|
|
Our Management Training
Classes
By introducing our
Management
Training classes 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
classes. 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 classes please
contact us.
As a part of our management training classes, 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
|
 |
Project Management Training Tips:
The Dangers of Being a Micromanager
You may wonder exactly why being a micromanager is bad for your
business. On the surface, it seems wise to make sure that your
project management staff is doing a good job, to pitch in and help
with a project now and then. It seems to demonstrate a solid work
ethic and set a good example for the team. What could be wrong with
that? Well, if you’re a manager, there’s a lot wrong with that.
Basically, micromanaging is involving yourself too directly in what
your project management staff should be doing instead. By
definition, a manager is tasked with — yes, you guessed it —
managing. That involves coordinating projects, solving problems,
dealing with other managers, and developing relationships with
clients. The manager has to ensure that a certain quantity of work
gets done, and normally that work is much more than one person could
ever do alone. Therefore, the manager supervises a team of people to
help them carry out that work.
However, if a manager’s time is consumed with micromanaging, there's
no time for all the other managerial tasks on his or her plate.
Quite simply, it is damaging to your business to micromanage. Here
are some tips to keep in mind when tempted to manage to the nth
degree:
• There’s more than one right way. As a supervisor, you need to
prepare your employees to complete projects successfully, and to be
clear from the beginning about the results you expect from them.
Then you should stand back and let them carry out their designated
tasks in the way they see fit, coming up with their own solutions.
Remember that employees need to do things in a positive way, but not
necessarily in the same way you would do them. This does not mean
that communication is closed down — you still need to touch base
from time to time, to see how projects are progressing, and to check
if the person has any questions. But he or she needs freedom to work
within an open framework, to learn and grow. The end result is a
strengthening of your firm. There’s no way your project management
staff can develop and the firm can flourish if you are always there
to meddle in the project and demonstrate the “correct” way to
accomplish a task.
• It’s about trust. Your employees have to believe that you trust
them to do a good job. But how can they do that if you’re always
hovering over their shoulders, diving in to rescue them from
themselves? If it’s inevitable that your project management staff’s
decisions will be second-guessed, they will begin to feel frustrated
and powerless. In addition, your employees will learn that they will
not be held accountable, and will soon stop trying to make any
decisions at all.
• If something’s wrong, fix it. If you have an employee who is
indeed constantly doing things incorrectly, it may be time to clean
house and hire someone who can do the job properly. But first, see
to it that your project management employees are fully trained and
know everything they need to know to do their jobs well. Be certain
you're communicating the duties of the job clearly. Finally, keep in
mind that some employees want to be micromanaged. Just as you need
to stay out of their way, your project management staff needs to
remember the importance of making decisions on their own.
• Beware of burnout. If you insist on meddling in a project,
creating frustration and lack of accountability in your project
management employees, and still attempt to shoulder all your other
managerial responsibilities, you’re going to get tired. Really
tired. And eventually, tiredness will progress to exhaustion and
complete burnout. At which point, you won’t care about micromanaging
anymore. But at that point, of course, it will be too late. Don’t
let events progress to that point.
The bottom line: a good manager is one who prepares, and then trusts
employees, remembers that he or she is part of a team, and leads by
example, not by doing everyone else’s work. Your project management
staff will appreciate your efforts, and will feel a greater sense of
personal accomplishment. And in the end, your business will thrive.
Source:
http://www.allbusiness.com/human-resources/employee-development-leadership/11235-1.html
Subject: Project Management
More Management Training Tips
|
 |
|
Project Management Training Tips:
The Dangers of Being a Micromanager
|
|