Life Back West

[Coaching Tips] How to Say Thanks (and When and Why)

The gift fruit basket from Wendy and Richard Yanowitch was over the top, but it was really the simple handwritten card expressing what I had done and their thanks for my behavior that hit the bulls eye. Their thank you letter, as my friend Cathy Madison at Cathedral School for Boys might saw, “was a keeper.”

The next day at the school bus stop Lola’s mom, Charley Zechas, totally out of blue turned to me and said “I like having you at our bus stop. You make things feel present. Thank you.”

Two thanks, both unexpected, and both the types of things that make you feel alive with that certain warm glow inside. So what can you take away from these examples?

Four principles, and you can apply them to your world, both at work and at home,  just as I hope to apply them to mine:

My friend and colleague Jo Whitehouse has this thanks part down pat.. Her thanks are always thoughtful, specific to the behavior involved, and yet not so predictable. A former boss, Magnus Lundberg, did a pretty good job as well. His motto was “cool mind, warm heart.” This is warm heart stuff, and we should all be so skilled as Jo and Magnus.

So that’s it. Four simple principles for knowing how to thank someone. And thank you for reading!

Life Back West is an occasional set of writings focused on ways people, teams and organizations can be both more effective (doing the right thing) and more efficient (doing the right thing well). More about executive and team coaching services can be found at the “About J. Mike Smith and Back West, Inc.” sidebar or the “Hire Me” tab above.

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