Wednesday 25 March 2020

Five Tips for Coaching Top Performers


Executive coaching programs helps effective managers become even stronger. The same can be said of Olympic coaches and the athletes they coach.
A recent article in the Harvard Business Review looked at various coaching strategies and strengths that have helped coaches produce winning athletes in intense situations. Thinking of employees as athletes, five keys to success are identified as:
  1. Help your “athletes” understand and learn to use their talents and skills in the work environment. Allow them to be creative. When creativity is allowed, employees feel free to use their interest and skills to develop a better product. Take the time to build in space for creative uses of skills into different projects.
  2. Build a strong, transparent relationship with your mentee, to establish an open line of communication with them. Honesty is key. Olympic athletes have usually had the same coach since they were youngsters; even if they adopt other coaches along the way, their original mentor and trainer is always there to support them on game-day.
  3. For athletes, training is the most crucial part. They must be up to date on the latest rules, techniques and competitor training habits and performances. The workplace is similar. Push your employees to investigate new technologies, and encourage attendance at training sessions, industry-relevant conferences and membership organizations.
  4. Athletes receive different types of support including financial, motivational, nutritional, and more. Help steer your employees in the right direction and make it easier for them to “win.” Steering may look like helping your employees find grants for departmental team-building activities or building relationships with cross-organizational teams. Steering may also look like hiring effective managers who will appoint appropriate project leaders.
  5. I found the 5th point to be the most compelling: managing the environment for your employees. You know your organization and industry inside and out so give your employees the perspective needed to help them create innovative solutions they can carry with them to future leadership positions.
Have you seen this parallel between athletic coaches and workplace leadership? How did it impact your team and organization?
Let’s share experiences. Leave a comment below, send me an email, or find me on Twitter.

Friday 13 March 2020

A Guide to Developing, Managing, and Executing Effective Training Programs


Have you been tasked with developing an employee training program? Are you interested in identifying training costs and the criteria for an effective training program?
Read on as we provide answers to some of the most common training program questions, including a detailed overview and useful tips. Whether you’re conducting a training program yourself or simply learning more about the subject, we hope you find it helpful.
Table of Contents:

What is a training program?
A training program is designed to train employees in the specific skills they need to grow in their career. These programs are usually over a duration of time and based on organizational competencies. Since there are different employment skills needed throughout a career, the employee development programs will also vary to match the specific skill sets.

What’s the purpose of a training program?
The purpose of a training program is to serve as a guideline for employee development. When employees are empowered to grow and learn, they are more likely to remain with the employer.
What’s the difference between training program and workshops, webinars, facilitation and keynotes?
Workshops, webinars, facilitations and keynotes are all tools used within a training program. They are sometimes used as one-off events; usually, they are combined to create a diverse learning structure over time.
Below are general guidelines of what to expect for each tool:
  • Workshops: half day to multiple days, in person, interactive, ranging from 20-50 people, with the objective to interactively learn information
  • Facilitations: half day to multiple days, in person, interactive, ranging from 20-50 people, with the objective to bring group consensus and decisions amongst the participants
  • Keynotes: 45-60 minutes, in person, minimal interaction, ranging from 50-2000 people, with the objective to share knowledge (often referred to as ‘Sage on a Stage’)
  • Webinars: 60-120 minutes, online (with or without video), varying interactivity, ranging from 10-1000 people (depending on the platform), with the objective to interactively teach information to a remote audience

For example, if you are tasked to create a coaching employee training program, where all 500 employees know the basics of coaching and use coaching skills consistently, you could facilitate a half-day session with the HR team to create alignment with the coaching objectives and organizational mission. Once that is clarified, a 9-month developmental program could be devised that included one keynote for all employees to understand the macro concepts of coaching, followed by 10 workshops for 50 people to learn how to coach. Follow up webinars would be the next step, to help people reinforce the skills they learned in the coaching workshops. At the conclusion of the 9 months, all employees would have heard a macro keynote on the topic, been trained in the workshop and had time to reinforce the lessons learned through a webinar, creating coaching skills to be used consistently within the organization.
What is a management development program and a leadership development program?

Management development programs (MDP) and leadership development programs (LDP) are similar to the training program described above. The difference is the specificity of the audience (management or leadership team) and the identified topics needed to become an effective manager or leader. In addition, the cohort stays together throughout the entire time; for example, if an organization has 10 managers, that group of 10 managers will meet together in the workshop or webinar throughout the entire duration of the program. Finally, MDPs and LDPs often include a capstone exercise where small groups within the cohort need to develop a solution to an organizational problem, using the skills they learned. Watch the video here to learn more about our Performance Leadership Program.

