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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
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Change Management Training Tips:
Upgrading talent
A downturn can give smart companies a chance to upgrade their
talent.
Downturns place companies’ talent strategies at risk. As
deteriorating performance forces increasingly aggressive head count
reductions, it’s easy to lose valuable contributors inadvertently,
damage morale or the company’s external reputation among potential
employees, or drop the ball on important training and
staff-development programs. But there is a better way. By
emphasizing talent in cost-cutting efforts, employers can
intelligently strengthen the value proposition they offer current
and potential employees and position themselves strongly for growth
when economic conditions improve.
Companies can maintain their attractiveness to internal and external
talent by using cost-cutting change management efforts as an
opportunity to redesign jobs so that they become more engaging for
the people undertaking them. A job’s level of responsibility, degree
of autonomy, and span of control all contribute to employee
satisfaction. Head count reductions provide a powerful incentive to
use existing resources better by breaking down silos and increasing
the span of control for challenging managerial roles—thus improving
the odds of engaging key talent in the redesigned jobs.
Consider Cisco Systems’ approach to downsizing during the last
recession. In 2001, as deteriorating financial performance forced
the elimination of 8,500 jobs, Cisco redesigned roles and
responsibilities to improve cross-functional alignment and reduce
duplication. The more collaborative environment fostered by such
moves increased workplace satisfaction and productivity for many
employees. Change management initiatives like Cisco’s succeed when
companies focus on redesigning jobs and retaining talent at the
outset of downsizing efforts.
In addition to redesigning roles, companies cutting jobs should
carefully protect training and development programs. These are not
only essential to maintaining workplace morale and increasing
long-term productivity, but they also give people the skills
necessary to carry out redesigned jobs that have greater spans of
control. During the last recession, International Paper continued
offering classes at its leadership institute by replacing external
facilitators with the company’s senior leaders. This change
management approach not only reduced the cost of delivery but also,
thanks to the involvement of senior leaders, redirected the content
of the leadership program by tying it more closely to decisions and
skills affecting the company’s current performance. Similarly, IBM
retained its employee-development programs during its major
performance challenges in the mid- to late 1980s. It took the
arrival of Lou Gerstner as CEO and a new strategy to turn the
company around, but the historical investments IBM had made in
developing its people helped achieve a successful turnaround.
Before undertaking widespread layoffs, companies should use their
change management processes to help identify strong employees.
Companies that conduct disciplined, meritocratic assessments of
performance and potential are well placed to make good personnel
decisions. These companies should also bring additional strategic
considerations to the decisions. They should assess which types of
talent drive business value today and which will drive it three
years from now, as well as which talent segments are currently
available and which will be in the future—keeping in mind, for
example, that new MBAs will be equally available in two years. They
should also look at which types of talent would take years to
replace or develop—for instance, skilled electric utility engineers
in an environment where retirements are dramatically reducing
supply. Change management well informed by key strategic questions
can minimize the negative cultural impact of downsizing, improve the
bottom line, and help identify talented people the company should
try to retain.
Companies that are reducing staff must focus relentlessly on the
internal cultural and external reputational implications of
cost-cutting efforts. Although strong employer brands are resilient,
it’s difficult to reestablish brand strength once the culture has
been damaged. The way many companies conduct large-scale downsizing
decreases efficiency, morale, and motivation on the part of
remaining employees. It also increases voluntary turnover among high
performers and compromises a company’s ability to attract strong
talent in the future, as potential employees wonder how risky it is
to take a job there.
Counteracting these tendencies requires creativity. In 2001, Cisco
gave generous severance packages and assistance with job searches to
the workers it laid off and launched a change management program
that paid one-third of salary, plus benefits and stock options, to
ex-employees who agreed to work for a local charity or community
organization. Steps like these protected Cisco’s employer brand by
attempting to make departing employees feel better about Cisco and
underscored the company’s commitment to its people for those who
remained. The results were measurable: employee satisfaction
remained high, and Cisco retained a prominent spot on Fortune
magazine’s “Best Companies to Work For” list.
A strong employer brand is also important for companies undertaking
selective recruitment even as they cut personnel costs elsewhere.
Using slowdowns to uncover and hire displaced talent is often
fruitful. Studies have shown that although overall levels of
recruitment may level off or even fall, the quality of workers hired
rises in recessions. And opportunities to find and hire displaced
talent may be particularly valuable during this downturn, as massive
change management downsizing in the financial-services sector makes
available to nonfinancial companies a large pool of highly educated
and motivated professionals who previously might not have considered
jobs outside their previous employers or industries.
Some organizations are moving surprisingly quickly in response to
these change management opportunities in the talent market. In late
October 2008, the US Internal Revenue Service hosted a Manhattan
career fair targeted at displaced financial-services professionals.
More than 1,300 people attended, many standing in line for three
hours to learn more about an employer that offered a newly
interesting brand of “job stability.”
Cost cutting during a downturn is often necessary to ensure a
company’s current profitability and future competitiveness. Rather
than freezing all hiring and employee-development programs,
companies should use this period as an opportunity to use change
management to upgrade talent and better engage existing staff. This
means reinvesting a percentage of the capital liberated from cost
cutting into, for example, selective recruiting and development
programs and in efforts to safeguard the culture and to redesign
jobs so that they are more engaging to the remaining employees
Source: DECEMBER 2008 • Matthew Guthridge, John R. McPherson,
and William J. Wolf
http://www.mckinseyquarterly.com/Upgrading_talent_2260
Subject: Change Management
More Management Training Tips
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Change Management Training Tips:
Upgrading talent
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