When is executive advising / mentoring more suitable than executive coaching?

In introductory meetings I often find myself explaining the difference between coaching and mentoring. Coaching is not always the right intervention and there are definitely times when I suggest an executive might benefit more from working with an advisor or mentor.

A recent conversation with a prospective coaching client prompted me to write this blog post, explaining why they are both valuable approaches … with quite different purposes. 

ICF aligned* Executive Coaching is a professional, evidence-based developmental partnership that strengthens how leaders think, decide, and show up.

Executive Advising/Mentoring
is experience-based guidance that offers recommendations and lessons learned from someone who has walked the path before.

ICF-Aligned* Executive Coaching

Most useful when:
– Navigating complexity or organisational change
– Developing leadership identity and presence
– Strengthening emotional intelligence and decision-making
– Building long-term capability

Purpose: Development
Focuses on expanding the leader’s capacity, clarity, and long-term effectiveness.

Stance: Partner
Non-directive, non-hierarchical; the coach is a thinking partner.

Method: Evidence-Based
Grounded in ICF Core Competencies, reflective practice, and structured methodology.

Focus: The Leader’s Thinking
Explores patterns, identity, blind spots, and decision-making.

Session Style: Client-Led
Co-created conversations that evoke insight and build capability.
Impact: Transformational
Identity-level shifts, increased emotional intelligence, stronger leadership presence.

Outcome: Builds the Leader
Develops long-term leadership maturity and effectiveness.

Executive Advising/Mentoring

Most useful when:
– Needing quick answers or situational guidance
– Facing challenges the advisor has personally solved
– Seeking industry-specific insights or shortcuts

Purpose
: Direction
Focuses on providing guidance, recommendations, and lessons learned from experience.

Stance
: Expert
Directive, experience-led; the advisor is the authority sharing expertise.

Method
: Experience-Based
Grounded in personal experience, industry knowledge, and prescriptive advice.

Focus
: The Advisor’s Experience
Shares stories, shortcuts, and solutions from past roles.

Session Style
: Advisor-Led
Guidance shaped by the advisor’s background and expertise.

Impact
: Transactional
Faster decisions, situational solutions, avoidance of common pitfalls.

Outcome
: Guides the Decision
Provides answers and direction for immediate challenges.

* The International Coaching Federation (ICF) is the world’s leading professional organization for coaching.