Five Ways to Develop Your Leadership Talent Pool

You’ve heard it before: good leaders are made, not born. Simply put, leadership is working through others to achieve results. This is often easier said than done, especially when the others may be quite different than us. Here are five ideas for how to develop a deeper pool of leaders at all levels of your organization. You can also contact us to help you develop a custom leadership development program for your organization.

1.  Improve self-knowledge

The Connection Circle below shows that achieving business results through others starts with understanding oneself.

With self-knowledge, one has the capacity to harness strengths and manage weaknesses. (And we all have strengths and weaknesses.) When we are able to manage ourselves effectively, we can be more successful engaging others, and achieving business results.

As you know, Predictive Index® is a powerful tool for working through the Connection Circle, starting with building self-awareness and moving out from there. Identify your high-potentials and send them to the PI Management Workshop™. Your leaders can shift from judging others (“She just ‘doesn’t get it.”) to understanding them and working with them in the most effective way (“She’s needing more clarity from me. I need to be more specific about what I want the final product to be.”) See PI Workshop dates.

2. Consider Coaching

Pairing training with coaching boasts ROI. But you don’t have to take our word for it. Consider:

  • An International Personnel Management Association survey (Jan. 2001) found that productivity increased by 88 percent when coaching was combined with training (compared to a 22 percent increase with training alone).
  • A Manchester Inc. study of Fortune 1000 executives (2001) found that coaching resulted in a ROI of almost six times the program cost as well as a 77 percent improvement in relationships, 67 percent improvement in teamwork, 61 percent improvement in job satisfaction and 48 percent improvement in quality
  • Research conducted by Metrix Global, LLC with Fortune 500 companies (2001) reveals that 58 percent of those clients whose coaching experience was limited to working on more tactical issues reported that their coaching significantly impacted the business. In contrast, 100 percent of those who’s coaching addressed more strategic issues reported making a significant impact on the business.

Learn more about our coaching services.

3. Schedule Training

Learning and growing is not a “one and done” event. Rather, it’s a process. And because adults learn best when they can experience new thoughts and ideas, not just hear about them, our group-format training includes interactive exercises and application activities. We offer a robust selection of topics for ½ and full-day sessions:

  • Change Management
  • Motivation
  • Decision-Making
  • Conflict Resolution
  • Communication
  • Performance Management
  • Team-Building
  • Using Predictive Index in Hiring
  • Implementing the Predictive Index at an Organizational Level
  • Coaching
  • Performance Goals and Standards

Contact me to learn more.

4. Brunch and Learn

Our monthly PI Fridays refresher webinars are an excellent opportunity to gather your trained PI analysts (those who have attended the PI Management Workshop™) around bagels and coffee. These sessions revisit PI topics first encountered during the PI training as well as give you the opportunity to ask questions. See webinar schedule.

5. Attend Our Annual PI User Group

This annual gathering of trained PI analyst deepens knowledge, sharpens skills, and refreshes enthusiasm. Generally scheduled during the fall of each year, this event includes sharing of best practices, application activities and skill-sharpening presentations. Learn more about the 2012 PI User Group meeting on Nov. 15th in Lansing, MI.

Do you have a favorite method to develop leadership talent to add to this list?  Contact me or leave a comment.

 

Two reasons why your best 30 something employee is about to quit you

Young employees can be the most productive, energetic and powerful group in your organization.  However, they are leaving companies earlier than ever.  Why?

  1. Lack of training opportunities
  2. Lack of mentors

Read on:

Multiple studies find that today’s younger workers have absolutely no intention of sticking around if they don’t feel like they’re learning, growing and being valued in a job. Beth N. Carver, a consultant who has spent 12 years researching exit interviews, finds that a loss of training opportunities and a lack of mentors in the workplace are two of the biggest reasons why young workers leave.

Read more: http://anniemurphypaul.com/2012/09/why-workers-leave-its-usually-not-about-the-money/#ixzz27UJ6thaH

At ADVISA, we provide our clients with a dozen modular training opportunities focused on leadership development, frontline management skill development, sales skill development and behavioral intelligence focused on gaining influence and providing coaching/mentoring in the work place.  If you have programs like these in place for your employees, pat yourself on the back because you are investing in the right place.  If not, reach out to me and learn what programs we have installed at client companies like yours to take care of their best and brightest 30 somethings.

