Description

The Wealth of Coaching: A playbook for coaching in the modern workplace

Editor: Susi Astengo
ISBN: 978-1-991272-39-3
Hardcopy price: R359.00 

EISBN: 978-1-991272-40-9  
E-version price: R332.00 

Coaching has come a long way—from exclusive executive privilege to a cornerstone of modern talent development. But in an era defined by rapid change, complexity, and digital disruption, how do we ensure coaching remains human, impactful, and fit for the future?

The Wealth of Coaching is a timely and practical guide that brings together a dynamic collection of voices—coaches, psychologists, leadership experts, and tech innovators—to explore what coaching really looks like in today’s working world.

  • Curated by award-winning coaching strategist Susi Astengo, the book tackles the big questions:
  • How do you build a sustainable, organisation-wide coaching culture?
  • What is the real difference between coaching and therapy—and why does it matter?
  • How can tools like the Enneagram, neuroscience, and even AI enrich the coaching experience?
  • What does maturity look like in a coach—and how do we measure it?

Whether you’re an HR leader, coach, learning and development practitioner, or business decision-maker, this book offers clarity, insight, and actionable strategies. Drawing on two decades of real-world experience, The Wealth of Coaching positions coaching not just as a development tool—but as a strategic lever for better business, better leadership, and better human connection.

If you’re ready to move from ad hoc coaching to embedded, measurable impact—this book is your essential resource.

Curated by award-winning coach and businesswoman Susi Astengo, this playbook brings together leading voices in the coaching field to explore what’s changing, what still works, and what lies ahead. With contributions from coaching pioneers such as Prof David Clutterbuck, Dan Newby, Sam Isaacson, and a range of experienced practitioners including Dr Neville Goldin, Lily Breuning-Ellis, Vandena Daya, Brad Shorkend, Marcel Brunel, Savnola Goldridge, Karen Grant, Sam Isaacson, Shelley Lewin, Dan Newby, Dr Ashika Pillay, Liza Stead and Tessa Whyatt, this book is both a reference and a reflection of a profession coming into its own.