In Good Company
Coaching Jobs
16:47
 

Coaching Jobs

Feb 23, 2026

What if building a career in coaching did not require you to run your own business at all?

In this episode, we open up a conversation that we realise we have not explored nearly enough. We often talk about creating a coaching business or becoming a coaching leader, yet there is a growing and exciting landscape of coaching jobs inside organisations that deserves real attention.

This discussion was sparked by the noticeable rise in coaching roles appearing across LinkedIn and within our own community. As we began to explore them more closely, we  reflected on our own experience of returning to an in-house role where coaching formed the heart of our work. It brought together everything we loved about developing people, with the stability of a regular income and without the constant need to generate clients. That combination created a deep sense of alignment and ease.

We share the wide range of ways coaching now shows up in organisations. Some roles are fully dedicated internal coach positions. Others sit within learning and development, people development, leadership, apprenticeships or culture transformation. In many cases, coaching becomes the differentiating skill that allows someone to move from one profession into another and close the experience gap that once felt like a barrier.

What becomes clear in this conversation is that there is no single pathway. For some people, the idea of running a business and stepping into a CEO identity is energising. For others, it is not where their passion lies. There is equal value in a role where you are paid to do the work you love every day, making a tangible difference to individuals and teams, without needing to manage marketing, sales and operations.

We also reflect on the increasing recognition within organisations that coaching improves performance, supports wellbeing and helps retain talented people. As executive coaching has proven its impact, companies are now asking how to create that same level of support at scale. This is where internal coaching capability and coaching cultures are being built, and it is opening doors to roles that simply did not exist a decade ago.

One of the most important themes running through this episode is possibility. Coaching training is not only about becoming a coach in private practice. It is a powerful, transferable professional development that allows you to reshape your current role, step into a new one or design a portfolio career that blends stability with independence.

We also talk about timeframes, because the journey is often far more achievable than people imagine. Within a year to eighteen months, it is entirely possible to gain a qualification, apply your existing experience and position yourself as the ideal candidate for roles that previously felt out of reach.

At its core, this episode is about contribution. It is about being paid to make a meaningful difference, to work with people in a way that feels purposeful, and to build a career that reflects how you truly want to spend your time.

 

Timestamps:

00:00 Introduction to coaching jobs in organisations
00:26 Jo’s in-house coaching role and the value of income stability
01:48 Searching for coaching roles and surprising results
03:17 Using coaching to bring strengths and passions together
04:17 A success story of moving into an internal coaching role
05:11 New and emerging coaching career pathways
06:05 Coaching qualifications as a bridge into people roles
07:02 The scope and creativity within L&D and development roles
08:27 Portfolio careers and university coaching work
09:24 The rise of in-house coaching in global organisations
10:23 Building coaching capability at scale
11:21 Organisational support for coaching development
12:13 Coaching roles shaped by culture and organisational need
13:10 Business owner versus employed coach pathways
14:04 Part-time roles and blended career models
15:00 Being paid to make a meaningful difference
15:56 How quickly career change can happen through coaching
16:52 Transferable skills from other industries
17:22 First steps to explore coaching opportunities

 

Key Lessons Learned:

  • A coaching career can exist fully inside an organisation without running a business.
  • Coaching qualifications create powerful bridges into people development and L&D roles.
  • Internal coaching is growing as organisations seek performance, wellbeing and retention at scale.
  • Portfolio careers allow a blend of stability, flexibility and independence.
  • Transferable skills from many industries align naturally with coaching.
  • It is possible to reposition your career within one to eighteen months.
  • Being paid to make a meaningful contribution is a valid and achievable goal.

 

Keywords:

coaching jobs in organisations, internal coach roles UK, learning and development coaching careers, coaching qualification career change, people development roles coaching, portfolio coaching career, coaching culture in organisations, executive coaching internal capability, transferable skills into coaching, coaching career pathways,

 

Links & Resources:

IG Company website: https://www.igcompany.com
Coaching course quiz: https://www.mycoachingcourse.com

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