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Our Management Training
Courses
By introducing our
Management
Training courses to your staff we help ease the negative effect of change on both managerial and supervisory personnel. The change in job responsibilities, the change in personnel, job duties, and the rising challenge of developing subordinates are specific goals of our learning systems
courses. We are highly successful at helping Managers and Supervisors learn and adapt to the necessary skills and proper behaviors to be successful at work as well as in their personal lives.
For more information on our
management training courses please
contact us.
As a part of our management training courses, Managers and Supervisors
will learn how to:
- Minimize the chance of miscommunication by understanding what
people are really saying, and why
- Deal with difficult people, manage tense situations, and resolve
conflict
- Make use of proven active listening skills to improve your
ability to gain helpful information
- Be able to facilitate, guide, and close discussions in
one-on-one or group settings
- Improve understanding and communication by giving and receiving
good feedback
- Use ideas submitted by a member of the team without causing
other members to be defensive
- Develop a comprehensive team building strategy that improves
productivity of the whole team
- Emphasize the value of working toward common goals without
devaluing individual accomplishment
- Define and set up a method to track staff activities
- Be able to manage time and work assignments effectively
- Conduct team meetings that capture and hold the audience’s
attention
- Interview and hire the right person for the right job
- Save time and work more effectively through the use of a clear
time management plan
- Understand and comply with proper hiring and managing
requirements
- Communicate effectively with both superiors, peers and
subordinates
- Become effective coaches for their work team
- Conduct accurate and difficult performance appraisals
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Business Management Training Tips:
Keeping Your Cool — and Your Confidence
Another day, another test of your convictions and resilience. But
there are proven ways to keep your poise while getting through
today’s tough challenges. Here’s how three leaders in three very
different situations responded confidently to crises.
1. Business evaporating?
Think of it as temporary.
Jim Hernandez had every right to feel anxious. Hernandez, managing
director of Strategic Business Communications (SBC), a San
Diego-based sales and marketing consultancy group, leans heavily on
his relationship with the American arm of Honda. A significant chunk
of SBC’s revenue comes from business management training and
advising Honda dealers and automotive-related businesses in Mexico
and Latin America. But in recent months, a number of Hernandez’s
south-of-the-border accounts have faltered. Some clients can no
longer afford to hire him. “We have foreign clients who are
suffering worse than companies in the U.S.,” he says.
So what does Hernandez repeatedly say to himself? Good times will
come again. Hernandez is doubling his efforts to better serve
current clients — like negotiating 20 percent breaks on conference
venues for Honda in the States — while staying in close touch with
his absentee clients. The constant contact tells SBC’s tough-luck
clients that Hernandez still cares, while reassuring him that that
they will probably come back as the economy picks up.
“Do their decisions affect my income? Absolutely,” Hernandez says.
“I just tell myself that they’re going to be clients next year and
the year after. For myself and for them, I don’t drop them off at
the curb because they can’t spend money now.”
The takeaway:
Business management is cyclical. (Say that to yourself three times.)
A recession requires belt-tightening, but it also may free you up to
shower attention on existing clients. Then, when the economy
strengthens, such clients may want more work from your company.
“I’ve seen six or eight of these recessions. They all end,” says Pat
Hyndman, a 94-year-old coach for San Diego-based Vistage
International, an executive leadership organization. “When the sun
comes back out, you want to be poised to take advantage.”
2. Layoffs?
Remember the greater good.
Survivor syndrome doesn’t just affect those who live through war.
Business management executives suffer the effects of carrying on for
another day when some of their employees do not. The repercussions
of layoffs hit the leaders of small- and medium-size businesses the
hardest, because the decision makers are more likely to have
relationships with the people losing their jobs. Think about it: How
many of the thousands of let-go IBM workers does CEO Sam Palmisano
know?
Late last year, Delly Tamer decided he had no choice but to cut
staff. The CEO of LetsTalk.com, the largest independent seller of
mobile phones on the Web, laid off nearly 15 percent of his
250-person workforce. “These were good folks,” Tamer says. “We were
screwing up their lives.”
Tamer eventually got through the sleepless nights by convincing
himself that the few had to be sacrificed for the greater good. “I
gathered the whole company together and told them that I have to do
this so that the rest of us can feel protected. I still wanted the
people that were left to love their jobs — myself included,” Tamer
says. “Workers came up to me afterwards and said they appreciated
what I said.”
The takeaway:
Be frank with your employees. During recessions, your workers feel
more insecure about work than you do — and you know how worried you
are. Subordinates have more confidence when you give them a straight
assessment, even if that means telling them honestly that you don’t
know what the future will bring. Tamer says he seldom holds back:
“I’ve told them that demand could fall off the cliff, and that I
simply don’t know if we’ll have more layoffs.” He also regularly
takes employees out to lunch and invites them to bring up anything
that’s on their minds.
Full business management disclosure isn’t just for the worker’s
benefit. “As boss, your transparency gives everyone more of a stake
in the business management, and trust for your employees builds,”
says Marina Gorbis, executive director of the Institute for the
Future. “Then you’re thinking, OK, we’re all in this together.”
3. Tempted to fix every problem?
Lean on your staff.
In crunch time, business management leaders can fall into the trap
of believing that they’re the best people for any and every job that
they oversee — whether it’s crawling back into the sales-force
trenches or literally crawling back into the trenches. “It took
everything I had not to transport myself to my associate’s position
and get down and fight,” says U.S. Marine Corps Col. Royal Mortenson,
recalling a moment in 2003 in Nasiriyah, Iraq, when members of his
infantry battalion came under enemy fire a couple of miles from his
position. “My emotions were telling me to go.”
Mortenson then did what any good business management leader should
do: He stayed put, successfully coordinating air and artillery
strikes via radio. Trusting your employees to do what they were
hired to do is unquestionably a vote of confidence in them, and it’s
almost always the smartest thing to do for the business. Moreover,
it’s good medicine to remember that you’re in a position of business
management for a reason. “That moment was the result of training and
prep that I’d gone through for 19 years,” Mortenson says. “Sometimes
I have to remind myself that the Marine Corps put me in a leadership
position because it believes in me.”
The takeaway:
This is the worst possible time to be a business management control
freak. It’s not just letting people do their jobs — it’s recognizing
and jettisoning ineffective practices, even if you’re working harder
and harder at them. Gorbis suspects that the broad changes we’re now
undergoing could be severe and long-lasting, on par with those
encountered during the Industrial Revolution. Accordingly, she has
gone so far as to embrace an acronym known in Mortenson’s line of
work: VUCA, or volatility, uncertainty, complexity, and ambiguity.
We have to get comfortable — and confident — with the idea of
consistently adjusting course. “It’s a VUCA world,” Gorbis says.
“It’s time to be adaptive.”
Source: by Andrew Tilin
http://www.bnet.com/2403-13056_23-290508.html
Subject: Business Management
More Management Training Tips
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Business Management Training Tips:
Keeping Your Cool — and Your Confidence
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