ACT · MI · GROW · Behavioural Science

The Coaching
Methodology.

The coaching series extends the Groundwork system into the psychological layer — the dimension that determines whether someone with a perfect planning system actually uses it, and whether someone who executes well sustains it when things get hard. These are not soft skills. They are evidence-based frameworks with extensive research behind them, applied in printable form.

01
Why planning alone isn't enough
Most people who fail to execute don't lack a plan. They lack clarity on whether the plan is in service of what genuinely matters — and the psychological tools to close the gap between knowing what to do and actually doing it.
02
The values layer
ACT's central insight: goals executed in the service of genuine values feel fundamentally different from goals executed to meet expectations or avoid discomfort. The Values Architecture is the tool that makes this distinction explicit — and it changes everything it's connected to.
03
The intention-action gap
Between 40–60% of stated intentions fail to convert to action. Not due to motivation collapse — due to specific, identifiable mechanisms with known interventions. Behaviour change science has solved this. The Accountability Framework applies that science.
How the coaching series fits the system

The coaching tools run alongside the planning cascade — not instead of it.

Before the cascade
Values Architecture
Run once before the Annual Blueprint. Establishes the values that your goals should serve. Revisit annually.
Alongside the daily
Weekly Debrief
Run weekly alongside the Weekly Review. The Review is operational. The Debrief is psychological. Both are necessary.
When stuck
Accountability Framework
Deploy when an important commitment is repeatedly not being kept. A diagnostic, not a motivational exercise.
For important decisions
GROW Session Planner
Use for any important decision, coaching conversation, or situation where clear structured thinking is required.
Four coaching methodologies

The frameworks.
The tools. The evidence.

ACT
Coaching Method 01

Acceptance & Commitment Therapy

Steven Hayes · 1982
University of Nevada — adapted for coaching
Values · Flexibility · Committed action

ACT was developed by psychologist Steven Hayes as a behavioural therapy grounded in the insight that the attempt to eliminate unwanted thoughts and feelings is itself a primary source of psychological suffering. The more you fight anxiety, the more powerful it becomes. The alternative is not suppression — it's acceptance combined with committed action toward what genuinely matters.

For coaching, ACT's most powerful contribution is the distinction between values and goals. Goals are things you achieve and then no longer have. Values are ongoing directions — you can never 'complete' the value of being a present father or a person who operates with integrity. This distinction transforms how you plan. Goals executed in the service of values feel different from goals executed to impress others, meet expectations, or avoid discomfort.

The psychological flexibility model — the core of ACT — asks a single question: are my current actions moving me toward what genuinely matters, or away from discomfort? Most people discover that a significant portion of their busiest days are the latter. The Values Architecture product is the structured process for making this distinction explicit.

The process
01
Acceptance
02
Defusion
03
Present moment
04
Self-as-context
05
Values
06
Committed action
Why it works
ACT works because it addresses the root cause rather than the symptom. Most productivity and planning systems assume the problem is organisation. ACT asks whether you're organised in the service of things that actually matter to you. Psychological flexibility — the ability to act in accordance with your values even when doing so is uncomfortable — is one of the most robust predictors of sustained behaviour change in the research literature.
How Groundwork implements it
The Values Architecture is the ACT implementation at the top of the Groundwork hierarchy. It runs the values clarification process — from 60 candidate values down to a genuine top five — and then builds the connection to the Annual Blueprint. The Weekly Debrief uses ACT's defusion and values-alignment questions to examine each week's actions against stated values. The Accountability Framework applies ACT's 'competing commitments' lens to understand what values conflict is actually producing the intention-action gap.
MI
Coaching Method 02

Motivational Interviewing

William Miller & Stephen Rollnick · 1983
Clinical psychology → executive coaching
Ambivalence · Change talk · Readiness to change

Motivational Interviewing was developed in clinical psychology — originally for addiction treatment — and is now one of the most widely used frameworks in coaching, healthcare, and behaviour change. Its central insight is one of the most useful in all of psychology: ambivalence about change is normal, and trying to overcome it through argument, persuasion, or willpower is almost always counterproductive.

The MI practitioner's job is not to persuade the client to change. It's to create the conditions in which the client discovers their own reasons to change — their own 'change talk' — by exploring the gap between their current behaviour and their stated values with genuine curiosity and without judgment. The moment someone articulates their own reason to change, in their own words, the psychology of behaviour change shifts fundamentally.

For men in particular, MI is valuable because it bypasses the resistance that direct advice typically triggers. The man who would dismiss a coach telling him he should exercise more will often talk himself into starting training when asked the right questions about what that would mean for the things he says matter to him. The Weekly Debrief is built around this principle — it's structured self-questioning rather than a checklist.