Learn more about BJ McKay here. 

Chairman’s Letter: Employee Development

Last week I visited a 200-employee company that has over the last two years developed and implemented their own employee university. While they recognize they’re not going to operate at the level of GE, they’ve made the decision that they want to become a learning organization in word and deed. Wow! That’s quite a commitment for a small company with limited resources. But, it’s also a statement to the people of the business that their growth is a keystone of the business’ foundation of success. The people in this company are being shown that corporate health involves a significant investment in people. Do your people feel that same sense of commitment from you and your business?

If not, it should give you pause. Isn’t the commitment of your employees the only true competitive advantage you have any real control over?

If you don’t have the time, resources or understanding to develop your own university, what can you do to create a simple but effective employee development program within your organization? Is there a mechanism that could potentially increase both work satisfaction and employee retention – yielding that elusive competitive advantage mentioned earlier?

I’d suggest you start with the basics – getting employees what they need to be successful throughout the life-cycle of their employment:

  1. Hire people suited to do the work you’re giving them to do
  2. Give them the training, tools and measurements to know what success looks like and the ability to achieve it
  3. Empower them to do their jobs
  4. Provide a forum for feedback that’s aimed at improvement
  5. Let people know the potential path for them to grow within your organization.

These are basics that are too often ignored. Frequently, entry-level people are hired if they pass a drug screen and their employment history isn’t too shaky. These newbies are paired up with different workers to learn their jobs and the trainers they’re given can’t help but blur the definition of success that’s provided. Ill-equipped for success, management is left to hawk over the new employee’s work because the worker doesn’t have the skills or confidence necessary to function independently. The bad work is caught and admonished and the good work often ignored. The only place employees know they could be going in the future is back to work tomorrow – hopefully.

What specifically can we do to overcome these challenges and build a basic employee development program?

First, even at the entry level, people want a job suited to their personality. An employees’ first view of working in your organization is the first job they take. Why not make sure that they are, at the least, doing a job that gives them the opportunity to gain satisfaction from the work that they do? Use Predictive Index® to develop a range of successful job profiles for each of your jobs and make sure that people are working where they’ll have an opportunity to enjoy the work you give them. Or, if they’re not in a job for which they’ll likely glean satisfaction, for whatever reason, communicate why they’re doing what they’re doing and the reason for them doing it (development, perhaps). And, if there is an end in sight to their working against their personality, discuss what that is.

Employees want to know how they can be successful. Thus, the first day someone reports to work, you should have a plan in place that:

  • Lays out how you’re going to measure success at each stage of their learning
  • Describes the training you’re providing to get them to excellent performance
  • Provides the tools they need to be successful.

Ideally, the person would already have most of this information prior to being brought on board. Regardless, they need to have you go over it all once again their first day on the job. Go over, “Here’s what success will look like. Here’s what training will look like. Here are your tools. Here’s how you’ll be reviewed and when.” People want to do good work. They need to know what that looks like and how they’re going to get there. Employee development begins with learning the job.

Once the job is learned, empower your people to do it. Yes, they need feedback that they’re doing well. Yes, you want to thank them for a job well done. Yes, you want to pay them fairly. Yes, you want to give them whatever their profile requires to gain satisfaction. But you also want to give them the ability to do their jobs without too much interference. Empowerment builds both trust and confidence – and that nourishes development.

People also want and need feedback about their work. First Break All the Rules, by Marcus Buckingham and Curt Coffman, posits that an employee talking with someone in the last six months about their progress and receiving praise at least once per week are differentiators of organizational success. If you’ve followed the first three items above, you already have measures for success for your jobs. Use them to review your people. And do your best to catch them doing good work and recognizing it from their first day on the job.

Finally, let people know to what positions they could be promoted, what they need to do to earn that promotion and the time frame in which it could happen. Many people don’t want to change jobs. Some jobs don’t have promotional opportunities. Just know you’re better off being frank about the personal growth situation you have in relation to each employee – letting them know where their opportunities may lie. Both positive and negative assumptions made by employees about their future are counterproductive to you in the long run. Getting the facts out builds trust and confidence.

