Leadership Training  Institute
      Bookmark This Page

Available Programs

Leadership
Skills Training

Managing People
Workshop

Leadership in
Sales Management

Managerial Coaching
Skills Workshop

Dealing with
Difficult People

Time Management
Workshop

Leadership Tips

 

 

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

More Tips

 

 

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

 

Leadership Training: Two Questions to Help You Change Your Leadership Style

Do you want to change your leadership style? Perhaps you've discovered something in particular that you want to do, or do differently.

And this, of course, is the problem. You want to change something you do, but the folks in the office just aren't expecting you to change anything. They don't WANT you to change anything.

Also, some people around you may be suspicious or cynical. Not all of them, maybe, but enough to make it tricky to change.

So no matter how enthusiastic or motivated you might be to make a change, all of the 'noise' around you makes you reluctant, or resistant, to change. The pain of change seems worse than the gain of change.

So you stop even thinking about change. And soon you're as cynical and suspicious as all the rest. And nothing ever changes.

If this sluggish feeling is familiar to you, then what you're experiencing is the heavy inertia of 'the way things work round here'. It's the power of the status quo to weigh heavy on you and stop you from changing anything.

How can you start the change process? What you urgently need to do is find ways over or round the inertia. And the questions to ask are these:

1. When is it easier to change my leadership style?
2. What will help me to change my leadership style?

First, it's easier to change your leadership style when you take a new job or a new role in another department. In a new role, you can set out your plans for the new team and you can change the way you manage or lead the team. This is, of course, because no one knows you from your previous role. They don't know the old boss.

You can also change your leadership style at the start of every new project. Every beginning is an opportunity to restart or relaunch your leadership style.

Of course, you may still have tricky issues to deal with - people asking 'why the sudden change?' - so there is something else you need to do: create a Leadership Manifesto to overcome inertia

A Leadership Manifesto will make it easier for you to change your leadership style.
The Manifesto - like a manifesto for a political party - is an outline sketch of what you're trying to do. And, importantly, it's also a sketch of HOW you're planning to do it.

Drafting and actually discussing a one-page leadership manifesto with your team is a great way of getting people moving anyway, and the idea of a manifesto helps people focus round what you're trying to achieve.

Now your manifesto could address any of the issues you feel are important for the team to address. Here are just three suggestions:

1. Collaborative goal setting versus boss-centered goal setting. You may want to work with people to help them set goals or you may wish to give people targets based on your understanding of their skills and performance in the past.

2. Cross-business collaboration versus cross-business competition. You may want to explore why you believe you should be collaborating with other teams in the business or why you should be competing internally with them.

3. Day-to-day constructive feedback versus end-of-year appraisals. You may wish to create a more open atmosphere and attitude towards 'live' performance management. You might want to create an atmosphere where it is acceptable to give practical and constructive feedback. The alternative is waiting for the end-of-year appraisal which is way too late to be useful.

I find that the concept of a leadership manifesto is very flexible and you can use it anyway that suits you. For example, you could with your team develop a change manifesto. Get the team to create their own manifesto for the way things work round here. Invite them to think about, if they were in charge, what would they change?

And finally, make sure that part of your Leadership Manifesto is about making it easy for others to make changes in their role. Give your team permission to change, too. That's part of your developmental role, which should also be in the Manifesto.

Having an open and understood Leadership Manifesto is all part of building your personal leadership brand. Your openness on what people can expect from you helps them to trust you more, so that when the going gets tough, they know they can rely on you to lead them well.

Source: Steven Sonsino link

Related: Leadership Training

 

Back to Top

Copyright © 1979, 1982, 1991, 1994, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2002, 2004-2009
Leadership Training Institute of America
All rights are reserved.