The process
01
Express empathy
02
Develop discrepancy
03
Roll with resistance
04
Support self-efficacy
Why it works
MI works because change is most durable when it's self-generated. External motivation — accountability partners, coaches, apps — works while it's present and collapses when it's removed. Internal motivation, built by connecting behaviour to genuine values through structured self-exploration, is self-sustaining. The research on MI shows significant effects across health behaviour, addiction, and professional performance with remarkably brief interventions.
How Groundwork implements it
The Weekly Debrief runs MI's core structure as a weekly self-coaching exercise — the intention gap, the avoidance inquiry, the values alignment check. The Accountability Framework uses MI's competing commitments lens to identify what the avoidance is protecting. The GROW Session Planner incorporates MI-informed questioning at the Reality stage — separate fact from interpretation, explore ambivalence before generating options.
GROW
Coaching Method 03

The GROW Model

Sir John Whitmore · 1992
Performance Consultants — executive coaching
Structure · Clarity · Committed action

The GROW model is the structural backbone of professional coaching worldwide. Developed by Sir John Whitmore and colleagues at Performance Consultants in the early 1990s, it's the framework taught in most coaching certification programmes and used in most corporate coaching contexts. Its durability comes from its simplicity: four stages that create a deliberate sequence for moving from confusion to committed action.

The sequence matters. Without Goal clarity first, the Reality stage becomes unfocused venting. Without Reality before Options, proposed solutions are disconnected from what's actually happening. Without Options before Way Forward, commitment is made to the first solution rather than the best one. The model forces the thinking to happen in the right order — and most important conversations go wrong precisely because the thinking happens in the wrong order.

GROW works equally well as a self-coaching structure, a framework for coaching conversations, a template for performance discussions, and a structure for any important decision. The GROW Session Planner makes this available in printable form — for formal coaching sessions, for self-directed reviews, and for anyone who leads people and needs a structure for developmental conversations.

The process
01
Goal → Reality → Options → Way forward
Why it works
GROW works because it creates a container for quality thinking. Most people jump from 'problem' to 'solution' without clearly defining either. GROW forces four distinct cognitive steps, each of which deepens the thinking before proceeding. The Goal stage clarifies what you actually want (often different from what you first say). The Reality stage separates fact from interpretation. The Options stage generates alternatives before evaluating any. The Way Forward converts the best option into specific commitment. The research on structured coaching conversations consistently shows superior outcomes compared to unstructured advice.
How Groundwork implements it
The GROW Session Planner runs the full four-stage protocol in printable form — with a minimum of 8 options before evaluating any, a values alignment check at the Options stage, a pre-mortem at the Way Forward stage. The 90-Day Debrief uses the GROW structure as its backbone — Goal (what did you intend?), Reality (what actually happened?), Options (what could you do differently?), Way Forward (what will you do?). The Resilience Audit uses a GROW-informed development planning page for each identified resilience gap.
BC
Coaching Method 04

Behavioural Science & Behaviour Change

Kahneman · Cialdini · Fogg · Clear · 2000s+
Academic psychology → applied coaching
Intention-action gap · Friction reduction · Commitment devices

The science of behaviour change has produced more rigorous, replicable findings than any other branch of psychology in the last 30 years. The picture that emerges is humbling: humans are dramatically worse at predicting and controlling their own behaviour than they believe, and the gap between intention and action is a systemic feature of human psychology, not a personal failing.

The key findings are these. Implementation intentions — the specific format 'When X happens, I will do Y' — roughly double follow-through rates compared to vague intentions. Environment design (making desired behaviours easier and undesired behaviours harder) is consistently more effective than willpower. Competing commitments — the hidden goals that your non-action is serving — are almost always present when someone repeatedly fails to follow through on stated intentions. Reducing friction on the first action is more effective than increasing motivation.

The Accountability Framework is the Groundwork implementation of these insights — not as a lecture about behaviour change, but as a structured diagnostic process. What type of blocker is this? What is the competing commitment? What is the implementation intention? What environmental change would reduce friction? What is the smallest possible first action? These are the questions the research shows matter most.

The process
01
Identify blocker → Design environment → Implementation intention → Smallest action → Measure
Why it works
The intention-action gap research shows that between 40–60% of stated intentions fail to convert to action — not due to motivation collapse, but due to specific, identifiable mechanisms that each have known interventions. The power of this framework is that it moves the conversation from 'why don't you just do it' to a diagnostic: which specific mechanism is active here, and what is the evidence-based intervention for that mechanism?
How Groundwork implements it
The Accountability Framework is the primary implementation — a full diagnostic and commitment tool built around the five most common intention-action gap mechanisms. The Weekly Debrief's 'intention gap' section applies behavioural science's competing commitments lens to weekly execution. The Values Architecture's 'committed action' page uses the implementation intention format throughout. The 90-Day Debrief builds environmental design review into the quarterly cycle.
Start with the Values Architecture.
It changes everything below it.
Before you plan your year, know what you're planning toward. The Values Architecture is the first product in the coaching series and the foundation for using every other Groundwork tool more effectively.
Values Architecture — £9.99 See all coaching tools