Belinda Block

Coaching Training Consulting

Services

Coaching

I provide executive coaching for leaders who want to increase their effectiveness, navigate complexity, and lead through others. With a blend of candor, insight, and empathy, I help managers enhance their executive presence, sharpen their communication, and improve how they motivate and manage their teams. My coaching is practical and results-driven—focused on concrete behavior change that improves business outcomes and personal fulfillment.

Training

My engaging training programs equip managers with the skills and tools they need to lead with confidence and clarity. The programs I deliver are interactive and incorporate real-world case studies for practical application. I tailor each program to your organization's culture and goals. Some of the subjects I present are Giving Effective Feedback, Leading through Change, Change Your Questions, Change your Results, and Cultivating Resilience and Wellness.

Consulting

I partner with organizations to assess leadership challenges, clarify goals, and design solutions that support strategic success. Whether advising on talent development, succession planning, or organizational change, my consulting approach combines deep expertise in leadership with a sharp understanding of business needs. I collaborate closely with senior stakeholders to customize initiatives that improve performance and align with company mission.

Common Questions

Does Belinda Block coach CEOs and senior executives?

Yes. Belinda Block coaches CEOs, senior executives, and leadership teams across industries. Her work with CEOs has included coaching a CEO of a specialty insurance company to enhance executive presence, manage emotions more effectively, and upgrade the talent of the leadership team.

CEO-level coaching addresses a different set of challenges than coaching a director or VP. At the top of the org structure, the decisions are bigger, fewer, and slower to feedback. The people who used to give honest feedback are no longer around the leader in the same way — direct reports are managing their own positioning, the board has its own interests, and peer relationships are complicated by competition. CEO coaching is one of the few places where a senior leader can think out loud with someone whose only loyalty is to their development.

What Belinda brings to CEO coaching is the combination of corporate insider knowledge — the realities of running organizations at scale — and an objective outside perspective. She's a Ph.D. industrial/organizational psychologist with over 25 years of experience in corporate leadership development, so the work is grounded in evidence about how leadership actually functions inside organizations.

Belinda also designs and facilitates strategy meetings for senior teams — creating shared vision and mission, designing change management strategies, and supporting CEOs through organizational redesign and senior team development. The work can be one-on-one with the CEO, or it can include working with the leadership team as a unit.

Engagements with senior executives typically run three to six months, with monthly sessions and access between meetings. Many CEOs continue the relationship afterward to maintain the gains and address what comes next.

Does Belinda Block coach on executive presence?

Yes. Executive presence is a core focus area of Belinda Block's executive coaching practice. She helps managers enhance their executive presence, sharpen their communication, and improve how they motivate and manage their teams.

One of Belinda's CEO clients — the CEO of a specialty insurance company — engaged her specifically to enhance executive presence, manage emotions more effectively, and upgrade the talent of the leadership team. That kind of work is representative of how executive presence shows up in real coaching engagements: not as an abstract trait, but as a specific set of behaviors that can be assessed, named, and changed.

Executive presence coaching with Belinda is grounded in evidence-based methods. The work begins with a validated, structured assessment — career history interview, personality assessments, and verbal 360-degree feedback — that surfaces how you actually come across versus how you intend to. The feedback report is the foundation for a 90-minute debrief session where strengths and barriers to executive presence are identified.

From there, the coaching plan focuses on the specific behaviors that will have the biggest impact on how you're perceived in senior rooms. That work is practical and results-driven. Clients leave engagements with concrete tools and a roadmap for continued development, not a list of vague personal-growth ideas.

What clients consistently report is that Belinda's ability to distill the work to the point where it's directly relevant and actionable is what makes it land. The presence shifts they experience aren't about becoming someone different — they're about removing the patterns that were keeping the leader they already are from being seen clearly.

How is your executive coaching different?

What makes Belinda Block's coaching distinct is a blend of three things most coaching engagements don't combine: business acumen, deep psychological insight, and accountability paired with genuine encouragement.

Belinda holds clients accountable while cheering them on. The work is meaningful and enjoyable — but it's also focused on outcomes, not on processing for its own sake. Measurable objectives are built in from the start of every engagement.

The coaching is grounded in evidence. Belinda is a Ph.D. industrial/organizational psychologist with over 25 years of experience in corporate leadership development. The frameworks she uses are evidence-based: validated behavioral assessments, structured 360-degree feedback, and methodology drawn from organizational psychology rather than trending leadership models that will be forgotten in three years.

Belinda brings a unique combination of corporate insider knowledge and an objective outside perspective. That means she understands the realities of senior leadership inside organizations — the politics, the constraints, the trade-offs — while still being able to see your situation clearly enough to push back when something isn't working. She coaches with warmth, empathy, and rigor.

