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Leadership Development Training - Why Would Someone Want to Be a Leader?

Leadership and Talent Management - Follow the Leader?

Leadership Training to Find Your Leadership Style

Leadership Development: Does A Better Leadership Style Exist?

Management and Leadership - What Is The Difference?

Leadership Development in a "Nutshell"

Leadership Training: Leadership and Chaos

Management and Leadership Found in the Few and the Small

The Lead Wolf Model of Leadership Training

Leadership Training or Leadership Development - Building the Case

Business Leadership Development Training For Managers

Leadership Skills: Bad Leadership - What it is, How it Happens, Why it Matters

Leadership Development Training - A Simple Guide

Define Leadership and Exercise it - The Missing Key Success Factor in Change Management

Leadership Development and Measuring Leadership Effectiveness

Leadership Training: Leadership is Not a Four-Letter Word

Succession Leadership Training is Essential For Individuals, Businesses and Organizations

Leadership Starts With Tough Decisions - Five Leadership Skills For Outstanding Team Building

Leadership Development Training To Improve Your Skills

Leadership Skills, Tribal Spiritual Wisdom, And The Leadership Talk

Curiosity-Creativity-Commitment: The Three C's of Leadership Skills

The Seven Faces of Servant Leadership Skills Training

Leadership Development - Strategy: An Unmined Lode of Results

Turbo Charge Your Career With This Powerful Leadership Training Tool: The Leadership Talk

The Best Ways To Multiply Extraordinary Management and Leadership in Your Organization

Einstein, The Universe, And Leadership Skills Training

Exceptional Leadership Workshop - Inspire the Best Effort in Others

How to Maximize the Return on a Leadership Training Course

Leadership Development - 10 Appeals to Your Leadership Potential

Leadership Development Training is Coming of Age

Myths and Demons of Leadership Skills Training

Leadership Skills Training Course - an Army Girl's Point of View

Leadership Training and Adversity - The Shaping of Prominent Leaders

Business Leadership Training - What Makes an Effective Leader?

Instant Leadership Development

Leadership Development and Theoretical Leadership Philosophies

Vision as an Element in Successful Corporate Leadership Training

Leadership and Branding - Leadership Development Principles for CEOs

The Essentials of Leadership Seminars

How Leadership Training Develops Strong Business Leadership Skills

Creating a Culture of Management Leadership

How to Run a Leadership Development Training Activity

Leadership Courses: Do You Want to Launch a Leadership Revolution?

Building Self-Confidence & Leadership Qualities - 3 Leadership Training Tips

The Myth of Leadership Development Training

Leadership Skills: Quotes to Help You Stay Focused as a Leader

Leadership Exposed: Things You Thought You Knew About Leadership Workshops

Can Leadership Training Be Measured?

The Fundamental Purpose of Leadership Seminars

Leadership Training and the Culture of Leadership

Leadership Skills Training - Do You Have It?

The Optimal Leadership Development Training Model

Management and Leadership Training Courses - The Impact of Hidden Leadership

Business Leadership Training - Leadership As A Sacred Calling

Developing A Business Leadership Training Culture

Effective Leadership Training Courses and the Provision of Leisure Services

The Listening Leadership Training Program Talk

Turbo Charge Your Career With Powerful Leadership Training

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Leadership Skills Training

Management and Leadership Training Courses

Proven Leadership Skills

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

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

Course Objectives:

At the 90-day post-course 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 courses, please complete this form

 

Leadership Training Courses: What's Changed in Change Management?

Max Ways, the former editor of Fortune magazine, predicted 40 years ago, "The main challenge to U.S. society will turn not around the production of goods, but around the difficulties and opportunities involved in a world of accelerating change and ever widening choice. So swift is the acceleration that trying to `make sense' of change will become our basic industry."

That prediction is an apt description of our current reality. Change is no longer a force in the environment. It is the environment. Organizations around the world and their leadership struggle to keep their footing in a whirlwind of technological innovation, customer demands, competitive pressures, globalization and economic volatility - knowing that any of these forces can turn a business model upside down in an instant, rendering even the best strategies obsolete.

To succeed during turbulent times, organizations and individuals must find ways to thrive - not just survive - amid complexity and uncertainty. Those enterprises that continually transform themselves in response to constantly shifting conditions gain a tremendous competitive advantage.

So what does it take to manage change in leadership today?

Management officials looking to help their organizations (or management teams or management departments) make sense of change in the 21st century need a completely different set of skills than their counterparts in the last century. Forget about issuing orders or coercing with threats. Success in the Information Age takes employee engagement and creative collaboration. It takes guidance by leadership officials who know how to harness the energies and talents of others while keeping their own egos in check. It takes leaders at all levels who manage by influence rather than by position.

The dictionary says that leadership means going ahead or showing the way. To lead is to help a group define and achieve a common purpose. But look carefully at that last sentence - helping a group define and achieve a purpose is not the same as setting that purpose and then "selling" it throughout the organization. Change driven from on high without significant across-the-board participation is bound to meet with workforce skepticism and resistance. On the other hand, the co-creation of purpose/vision/strategy is an inclusive process that encourages employee engagement from the very beginning.

Effective management of organization change also depends on early, comprehensive, and transparent communication. In most cases, the manner in which change is communicated is more important than the nature of that change. And don't think for one moment that speeches and articles are the only ways leaders communicate. Every action and off-the-record comment carries weight. As one insightful leadership pro told me, "What I do in the hallways is more important than anything I say in the meetings."

Abrupt change that comes as a complete surprise is the hardest to accept. To reduce fears of the unknown and squelch fantasies of the rumor mill, leaders "set the stage" by informing people upfront about the real-life challenges and opportunities that are likely to become the future impetus for organizational transformation. They also make sure that employees have enough business acumen to make sense of financial data. The more everyone understands about the current situation, the trends and forces shaping the future, the economic realities of the business, the alternatives being considered, and the consequences of not changing - the easier it is to accept and even anticipate the need for change.

Respected change-management officials are powerful communicators who don't ignore or sugarcoat negativity. Instead, they help people make sense of it. If a past change effort has failed, it's publicly acknowledged and reviewed so that everyone can extract its lessons and move forward. (Likewise, if a best practice is discovered, it's also publicly acknowledged, reviewed, and learned from.) Candid change-communication means that both positive and negative aspects are disclosed. The most motivational Management officials are those trusted by their team to share knowledge and "tell it like it is."

Effective Management officials of change are catalysts, creating synergy in their organizations. They delegate responsibility and authority. They encourage and protect their teams. They model attitudes and behaviors they want to see reflected back. Most of all, they realize that managing change today takes emotional literacy. It is no longer enough to appeal solely to people's logic. Leaders also have to touch people's hearts. And the best of today's leaders do so by revealing their own passion - for the future success of the organization and for the individuals in that organization who face the tough job of transforming themselves in order to collectively create that future.

Source: Carol Kinsey Goman, PhD link

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