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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 Skills Training

Proven Leadership Skills

The Leadership Training Institute offers seminars that teach participants to confidently use proven methods of management leadership to lead people and help them plan, organize and control their work assignments. Workshop 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.

Seminar Objectives:

At the 90-day post-workshop 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

 

Management Skills Training for Growing Profits with Process Improvement

Continuous process improvement is a systematic approach to achieve both incremental and breakthrough improvements in processes. This results in effective, better and more efficient ways in producing products or services.

Why is continuous process improvement important? The world is changing daily. If you do not keep up with the changes that are happening, you will soon find that you will not be able to keep up with the competition either.

By using continuous process improvement methods and techniques, you can determine if your business activities are the way to serve both your customers and organization.

However, you must realize that this is not a one time effort. If you want to achieve total customer satisfaction and increased sales, then continuous process improvement must be an ongoing initiative. It must become a way of life. Systematic application of continuous process improvement methods will result in it becoming second nature.

The key steps are

  1. Select
  2. Analyze
  3. Measure
  4. Improve
  5. Evaluate

1. Select

It is important to select the process that needs improvement. Choosing one that is already working well is a waste of time and money.

The process you choose should also be one that is important to meeting customers' wants and needs and also be one that is critical to achieving your organization's goals.

2. Analyze

You now need to understand how the process currently works and analyze it. This will require you to document the process as it is currently practised. This is also known as the "as is" process.

Identify all the process tasks and create a process flowchart. This will provide a visual drawing to help you to identify tasks that may not be adding value.

You will then need to decide what are the processes you want to measure.

3. Measure

Measurement is key to process improvement. If you cannot measure, you cannot manage effectively.

An initial baseline performance level must be established first. Then continue to measure the process. Only then can you determine if any improvement has happened.

Gathering baseline data is important as what you think it is and what it actually is can be quite different.

The process performance gaps need to be identified next. Non-value added tasks are an example. You will be able to identify other problem areas by reviewing your process flowchart.

Common problem areas are poor communication, lack of training, use of outdated processes, unclear responsibilities, lack of clear procedures, insufficient delegation of authority to operations personnel and lack of management availability to make key decisions.

4. Improve

Process goals must be set to increase the probability of success. Achieving goals also provides encouragement for the team and acts as a measure for management to recognize employee achievement.

By its very definition to achieve continuous process improvement, goals must be set and work must be done to meet them. Then set higher goals and continually improve on the way work is done to achieve them.

You need to find improvement needs based on the performance gaps that you would have uncovered earlier. Confirm desired process performance levels based on your customer needs. You must also decide on any supplier prerequisites to be able to meet these targets.

Now look back at your earlier analysis to identify the root causes of the process problems. Identify opportunities to streamline and modify the process. You can redesign the process to be more efficient by eliminating or simplifying steps. Or you can also modify steps within the process.

There will be a number of ideas that you might get. Decide on the best one depending on the impact it will have, the amount of funds that you have, the skills required and the resources it will require.

Get back to your original flowchart and note the changes you have made. This will give a clearer picture of how your changes will impact your process.

It is better to test your solutions and see if they work well. If you get good results, you can then go ahead and implement the changes.

It is important that data is gathered on all key process measures. This is the best way to determine if your process changes are resulting in improvements. If necessary, you may need to add new process measures.

5. Evaluate

It may seem that you have achieved process improvement, but your job is not done until you get all the data and feedback for use in evaluating the outcome.

This step is necessary to ensure that the root causes of your process problems are reduced or eliminated. You also need to confirm that your customer needs are satisfied.

Once you are satisfied that your initial efforts have been successful, it is now time to standardize it and monitor the ongoing improvement. This step is crucial to ensure that people do not return to their old way of doing things.

It is now time to communicate the improved process flow and documented procedures. Training on the improved processes need to be conducted if required. Importantly, data must continually be collected to measure and monitor to ensure that the improved process is maintained and if possible improved.

Once a changed process has been put in place by management, there is the question of when to disband the team. It is best to maintain the team till a point when the improved process has been well established and has become second nature to the people handling them.

Source: Kevin Sinclair link

Related: Management Training

 

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