Let's be honest. Most coaching programs are information dumps disguised as transformation journeys.
I know because I've seen it. Before I became a learning experience architect, I was a creative writer fascinated by how stories change people. But I quickly realized something was broken in the education world.
Information was being delivered, but transformation wasn't happening.
After getting degrees in Creative Writing and Instructional Design from Full Sail University, I went on a mission to fix this problem. I wanted to know why brilliant coaches with life-changing expertise were struggling to get clients to implement.
The answer? Most coaching programs ignore how adults actually learn.
In this article, I'm sharing the five most powerful adult learning principles I've discovered. These aren't theoretical concepts—they're practical tools that have helped my clients increase implementation rates by an average of 85%.
Before diving into the principles, let's talk about why most coaching programs struggle to create lasting change.
The problem isn't your expertise. It's how that expertise is structured and delivered.
Most coaching programs are designed around what the coach wants to teach, not how the client needs to learn. It's like building a house by focusing on what the architect finds interesting rather than what the homeowner needs.
I remember the exact moment this hit me. I was reviewing a client's coaching program—a brilliant financial advisor who couldn't figure out why her clients weren't implementing her advice.
Her content was exceptional. Her expertise was unquestionable. But her program was structured like a university course: concept after concept with little connection to real-world application.
When we restructured her program using the principles I'm about to share, implementation rates jumped from 23% to 89% in just three months.
Now, let's dive into the five principles that transformed her program—and can transform yours too.
Adults learn best when they experience something before you explain it.
This flies in the face of traditional education, which typically follows the "tell-then-do" model: explain a concept, then have students practice it.
But adult brains are wired differently. We need to feel the problem before we care about the solution.
Instead of starting with "Here are the five components of effective goal setting," I might begin with: "Take 3 minutes to write down your biggest goal and the plan to achieve it. Now, let me show you why that approach fails 92% of the time—and what to do instead."
When you create an experience before explaining a concept, you're not just teaching—you're creating a gap that your teaching fills. This dramatically increases both attention and retention.
Adults need to see how information applies specifically to their situation.
This is why generic advice rarely sticks, no matter how good it is. If clients can't see themselves in your teaching, they won't implement it.
After teaching a concept, I always include a "Make It Yours" exercise with prompts like: "How does this apply to your specific industry?" and "What unique challenges might you face when implementing this?"
When I redesigned a leadership coach's program to include personalization mechanisms, completion rates increased by 64% and client satisfaction scores jumped from 7.2 to 9.6 out of 10.
Adults learn through implementation, not consumption.
Yet most coaching programs are designed for consumption: module after module of content with implementation treated as an afterthought.
The research is clear: spaced practice (implementing in short bursts over time) is dramatically more effective than massed practice (trying to implement everything at once).
In one program I designed, we replaced the traditional "8 modules in 8 weeks" structure with "4 modules in 12 weeks," where each module was followed by a two-week implementation period with daily micro-actions and weekly coaching support.
This approach might seem counterintuitive—you're teaching less content—but the results speak for themselves. Implementation rates tripled, and client results improved dramatically.
Adults remember what they feel, not what they're told.
This is where my background in creative writing becomes particularly valuable. The most effective learning experiences engage emotions through story, surprise, and personal connection.
Neuroscience confirms this: emotional arousal leads to stronger memory formation and increased likelihood of behavior change.
For a business coach's program, I created a "Hero's Journey" structure where clients recorded video diaries at key milestones. These emotional touchpoints became anchors for the concepts being taught, dramatically increasing retention and implementation.
When you design for emotional connection, you're not just teaching concepts—you're creating experiences that change how people think and act.
Adults need to see progress to maintain motivation.
This is perhaps the most overlooked principle in coaching program design. Without clear feedback loops, clients can't see their progress, leading to decreased motivation and eventual dropout.
I helped a health coach develop a "Progress Pulse" system where clients tracked five key metrics weekly. The system automatically generated visualizations showing progress over time, which dramatically increased program completion rates.
Effective feedback loops don't just show progress—they create a sense of momentum that drives continued implementation.
Let's see how these principles transformed a real coaching program:
Alex, a business coach, had created a comprehensive program covering everything entrepreneurs needed to know about scaling their business. The program consisted of 12 modules delivered weekly, each packed with valuable information.
Despite the quality of the content, completion rates hovered around 20%, and client results were inconsistent. Alex was frustrated because he knew his methods worked—when clients actually implemented them.
Working together, we redesigned Alex's program using the five principles:
The results? Completion rates jumped to 86%. Client results improved dramatically, with the average client reporting a 43% increase in revenue within 6 months. And Alex was able to increase his program price by 60% while maintaining full enrollment.
Ready to transform your coaching program using these principles? Here's where to start:
Remember, the goal isn't to create perfect learning experiences overnight. It's to continuously improve how your expertise is structured and delivered so that clients get better results.
That's what I'm obsessed with: not just teaching, but transformation. Not just information, but implementation.
Because at the end of the day, your success as a coach isn't measured by what you know—it's measured by how your clients' lives change as a result of working with you.
I've created a free 20-minute training that shows exactly how I apply these principles to transform coaching programs. No opt-in required, no pitch at the end. Just genuinely useful content from someone who's obsessed with making learning work.
Watch the TrainingI specialize in helping high-ticket coaches transform their expertise into structured, scalable programs using adult learning principles and storytelling techniques.
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