There is no better mechanism to increase employee productivity than following the basic employee development tenets laid out above.

Until your people are operating independently doing work that suits them with feedback on doing the work well, other employee development programs are frosting on a mud pie. Do you have these basics of an employee development program in place? If not, you might think about what you could do to start. If you want to chat, give your Predictive Index consultant or me a call. It is a good way to continue to build upon your competitive advantage.

Thank you for reading.

Bob Wilson

I-It vs. I-You. How are Sales Superstars created?

I-It = Viewing people solely as instruments to be used toward our own goals.  I am “I-It” when I care not at all about your feelings but only about what I want from you.

I-You = A special bond, an attuned closeness that is often-but of course not always-found between husbands and wives, family members, and good friends.

When we are in I-It mode we treat other people as means to an end.  In the I-You mode, our relationship with them becomes an end in itself.  (Daniel Goleman; Social Intelligence)

So, how are sales superstars created?  I-You and I-It is how.  Let’s define a sales superstar – an individual who consistently achieves above average revenue results while maintaining a role as a consummate team player and positive employee role model.  Would you like to have more of them?  Me too!

I-You and I-It cuts to the heart of this conversation.  In selling situations we can find ourselves on the wrong end of an I-It conversation.  The “I” is the prospect and the it, more often than not, is the sales person.  The salesperson feels objectified, disrespected, made to feel small, and often a second-class citizen.  That is what being “It” feels like.  Not something you want to do for a living.  It is unsustainable for most mere mortals.

The I-It is also a glass ceiling for sales superstar impostors.  These are the individuals who produce sheer numbers but tend to be a negative influence and suffer from “too-heavy-to-handle” ego.  They are the “I” and the company and clients are the “It.”  Meant to serve their own ends.  As you can imagine, this is also unsustainable.

I-You is the secret.  “I” actually care and am interested about “You,” regardless of any positive outcomes for me — where I ask questions that strike to the heart of problems that matter to you and are relevant.   Not, simply the problems that happen to be solved by my products or services.  The I-You is the person who legitimately cares about others, and in turn, others trust that person.  They should.  These are the gems that take a reasonably good sales team and turn them into super heros.

The great news, in most cases, is that this mindset can be trained to those willing to learn them.  Like anything else, there has to be a will to become better, and an authentic passion for what you are selling and the good it brings to clients.

Do you have a sincere interest in re-engineering the human side of your business?  Contact me.

Who will buy the boomers’ businesses

When business people talk about the baby boomer generation, the talk usually is about the high number of employees who are quickly approaching retirement.  As they ride off into the sunset, they will take a generation of knowledge and experience.

This baby boom generation is likened to a “Pig in a Python” because it’s seen as an unusually large demographic lump moving through time.   The baby boomer phenomenon isn’t a concern limited to employers.   It also portends that the huge number of baby boomers who own business, large and small, will be faced with selling, passing down or liquidating their businesses.

Aside from the issues a recession might present in terms of fewer buyers, reticent lenders and depressed valuations, many of these aging proprietors might also suffer from self-inflicted wounds to their income statements and balance sheets.

Many sole proprietors eschew accepted strategic planning methods or family business planning consultants – preferring instead to keep their plans in their heads or on the back of a napkin.  The succession planning and organizational alignment imperatives become last-minute activities embarked upon when the owner decides it’s time to exit or transition the business to new hands.

Bob Wilson wrote about the need in his article, Selling the Business as a Succession Plan.  Time is short.  For a mid-size company, a successful succession planning process can seldom be developed and executed in less than five years and the baby boomer clock is ticking.

If you’re the owner of a going concern, how would you answer these questions:

  • Can your business survive your departure?
  • Would you be comfortable taking a six-month sabbatical this year?
  • Are you building a team that can perpetuate the value you’ve created?
  • Have you hired people to do what you do better than you can do it; or, have you hired people to do what you tell them to do?

If you can’t answer these questions to your satisfaction, we can help.  Call me.

Building effective teams

Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed people can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has.

