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How to use DISC Profiling in coaching

The Coaching Academy Blog

Posted: May 2025

Have you ever wondered what truly drives your clients? How do they communicate? What barriers may be holding them back? If these questions resonate with you, DISC profiling may just be the tool you’ve been looking for. Whether you’re an established coach or just starting in the field, understanding DISC can elevate your practice, help you unlock the people puzzle and foster meaningful transformation.

What Is DISC Profiling and How Can Coaches Use It?

DISC profiling is a behavioural assessment tool that helps individuals understand personality traits, communication preferences, and motivational drivers. For coaches, it offers a practical and insightful framework to tailor support and help clients grow.

 

What Is DISC?

DISC stands for:

  • Dominance (D) – Direct, decisive, focused on results.
  • Influence (I) – Sociable, enthusiastic, driven by connection.
  • Steadiness (S) – Patient, reliable, values harmony.
  • Compliance (C) – Analytical, detail-oriented, seeks accuracy.

Developed as a behavioural model, DISC categorises personality styles based on how people respond to challenges, influence others, approach tasks, and follow rules. Unlike clinical personality tests, DISC focuses on observable behaviour and communication.

 

What Does DISC Profiling Reveal?

Using DISC profiling, coaches and clients can uncover:

  • Communication preferences
  • Motivational drivers
  • Reactions to pressure or change
  • Barriers to personal or professional growth
  • Strengths and blind spots

This insight leads to greater self-awareness, stronger relationships, and more effective goal setting.

 

5 Ways Coaches Use DISC Profiling

1. Personalising Coaching Sessions

DISC allows coaches to adapt their approach to each client’s style:

  • D-type clients respond well to direct, results-driven plans.
  • S-type clients prefer steady pacing and emotional reassurance.

This customisation increases trust and coaching impact.

 

2. Increasing Self-Awareness

Many clients are unaware of their behavioural patterns. DISC acts as a mirror:

  • I-types may discover they struggle to set boundaries.
  • C-types may realise perfectionism slows them down.

This awareness fuels authentic, self-directed growth.

 

3. Strengthening Communication and Relationships

By identifying communication styles, clients learn how to:

  • Adapt their approach with others
  • Reduce conflict and misunderstanding
  • Build more collaborative personal and professional relationships

 

4. Identifying Strengths and Development Areas

Each DISC profile has both strengths and challenges:

  • D-types excel at decision-making but may overlook details.
  • C-types value precision but may avoid delegation.

Recognising these patterns enables targeted personal development.

 

5. Enhancing Goal-Setting and Motivation

Motivational drivers vary across DISC types:

  • D-types thrive on bold goals and competition.
  • S-types seek meaningful, team-oriented milestones.

Using DISC, coaches can create goal strategies that truly resonate.

 

Why DISC Is a Game-Changer for Coaches

By integrating DISC profiling into your practice, you unlock deeper understanding of your clients’ core behaviours and motivators. This insight goes beyond surface-level coaching to:

  • Build stronger rapport
  • Accelerate trust and results
  • Deliver tailored strategies that match client psychology

Ultimately, DISC helps clients communicate better, lead more effectively, and reach goals with confidence.

 

FAQs About DISC Profiling

What does DISC stand for?

DISC stands for Dominance, Influence, Steadiness, and Compliance – four behavioural styles identified in the DISC model.

 

Is DISC a personality test?

DISC is a behavioural assessment, not a clinical personality test. It measures how people typically act and interact in various situations.

 

How accurate is DISC profiling?

DISC is widely used in coaching, HR, and leadership training. While not diagnostic, it offers highly practical insight into behaviour and communication.

 

Can DISC change over time?

Yes. DISC profiles can shift in response to life experiences, job roles, or intentional growth. Coaches can track and work with these changes to support client evolution.

 

Learn to Use DISC in Coaching

Want to start using DISC with your clients? Join our DISC training workshops designed specifically for coaches. Learn how to apply this powerful tool to unlock potential and drive meaningful change.

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