WHAT IS TRANSFORMATIONAL COACHING?
Transformational coaching is one of the most used and least clearly defined terms in professional coaching. Different coaches use it to mean different things. This guide gives it a precise definition, distinguishes it from related concepts, and explains when and why it is the right approach. It connects to our broader guide on what coaching is and to our overview of the different types of coaching.
What transformational coaching means
Transformational coaching works at the level of identity, beliefs, values and the ways a person understands themselves and their world. It is not primarily concerned with what a person does, but with who they are and how they see things. The assumption is that lasting change in behaviour comes from shifts at this deeper level, not from technique or willpower applied to the surface.
A person's actions are always an expression of their underlying mental model of reality. How they see their situation, what they believe is possible, how they define themselves in relation to others. Transformational coaching works with that mental model directly. When the model shifts, behaviour shifts with it, in ways that are sustained because they come from a different way of seeing rather than effort applied to an old way of seeing.
This distinguishes transformational coaching from coaching that focuses primarily on goals, skills, and specific behavioural change. Both have their place. A skilled coach understands the difference and knows when each approach will serve the client best.
Transformational vs transactional coaching
The clearest way to understand transformational coaching is in contrast to what is often called transactional coaching.
Focused on a specific goal, skill, or behaviour.
Bounded: the coaching has a defined scope and a clear endpoint.
Works with what the client does.
Change is measured by outcomes achieved.
It is often faster and well-suited to performance challenges, skill development, and specific decisions.
Focused on identity, beliefs, values and ways of seeing.
Developmental: the coaching works with the person over a longer arc.
Works with who the client is and how they think.
Change is measured by shifts in how the person sees and shows up.
Deeper and longer. Well-suited to transitions, recurring patterns, and questions of meaning and direction.
Most professional coaching sits somewhere on the spectrum between these two poles. A single coaching relationship often includes elements of both, moving between practical problem-solving and deeper developmental work as the client's needs shift. The distinction is useful for understanding what kind of coaching a situation calls for, not for categorising coaches into rigid types.
What transformational coaching works with
Transformational coaching is most relevant when the issue a client faces is not primarily one of skill, knowledge, or resources, but one of perception, belief, or identity. The following situations commonly call for transformational work.
Transformational coaching and transpersonal approaches
Transformational coaching frequently draws on transpersonal psychology. Transpersonal approaches work beyond the personal, addressing dimensions of human experience that include meaning, purpose, values, and connection to something larger than the individual self. They draw on psychological frameworks that recognise the full range of human experience, including the search for meaning, the role of values in decision-making, and the place of creativity, insight, and deeper awareness in human development.
This is not the same as spirituality or therapy, though it touches terrain that is often left to those disciplines. Transpersonal coaching is a rigorous professional practice that uses established frameworks and techniques within a clear coaching contract. The coach's role remains non-directive. The client remains the author of their own development. What changes is the depth at which the coaching operates.
TPC Coaching Academy's Coach Practitioner programme introduces transpersonal approaches in Module 3: Applied Positive Psychology in Coaching. The Coaching for Meaning, Purpose and Direction advanced pathway develops this into specialist competence for coaches who want to work at depth in this territory.
Transformational team coaching
The term transformational coaching also applies at the level of teams. Transformational team coaching works with the team as a whole system, addressing the collective beliefs, identity, and patterns of relating that shape how the team functions. It is distinct from team coaching that focuses primarily on improving specific performance outcomes.
A transformational approach to team coaching asks: how does this team see itself? What beliefs do team members share about what is possible? What patterns of relating are so established they are invisible? It works with those deeper dimensions of team life rather than with tasks and processes.
For a full understanding of what team coaching involves at every level, read our guide to what is team coaching. TPC Coaching Academy's Transformational Team Coaching programme is an ICF AATC-accredited six-month programme for coaches developing advanced team coaching competence and working toward the ICF Advanced Certification in Team Coaching.
Training for transformational coaching
Transformational coaching requires a strong foundation in core coaching competence before working at depth with identity and beliefs. A coach who moves into transformational territory without that foundation risks doing harm rather than good. Clients bring significant personal material to this work. The coach needs the skill to hold it appropriately.
The right starting point is an accredited practitioner-level programme that develops coaching competence across the full range of contexts, including the psychological depth required for transformational work. The Coach Practitioner programme builds that foundation across four modules over seven months. From there, specialist advanced training deepens the capability for transformational work in specific contexts.
The Coach Practitioner programme introduces the psychological frameworks that underpin transformational work, including transpersonal approaches in Module 3 and coaching through complexity and ambiguity in Module 4. The Coaching for Meaning, Purpose and Direction advanced pathway takes this further for coaches who want to develop specialist depth in transformational work with individuals.
For transformational work at team level, the Transformational Team Coaching programme is the dedicated route. Visit the course selection guide or book a call to discuss the right pathway for where you are.