                                    – Margaret Mead
Some of the reasons why team building is so difficult:

•We don’t process information or think alike

•We are motivated by different things

•We have different levels of experience

•We have different outside interests

•We each value ideas differently

•We have different styles of communication

•We learn differently

There is much more to building a team than assembling a group of individuals whose knowledge, experience, and skills are appropriate for the tasks at hand.  An effective team collectively identifies the behavior strengths of each team member, and assigns tasks appropriately.  Great teams value the differences among team members and leverage individual strengths to achieve the desired team results.

Consequently successful managers need to arm themselves with a variety of team building skills.  A foundation principle for your employee development programs should begin with an understanding of differing personality types and how that effects differing motivational needs, differing communication styles, etc.  The information derived from a good personality assessment tool can go a long way in helping you to develop top performing teams.

Performance Management and Employee Development – One Client’s Approach

Employee performance management and development is one of the ways that we demonstrate our commitment to our employees.

The process has several objectives:

  • To meet the company’s short and long-term business requirements to attract, retain and grow a capable and competent workforce.
  • To meet the work satisfaction needs of employees for individual growth and development.
  • To clearly and comprehensively establish mutually agreed-upon goals and measures at the beginning of each review period.
  • To identify and emphasize behavioral competencies that are critical to successful performance.
  • To support management goals by linking individual work goals and measures with that of departments, locations, product lines and service lines.
  • To facilitate continuously improving the performance of our workforce.

Although there are meetings to attend and forms to fill out, employee performance management and development is not intended to be just a “program,” but an integrated process which must be a way of life in our work environment.

Through this process, employees have the opportunity to increase their abilities and use their talents more effectively.  The objective is to improve job performance and work satisfaction, improve working relationships and partnerships.

Employees, managers and the company all benefit.  While the company and your manager will have important roles in providing the tools and supporting the process for employee performance review and development, you also play a critical role in assuring success.

Your participation is essential for the company to ensure engaged employees and a world-class workforce.

A survival tip for the holidays

The uber-stressed chaos that is the modern holiday season has officially begun.  It is the day after Thanksgiving and my youngest daughter and I decided to make a pilgrimage into the king of coffee shops.  The one closest to our house is also close to the retail shopping outlets.  Just driving past the store front I could feel the stress emitting from the building.  People were stomping out of our happy place with a scowl firmly chiseled into their expression.  My only thought was those poor people working in there, I know most of them and my heart went out to them.  However, we still elected to bypass this one and head to the one on campus.  Students would be gone for the holidays and there are no mega box stores around it.  To our relief there were not many people at this location.  We walked into a quiet, relaxed environment.  The barista even had time to strike up a conversation and ask us about our day.  I was back home in my safe, calm, enjoyable living room, that happens to be a coffee shop.

OK, by now you are probably saying nice story Todd but what does this have to do with my office?  The answer is everything!  With the stresses of the current economy, family pressures, travel, will I get little Jimmy the latest PS3/X-Box super game that is completely sold out, my in-laws are coming, cut-off in traffic, long lines, how can you possibly expect me to do any work in the next month.  Seems like each year the cycle starts a bit earlier.  How do companies accomplish anything between Thanksgiving and the New Year?  Certainly nobody is in the mood to sell or be sold to.  And can you afford to just write-off a month?

Back to the barista, which store do you want to work at?  If you worked at the one by the retail shops do you even want to come to work tomorrow?  It really is about matching people to work and engaging employees in the work they do.  Your skills in managing difficult people will certainly be challenged during the holidays but you can make your workplace a sanctuary where your employees come to escape all those other things as long as you do not get caught up in it and instead simply continue to do your job as a manager.   Do some of your people actually do worse under pressure?  Are you surprised then that you lose them during the holidays?  Can you make your work place that calm escape that makes them want to be there doing what they need to be doing? What employee motivation techniques do you have in your bag of tricks?  Do you remember to use them during the holidays or are you getting wrapped up in it all and becoming just another source of stress?  Take the time that this season provides to reconnect and get to know your staff.  The benefits will show as you enter the new year.  Spend the time to engage your employees in setting strategies for 2010.  Develop plans for both the business and individually for your staff members.