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The Coachability Code Podcast

The Coachability Code Podcast

Auteur(s): Jordan Ring
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À propos de cet audio

The podcast for coaches by coaches. What makes someone truly coachable? On The Coachability Code Podcast, we'll chat with rockstar coaches, wisdom-infused mentors, and high-level leaders to explore the patterns behind transformational change. You’ll hear honest conversations about great clients, tough clients, and all the moments in between. If you're a coach who wants to help your clients get better results, build stronger habits, and lean into growth, this podcast is for you. Let’s decode what it really takes to be coachable, and figure out how we can help our clients help themselves.Jordan Ring Développement commercial et entrepreneuriat Entrepreneurship Gestion et leadership Économie
Épisodes
  • GB Men's Padel Coach Sandy Farquharson on Why Most People Plateau And How to Help Them Break Through
    Feb 22 2026

    Connect with Sandy Farquharson
    →LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/sandy-farquharson/
    →The Padel School: Search “The Padel School” on YouTube, Instagram, and podcast platforms

    What this episode is about
    →Why players plateau after 6 to 9 months, and how bad habits lock in
    →How great coaches diagnose the real link in the chain, not just the final mistake
    →Sandy’s philosophy on hybrid coaching, online education plus on court training

    Who this helps
    →Padel players who feel stuck and want a real unlock, not generic tips
    →Coaches and clubs who want frameworks, SOPs, and better coach education

    Key takeaways
    →The best students have a growth mindset and take 2 to 3 ideas into real practice.
    →“Feel vs real” is why video feedback speeds up breakthroughs.
    →Most players improve early, then hit a frustration plateau without coaching.
    →Breaking bad habits is hard, but it creates the biggest jumps in performance.
    →Good coaching starts earlier in the chain, footwork, prep, timing, then contact.
    →Group coaching builds community AND teaches tactics you can’t do 1 on 1.
    →Misinformation spreads fast when players coach each other without a framework.
    →Consistency wins, weekly content compounds trust over years.
    →The fastest way to change systems is to fix the trunk, not blame a single leaf.
    →Hybrid coaching will scale clubs faster, but only if coaches are trained well.

    Quotables
    →“Remember the name, remember the name.”
    →“Feel versus real.”
    →“We’ve gotta go right to the trunk of the tree.”
    →“You’ve gotta be in it for the long run.”

    Practical tools and frameworks
    →Use video to show the exact moment the habit breaks, then rebuild the chain.
    →Coach with 2 to 3 priorities per session, not 25 tips.
    →Diagnose the earliest link that drives the error, timing, prep, footwork, not the finish.
    →Build SOPs at each level so quality scales across coaches and locations.
    →Pair online learning with on court reps so players and coaches improve faster.

    Books mentioned
    →Oversubscribed by Daniel Priestley
    →Key Person of Influence by Daniel Priestley

    Hosted by Jordan Ring
    →I’m Jordan, ghostwriter, book coach, author, and developmental editor.
    →Have you ever thought about writing a book.
    →Contact me at jordan@jmring.com
    →Connect with me at jmring.com

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    40 min
  • Business Coach Lisa Klein on Simplicity, Sustainability and Why all Coaches NEED a Lead Magnet
    Feb 18 2026

    Connect with Lisa Klein→Website: lisakleinco.com→LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lisakleinco/What this episode is about→Why high achievers get stuck in perfectionism and how to keep moving anyway→What a lead magnet really is, and why it protects your business from platform risk→How to build a simple foundation so launches stop feeling chaoticWho this helps→Coaches and online service providers who feel stuck, overwhelmed, or burnt out→High achieving women who know the vision, but need a clear path to get thereKey takeaways→Most people know point B, they just can’t create a clear plan to reach it.→The best clients trust the process, implement, and keep taking action.→Perfectionism delays results, “ready” is a trap.→A lead magnet is any value exchange that earns an email address, not just a PDF.→Owned audience matters because social platforms can restrict or remove accounts.→Relationships drive growth, kindness and consistency win.→Launches often feel slow until the final stretch, that’s normal.→If something doesn’t work, audit the breakdown instead of scrapping everything.→Confidence is built after action, not before.→Simple can be sustainable, and sustainable is what compounds.Quotables→“Trust the process.”→“Letting go of perfectionism.”→“No, just do it.”→“Keep it super simple.”Practical tools and frameworks→Create a lead magnet that fits your style, PDF, workshop, challenge, event, podcast, anything that captures email.→Set launch benchmarks early, open cart date, close date, and realistic targets.→When a launch stalls, audit subject lines, open rates, follow up, and outreach, before changing the offer.→Prioritize relationship building, comments, DMs, and coffee chats.→Focus on 1 small, consistent step that builds momentum.Books mentioned→Atomic Habits by James ClearHosted by Jordan Ring→I’m Jordan, ghostwriter, book coach, author, and developmental editor.→Have you ever thought about writing a book.→Contact me at jordan@jmring.com→Connect with me at jmring.com

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    33 min
  • Phone Readiness Coach Kathy Van Benthuysen on Tech Responsibility, Developing Character, and Coaching Teens
    Feb 9 2026

    Connect with Kathy Van Benthuysen
    →Email: kathy@converlation.com
    →LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/kathy-van-benthuysen/
    →Digital Prep Academy: Search “Digital Prep Academy” on Instagram, Facebook, X, TikTok, and YouTube

    What this episode is about
    →Why kids feel like every mistake can go viral now
    →How to prep kids before the phone and before social media shows up
    →The Phone Readiness Challenge and the 4 pillars it measures

    Who this helps
    →Parents who feel behind and pressured because “everyone else has a phone”
    →Educators and coaches who want practical tools for healthier tech habits

    Key takeaways
    →Once a phone is handed over, it’s hard to take it back.
    →Parents need a path that builds buy in, not constant enforcement.
    →Readiness beats age, “I’m 13” is not a plan.
    →Responsibility matters because phones amplify existing habits.
    →Emotional maturity matters because “left out” and “told no” are daily triggers online.
    →Tech awareness matters because platforms are engineered to keep kids scrolling.
    →Character matters because most of the real decisions happen when no one is watching.
    →Parental controls can create a never ending policing job for parents.
    →Kids respond differently to coaching from someone who is not their parent.
    →Repetition wins, you have to keep saying the message until it finally lands.

    Quotables
    →“Do it messy, do it afraid. Just do it.”
    →“Your eyeballs are the price of it.”
    →“Kids want and need boundaries.”
    →“If you give your kid a phone, they will find hours of time to be on the phone.”
    →“Keep your kids away from tech as long as possible.”

    Practical tools and frameworks
    →Run a Phone Readiness Challenge with the child and the parent taking the same quiz.
    →Use the 4 pillars: responsibility, emotional maturity, tech awareness, character.
    →Make the phone the “carrot,” complete the prep first, then earn the device.
    →Build a “go out to eat bag” so boredom doesn’t become an iPad habit.
    →Have the “why” conversations early, before the pressure moments happen at friends’ houses.

    Books mentioned
    →The Bible
    →Giftology by John Ruhlin
    →Redeeming Love by Francine Rivers

    Hosted by Jordan Ring
    →I’m Jordan, ghostwriter, book coach, author, and developmental editor.
    →Have you ever thought about writing a book.
    →Contact me at jordan@jmring.com
    →Connect with me at jmring.com

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    1 h et 3 min
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