|
"He was one of our top performers. Everyone loved working with him. So why is he failing as a manager?"
It seems like a logical step. Take your top performers and promote them into management positions. Have them transfer their individual style and success to the whole team. It can work, but it usually doesn't. Why not? Because…
Great contributors do not automatically make great leaders. Our experience has proven that the skills required to perform as an individual are fundamentally different from the skills critical to leading a team.
Essential Skills of Communicating provides the tools necessary to develop clear, concise messages. Focusing on communication as a two-way process, the program can help even experienced managers improve their messages by making them clear, well organized and aimed at the needs and interests of the listener. By developing the essential skills of communicating, managers improve relations with their team members and increase productivity.
Program Description
Essential Skills of Communicating helps managers learn the latest
techniques in developing effective communication skills-improving
their performance and increasing the productivity of the team
and the organization. Throughout the workshop, managers will review
video presentations and case studies, participate in group discussions,
practice new skills, and receive immediate feedback. Managers
leave with implementations tools, troubleshooting guides and additional
resources to help them apply the skills they have learned on the
job. The 4-5 hour workshop is designed for 6-18 participants and
includes the following:
- Create a Climate of Open Communication The
foundation of good communication is openness. The manager's
role is to support an environment that encourages the free exchange
of open, honest communication.
- Design Clear, Concise Messages Develop messages
that avoid complex and pompous language. Learn to logically
organize messages and aim them at the listener's interests.
- Manage Nonverbal Behaviors Effectively Understanding
nonverbal factors, such as voice tone, intonation and gestures,
is an important part of effective communication.
- Listen to Communicate Effective communication
is a two-way process. Managers learn the importance of active
listening and the role of responding appropriately by reflecting,
probing, supporting, and advising.
Download
PDF version
|