Home-based businesses are the
wave of the present and the
future. According to Home
Business Magazine, home-based
businesses are a trillion dollar
industry. These ventures vary
wildly in their scope, and
attract people from all walks of
life. Working from home is
attractive to men and women;
single and married people; as
well as those fresh out of
college, career switchers, and
retirees.
For years, corporate and
lifestyle coaching have enjoyed
popularity among home-based
entrepreneurs, and today parent
coaching is following suit.
Parent coaching is fast becoming
one of the best choices for
individuals who have the desire
to work from home, and with good
reason.
One Coach’s Story
In many ways, the parent
coaching profession is about
choice. When seasoned parent
coach Peggy Alvarado began to
feel stifled in her software
technology career, she started
exploring her options.
“I started to realize how I
really didn’t fit anymore in
that career,” says Alvarado. “It
was like I wanted more. I
started inquiring with my human
resources department about
coaching. These two experiences
for me started opening a door to
something brand new.”
Alvarado, who has a degree in
computer science, received her
Empowerment Coach Certification
and obtained Professional
Certified Coach status, which
put her on the path towards the
successful parent coaching
practice she enjoys today. This
path, however, was not a
straightforward one and again
Alvarado had choices to make.
“I knew coaching was the thing
for me,” says Alvarado. “At
first, I had one foot in that
new world and one foot in my old
world because such a lucrative
and successful career, no matter
how dead you might feel in it,
is hard to leave. It was clear
to me that coaching was the way
to go, but not clear to me that
I could make the exact money
that I could in corporate. Then
when I started my family, it was
much more important for me to
give time to my family life,
which then made my coaching
career prominent.”
Becoming a Parent Coach
Training to become a parent
coach is also an area of
choices. Certification can take
anywhere from six months to two
years to complete, depending on
the chosen program. There are a
number of coach certification
programs available, and parent
coaches must choose between two
courses of study. They must
choose to either become a
certified lifestyle coach with a
parent coaching as their niche
specialty or become a certified
parent coach. Programs like the
ACPI Certified Parent Coach
program specifically train
individuals to become parent
coaches.
People who choose a certified
parent coach program undertake
training that not only teaches
them how to coach, it teaches
them how to coach parents. Most
of these programs are offered
through a combination of online,
teleclass, and in person
training. Many coaching
certification programs also
include a marketing component
designed to help newly certified
coaches launch a practice.
How Parent Coaching Works
Once certified, parent coaches
typically enjoy the flexibility
of working from home. They hold
client meetings either over the
telephone, through E-mail, in
person or any combination of the
three. How and when these
meetings take place are up to
the coach, as are the number of
clients the coach chooses to
take on. Some coaches prefer to
work part time and pursue
outside interests or raise their
families, while others choose to
build a full-time practice. All
coaches are required to market
themselves, which can be
accomplished any of a number of
ways. Some coaches choose to
hold seminars and give
presentations to local parenting
groups and government agencies,
while others write articles and
market themselves through the
Internet. Still others offer
special time specific programs
that give parents the
opportunity to work with the
coach and see if theirs is a
good match that can be called
upon in the future.
Parent coaches can work with one
or both parents, and concentrate
on giving parents the confidence
it takes to raise their
children. Situations coaches
encounter are often as varied as
their client base. Coaches may
be called upon to help parents
who are struggling with a
particular childrearing issue or
they may be asked to help guide
a parent to achieve life/work
balance or they may be asked to
gather resources and assist a
family in setting up a
discipline structure. There is
really no one problem or
situation that parent coaches
work with. They work on helping
their clients obtain goals as
they relate to their children
and their family life.