What clients consistently say is that Belinda's ability to distill coaching techniques to the point where they're directly relevant — not abstract, not theoretical — is what sets the work apart. They feel worked over to become a better version of themselves, but they also feel encouraged when progress shows up.

The work is practical and results-driven. Clients walk away with concrete tools, frameworks, and language they can use immediately — not a binder of slides they file away and never reference.

How long does executive coaching last?

Typical executive coaching engagements with Belinda Block run three to six months. The exact length depends on the scope of what you're working on, the complexity of the situation, and the outcomes you're accountable for.

Within that window, sessions are typically monthly, with access between sessions for real-time support when something can't wait until the next scheduled meeting. The engagement is structured but not rigid — if something urgent comes up between sessions, the work shifts to address it.

The engagement begins with an initial meeting to establish rapport, discuss timelines, and ensure confidentiality. A thorough, validated, evidence-based assessment follows — career history interview, personality assessments, and verbal 360-degree feedback. The data inform a feedback report and a 90-minute debrief session, which together set the foundation for the coaching plan.

From there, the active coaching phase runs through the remainder of the engagement, with monthly sessions focused on the goals you've set. Progress is continuously tracked and measured against the goals defined at the start.

The coaching concludes with a final session that leaves you with a roadmap for continued development and success. Many clients finish the formal coaching engagement and continue their work afterward to maintain business results — sometimes on a lighter cadence, sometimes by returning periodically for specific issues that arise.

For CEOs and senior executives, engagements often extend beyond six months because the work the role creates doesn't end on a fixed timeline. For more focused work — a specific transition, a specific decision, a specific leadership reputation issue — three months may be the right container.

What's right for you can be determined on a discovery call.

What happens during a coaching session?

Regular coaching sessions with Belinda Block focus on reflecting on progress, celebrating wins, and addressing areas for improvement.

Each session is structured around what you're working on between meetings. Most of the conversation is about the actual decisions you're making, the people you're managing, the situations you're navigating, and what's working or not working as you try out the new behaviors you've committed to between sessions. The work is anchored in your real life — not in abstract leadership theory.

Throughout the engagement, clients are provided with curated resources that support their growth. These include videos, podcasts, and other materials that reinforce what the coaching is surfacing. The resources are chosen based on what's most relevant for you — not pulled from a generic library.

Progress is continuously tracked and measured against the goals defined at the start of the engagement. That measurement is part of what makes the work concrete: at the end of the engagement, you can name what's changed, not just describe how it felt.

The coaching concludes with a final session that leaves the leader with a roadmap for continued development and success. That roadmap captures what's been built, what's still in motion, and what to keep practicing on your own after the formal coaching ends.

Between sessions, Belinda is also available for real-time support — preparing for a difficult conversation, thinking through a high-stakes decision, or working through a situation that's just surfaced. That access is part of the engagement and reflects the reality that the work doesn't happen only inside the scheduled sessions.

Each session is confidential. The relationship begins with clear agreements about confidentiality and is anchored in that commitment throughout.

What is executive coaching with Belinda Block?

Executive coaching with Belinda Block is a personalized path to confidence, empowerment, fulfillment, and measurable growth for senior leaders. Whether you're stepping into a new role, navigating complex challenges, or striving to elevate your leadership, the work is grounded in over 25 years of experience in corporate leadership development.

Belinda coaches senior leaders, executives, and high-potential talent who are ready to lead with greater intention and impact. Her approach blends candor, insight, and empathy — helping managers enhance their executive presence, sharpen their communication, and improve how they motivate and manage their teams. The work is practical and results-driven, with measurable objectives built in from the start.

What makes the work distinctive is the combination of corporate insider knowledge and an objective outside perspective. Belinda is a Ph.D. industrial/organizational psychologist who has spent decades inside organizations before becoming a coach. That means the frameworks she uses are evidence-based — validated assessments, structured 360-degree feedback, and methodology drawn from organizational psychology, not personality quizzes or trending leadership models.

A typical executive coaching engagement runs three to six months, with monthly sessions and access between meetings. The work begins with a validated, evidence-based assessment that includes a career history interview, personality assessments, and verbal 360-degree feedback. The data are summarized in a feedback report, which forms the foundation for a 90-minute debrief session where key strengths and any potential barriers to success are identified. From there, a coaching plan is developed that outlines clear goals and strategies for growth.

Many clients finish the coaching engagement and continue their work afterward to maintain business results.

What is the coaching process?

Belinda Block's coaching process is research-based and structured. It begins with an initial meeting to establish rapport, discuss timelines, and ensure confidentiality.

