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Management Training
Seminars
By introducing our
Management
Training workshops 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 classes 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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Management Training:
Why Management Training Should Be the Last Thing You Cut
An organization I'm familiar with anticipated doubling its size within a year and, in order to manage the change that growth would bring, put in a new layer of management. Five vice presidents were installed, all of them promoted from within. Rather than effective planning, this turned out to be disastrous for the organization. Morale disintegrated. Turf issues and tempers began to flare in the formerly supportive environment. And productivity plummeted. Why? None of the VPs had ever had management training.
The practice of promoting people with the strongest technical skills, the most tenure, or the most outgoing personality is unfair to the team alienated by poor management, and to the person who is promoted and loses all self confidence-not to mention the costs of increased turnover and lost productivity. Underfunding, reducing or cutting your training and development budget, in either good times or bad, can put your business at risk.
After all, if people are your most important asset, why wouldn't you continually make investments in their value? As Jack Welch puts it, "An organization's ability to learn and translate that learning into action rapidly, is the ultimate competitive advantage."
Employees stay and leave for the same reasons
The opportunity for career growth and advancement is consistently one of the top three reasons people stay at companies. The lack of it is a primary reason for leaving. (Surprisingly, 89 percent of employers mistakenly believe employees leave for more money, according to author Leigh Branham, when the reality is that about 12 percent do.) In addition to saving the costs of replacing people-estimated to be 150 percent or more of total annual compensation-there are many benefits to establishing and maintaining a robust training program. And they all lead to better performance.
Depending on the focus, training and development:
•Ensures that people can do their jobs effectively
•Increases employee motivation
•Increases efficiencies in processes and systems
•Inspires innovation in strategies and products
•Cross-trains between departments and across regions (a safety net when you lose staff)
•Lowers risk management (in areas like sexual harassment and diversity)
•Increases productivity
•Improves customer relationships
•Helps maintain a competitive advantage
And there's more. Training and development is at the heart of succession planning. At its essence, succession planning is a systematic process where you identify, assess and develop your staff to make certain they are ready to assume key roles in the organization. These "high potentials" represent the future of your company. Top talent never stays with the status quo; they demand the opportunity to learn, grow and progress. And they are the people you can least afford to lose.
Training fits any budget
There must be as many reasons for training as there are ways to make it affordable. You train as part of orientation; when a performance appraisal indicates the need; to benchmark performance improvement; develop leaders; educate about specific topics... the list of training and development needs is long.
Training does not necessarily mean sending people across the country to attend seminars and conferences, although sometimes that's appropriate. Training can be as simple as a well-defined and executed mentoring program. By offering first-hand experience and personal knowledge, your senior people can be some of the most effective trainers in your company. (And some of them will need training on how to mentor effectively.)
Training and development does not have to lead to an immediate move up the ladder. People can be challenged by developing additional skills and taking on challenging new responsibilities in their current positions. Online courses and internal workshops presented by knowledgeable in-house specialists or local subject experts can satisfy the need for education, motivate, and stimulate thinking and innovation for very little cost.
All it takes is creativity and a commitment to learning that reflects your organization's strategic objectives and goals.
Far from luxury
Training and development is often viewed as a luxury or nice-to-have benefit. That is a fallacy. It's a necessity in the minds of your employees, and especially the talented employees you want most to keep. Employees create your products, deliver your services and make your organization run. If they perform poorly, how well can your organization perform?
You can actually save money and improve your bottom line by investing in continuous training and development, no matter what the economic environment is like. Reallocate your resources and adapt the delivery of training to your current economic circumstances, but don't slash your training and development budget away-ever! You'll create a more sustainable long-term business by giving your people one of the things they most value-and demonstrating in a tangible way how much you value them.
Kathleen Q. Votaw:
link
Subject:
Management Training
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