 30 January 2012

The International Coach Federation (ICF) commissioned from PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) a survey of the coaching industry based on 12,000 respondents from 117 countries. It followed the first survey in 2007 when 5,415 respondents from 76 countries gave an insight into the coaching industry, in one of the largest pieces of research at that time.

“The findings from the new survey will prove especially useful in highlighting the growth in coaching, and uncovering the trends that have emerged over the past five years,” says Hilary Oliver, President of the UK-ICF.

“The aim of International Coaching Week is to enable coaches to promote the value of working with a professional, and to encourage the public to make contact with them. It’s also an opportunity for coaches to give something to the community and work pro-bono for groups or individuals they don’t normally work with.”

Coaching is increasingly regarded as a key part of an individual’s learning and development, and many companies consider it crucial to their performance.

“Anyone looking for a coach should first of all identify their own objectives in working with a coach,” advises Hilary. “The coach’s role is to provide support to enhance the skills, resources, and creativity that the client already has. Our website is a useful starting point as it lists accredited coaches in the UK, and provides information on the coaching process.”

The ICF is the largest worldwide resource for professional coaches and the source for those who are seeking a coach. For more information on finding a coach in the UK see http://www.coachfederation.org.uk

For media enquiries or more images please contact kate@thewriteimpression.co.uk or call 0845 5272 801

Editorial Notes

1.    Interviews:

This year’s UK-ICF President, Hilary Oliver, and last year’s President, Deborah Price, are available for interview. Please telephone 0845 5272 801 to arrange a time.

2.    About the International Coach Federation (ICF)

The ICF is the largest worldwide resource for professional coaches, and the source for those who are seeking a coach. It’s a non-profit organisation formed by individual members - professionals who practise coaching, including Executive Coaches, Leadership Coaches, Life Coaches and many more, from around the world. Formed in 1995, the ICF now has over 19,000 members, dedicated to advancing the coaching profession by setting high professional standards, providing independent certification, and building a network of credentialed coaches.

###

Hilary Oliver
UK-ICF
01922 660088
Email Information

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Coaches Worldwide Celebrate International Coaching Week 5th-11th February 2012

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January 31st, 2012 at 1:26 am

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