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Leadership Skills Training

Management and Leadership Training Classes

Proven Leadership Skills

The Leadership Training Institute offers classes that teach participants to confidently use proven methods of management leadership to lead people and help them plan, organize and control their work assignments. Class participants will also learn to use resources made available to them more effectively.

On-Site Classes: can be tailored to the needs of client organization and delivered on-site at time and location of client choice.

Class Objectives:

At the 90-day post-class assessment, participants will have:

  • Demonstrated (on the job) an understanding that the intuitive style of leadership (self-centered, directive) will only work in special circumstances and will have made noticeable improvement in working themselves toward a management leadership style (participatory, empowering)
  • Spent more time "leading and managing" and less time "doing"
  • Used the action planning process to plan and implement at least one important initiative that has a positive impact on business results
  • Used the decision-making technique on the job to arrive at sound decisions that have or will have a positive impact on business results
  • Demonstrated greater ability to function in teamwork situations
  • Developed and successfully used a system of control by exception

For more information and pricing on our leadership classes, please complete this form

 

Management and Leadership Classes: Is Leadership More Like Poker Or Chess?

Leading often has parallels with playing both poker and chess. As in poker: you can be dealt handsome court cards (say, buoyant markets and customer growth) or the low, unsmiling ones (of supplier problems and staff illnesses). If luck runs your way, you may win regardless of personal ability or effort. And, vice versa, if luck's against you. In chess, there is less luck (perhaps none), since both sides start with the same resources and options. There is more room for strategy, but less for bluffing - since the pieces and their location are visible to each player. So, which would your people say is more your style: poker or chess? To start your thinking, here are four questions to ask yourself.

Do I have a leadership action plan? Setting out what I, as leader, will do so team members want to make my project successful? If not, do I know what's holding them back - from full understanding and commitment? For example...

Which two of the following are their most pressing questions? Where are we going? Can we do it? How should we behave? What output is required? Where and how do we all fit in? Or, what if our world erupts? When you've answered that...

What style of actions would my people suggest I take to address their top-two concerns? Perhaps, setting a clearer vision; or, taking charge more energetically; showing more decisiveness - or compassion; demonstrating sharper technical skill; or, investing more effort in staff development; or, responding more urgently to changing conditions. They're only illustrative but may give you a flavor of where you could add distinctive value - thus encouraging people to trust and follow you. Then finally...

What specific actions will I take? What will hit home for my people and make them enthusiastic to drive ahead and ensure things succeed? The who, the what and the when!

The last three points summaries the consulting process I've used with a wide range of clients over the last decade to help them develop their Leadership Action Plans. And, this is now online and vastly less expensive. In an hour, you can work through the VECTOR framework, homing in on actions that respond to your followers' needs - and will make you a higher performing leader. The result: a Personal Action List (PAL), which you can email to colleagues for feedback and discussion - and update as you move ahead.

You'll never eliminate luck. But you can make the best of what you're dealt: lifting people's sights, firing them up, shaping their behavior, raising their productivity, bonding them together and unleashing their creativity. If so, you can put aside the metaphors of both poker and chess - focusing solely on becoming a champion leader: someone people want to work with and follow. Finding your leadership PAL is the first step.

Source: Tim Pascoe link

Related: Management and Leadership Classes

 

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