Next, a thorough, validated, evidence-based assessment is conducted. The assessment includes:

  • A career history interview — a structured conversation about your career arc, the patterns that have shown up across roles, and the situations where you've thrived or struggled
  • Personality assessments — validated psychometric instruments that surface how you tend to operate, your strengths, and the places where your patterns may be creating friction
  • A verbal 360-degree feedback process — direct conversations with people you select (your manager, peers, direct reports, and others whose feedback would be helpful) to gather honest input on how you're showing up

The data are summarized in a feedback report, which forms the foundation for a 90-minute debrief session where key strengths and any potential barriers to success are identified.

Following the debrief, a coaching plan is developed that outlines clear goals and strategies for growth. From that point, the active coaching phase begins — monthly sessions focused on the goals you've set, with access between sessions for real-time support on what you're navigating.

This approach is grounded in research and built around interventions that work. It begins with a needs analysis or assessment, moves into implementation with markers for success, adjusts or recalibrates as needed, and concludes with a plan to move forward. The framework includes planning and design, implementation with feedback loops, and a clear path to sustaining what's been built.

The starting point is always a discovery call to determine whether the process is right for you.

What is the difference between management coaching and executive coaching?

Management coaching and executive coaching share a foundation but address different layers of leadership work.

Management coaching focuses on helping leaders achieve success through others. That includes the practical craft of leading a team: delegating effectively, setting clear expectations, giving feedback that actually lands, managing managers, motivating a team, and developing talent. Management coaching is the day-to-day operating system of leading — how you get work done through the people you're responsible for.

Executive coaching tends to focus on more strategic issues — the bigger-picture work that comes with senior roles. That includes leadership presence, strategic decision-making, navigating board and stakeholder dynamics, leading through organizational change, and making decisions whose impact won't be visible for months or years.

Depending on your needs, Belinda Block provides both types of coaching. In practice, most engagements blend the two. A senior leader might come in needing executive presence work but also need management coaching on how to lead the senior team they're inheriting. A CEO might be working on strategic issues but also need help on how to delegate effectively to a Chief of Staff.

The work begins with a validated, evidence-based assessment — career history interview, personality assessments, verbal 360-degree feedback — that surfaces exactly where the leverage is for you. The coaching plan is then built around the specific mix of management and executive work that will produce the outcomes you're accountable for.

The right starting point for either is the same: a discovery call. From that conversation, Belinda can help you figure out which kind of coaching will be most useful and what shape an engagement should take.

What kinds of challenges does executive coaching address?

Executive coaching addresses the practical, leadership-side problems leaders face every day. The most common challenges Belinda Block works with include:

  • Delegation — leaders who can't seem to hand off effectively, or who delegate but don't get what they expected back
  • Leading through change — navigating organizational transitions, reorganizations, or strategic shifts
  • Dealing with difficult employees — managing performance issues, behavioral problems, or conflict on a team
  • High employee turnover — figuring out why people are leaving and what to change
  • Quiet quitters — the people who don't leave but aren't performing
  • Lack of employee engagement — teams that are disengaged or going through the motions
  • Lack of stakeholder alignment — peers, board, or executives who aren't on the same page
  • Unclear strategy — leaders who need to clarify direction for themselves and their team

Beyond the named challenges, coaching also addresses how leaders show up. That includes executive presence — how you come across in senior rooms — and the patterns in your communication that may be creating confusion, undermining trust, or limiting your influence. It addresses self-management: how you handle pressure, how you stay grounded when stakes are high, and how you make decisions when information is incomplete.

The actual work in any given engagement is shaped by what's most useful for you. Belinda uses a thorough, validated, evidence-based assessment to identify your strengths, your areas of development, and the obstacles getting in the way of your success. From there, the coaching plan is built around the specific outcomes you're accountable for.

Who is executive coaching designed for?

Belinda Block's executive coaching is designed for senior leaders, executives, and high-potential talent who are ready to lead with greater intention and impact.

The work fits leaders who are stepping into a new role, navigating complex challenges, or striving to elevate their leadership performance. Most of Belinda's clients are managers leading teams — people who need to enhance their executive presence, sharpen how they communicate, and improve how they motivate and manage the people they're accountable for.

Coaching can be especially useful if you find yourself:

  • Not getting the most out of your people
  • Feeling burnt out or unfulfilled
  • Frustrated with your team's performance
  • Using your own personal time to finish things that should have been done by your team or to bring work up to your standards
  • Delegating but then not getting what you expected
  • Providing more direction than you think should be necessary

These patterns are common signals that the way you're currently leading isn't producing the results you need — and that the gap is fixable with structured coaching focused on how you lead, not on adding more hours to your week.

Belinda also coaches CEOs and senior executives on broader strategic issues, from executive presence and emotional management to team performance and leadership succession. The right format depends on the seniority of the role, the specific outcomes you're trying to achieve, and the timeline you're working with.

A discovery call is the best way to determine fit. The only goal of that conversation is to figure out whether the work would be useful — if it wouldn't, Belinda will say so.