How do I determine which topic is best for my organization?
For effective training, we must know what the employee needs. This need should also be aligned with the organizational vision and mission, which requires foundational work. And in order to do that work, competencies must first be established.
Sometimes referred to as ‘KSA’s, competencies are the things people need to know (knowledge), do (skills) and have (abilities) to be successful in a specific role. Competencies can be grouped into technical, foundational and leadership areas. They are defined by specific behaviors that describe what that competency would look like if someone was using it effectively. These behaviors are often laid out across a proficiency scale so the employee can clearly assess her current behaviors and understand what behaviors are needed for the next level.
Some examples of competencies are problem-solving, conflict management, technical skills and speaking up. While some competencies will be applied to every employee, others are role dependent. The CEO of a large organization likely won’t need to have specific technical competencies, and a coder on the tech team likely wouldn’t need to be competent in sales communication.
Once competencies are defined, the next thing to do is identify five clearly defined proficiency levels. For example, for problem-solving skills, level one might be, ‘asks questions and looks for information to identify and differentiate the symptoms and causes of every day, defined problems’. Level five might be, ‘anticipates problem areas and associated risk levels with objectivity; uses formal methodologies to forecast trends and define innovative strategies in response to the implications of options; and gains approval from senior leadership to solutions of multi-faceted problems’.
After competencies and proficiency levels are clearly defined, the next steps are:
  1. Determine the expected proficiencies by job position.
  2. Assess the employee’s competencies using a standardized process, on a regular basis. Competing an assessment will help the leader know which competencies to focus on for future leadership training.
  3. Aggregate the identified competencies and assess which ones are best for the cohort in mind.
  4. Develop a training program based on those competency topics.
  5. Track progress using accountability measures in the leadership development training.
Read in depth about each step here.
Using this process will prevent your training program from failing. You’re developing training programs because you are invested in employee development. If you’re willing to make that investment, it’s worth doing the foundational work necessary to create effective training that elevates your employees.
Do I need to hire an outsider to do the workshop or do I need to train myself?
It depends. Do you have in-house talent and capacity to complete steps 1-5 above?  If you do, then build a plan and allocate resources to do the work. If you don’t, then an outside vendor may be what you need to complete the work.
Is training better in person?
Again, it depends. In person training programs might be best if the skill being developed needs to be verbally practiced with other people, such as coaching, giving feedback, or crucial conversations. However, small group sessions can be just as effective using video technology, avoiding travel costs.
What’s the ROI of an employee development program?
Simply put: a better prepared employee is a more productive employee. According to the Association of Talent Development (ATD), companies that invest in training employees see a 218% higher income per employee than companies that don’t.
We know that a manager cannot motivate an employee to improve; that has come from within the employee. However, managers can create the learning environment for employees to grow. How? The first step is to take an inventory of the current staff, using a consistent assessment tool such as a 360-degree assessment, with an objective lens to collect skills data. This full assessment will provide two sets of data in one assessment: strengths and areas to grow. This 360 view lets managers begin to leverage the strengths in their staff; it also shows the delta between the strengths and weaknesses, so you can create the best strategy to improve the team.
The next step is to understand how adults learn. The 70/20/10 model (pronounced – seventy, twenty, ten) for employee development is one effective tool to leverage the current talents of your staff and build stronger teams, which increases the organizational bottom line.
What’s the 70/20/10 model?
Before we explain how the 70/20/10 model can help you develop career goals, let’s look at three types of learning strategies: pedagogy, andragogy and heutagogy. Pedagogy, known as “teach-centered”, is typically used where the student learns from one direction: teacher to student. Andragogy, known as “student-centered”, is when the student learns from two directions: teacher to student and student to student. Finally, heutagogy, known as “self-directed”, is how students learn from multi-directional perspectives: teacher to student, student to teacher, student to student, inside and outside of the learning environment; with heutagogy, the student sets goals and expectations, based on their experiences. The 70/20/10 model includes all three types of learning strategies.
Most of us immediately think about the costs of going to back to school to learn new things. The 70/20/10 model shows how you can learn something new, in many cases, without spending a dime. The model says that the best learning uses pedagogy, andragogy and heutagogy, where you spend 10% of your time learning from a teacher, 20% of your time learning through others and 70% of your time learning experientially. Click here to learn more about this model.


What should I expect when asking a vendor to help my organization?
At first, the vendor will likely ask for:
  • Multiple conversations with the organizational point of contact, so the vendor can better understand the objectives and organizational culture.
  • Up to three calls with an organizational employee or stakeholder, so the vendor can better understand the objectives and organizational culture.
  • A conversation about material preparation (slide decks, handouts, other supplies)
What are typical topics a vendor could provide?

We provide keynotes and workshops on these topics:
Coaching
  1. Coaching for Managerial Success
  2.  Career Coaching
  3.  Coaching Skills to Motivate your Team for Peak Performance
Communication
  1. Crucial Conversations
  2. Listening Skills
  3. Providing Feedback
  4. Presentation Skills
  5. Facilitation Skills
Diversity and Inclusion
  1. Unconscious Bias and You
  2. Leading Diversity for Improved Performance
  3. Engage Every Age
Human Capital Management
  1. Workforce Transformation: Oversight of Human Capital Strategy
  2. HR and People Analytics
Leadership
  1. Influencing without Authority
  2. Strength-based Leadership
  3. Leadership Development for Supervisors
  4. Organizational Polarity
  5. Values Based Leadership
  6. Breaking the Glass Ceiling: Empowering Women
  7. Workforce of the Future: Preparing Leaders for the Workforce of the Future
  8. Problem Solving: Thinking Differently to Solve Problems Faster
  9. Managing Conflict
Other
  1. Delegation
  2. Emotional Intelligence: Improve Your Team’s EI to Improve the Bottom Line
  3. Energy Management and Stress Reduction
  4. Mentoring
  5. Managing Constant Change
  6. Prioritization for Success
  7. Building the Teams of Tomorrow Today
How far in advance do I need to plan?
A brand new training program will likely take 1-2 months to develop, including clarifying objectives, identifying the cohort, developing curriculum, creating the communications and designing each workshop, webinar and other tools.
In general, training programs work best when employees are fully present, so August and December are not recommended training months. Often training programs run from September-June (skipping December) or January-July. However, be sure to avoid busy times for your organization such as January-April for tax accountants.
How do I know the vendor can provide what I need?
Training and development programs require specific skills, including Instructional Systems Design (ISD), so ask about the vendor’s ISD background.
In addition, ask for client references and be sure to call those references. Finally, ask for case studies that include specific measures of success.
How do I measure success?
The objective of an employee development program is to develop new skills and behaviors, which can be measured. Some common metrics include:
  • Absence rate
  • Cost per hire time to fill
  • Turnover costs
  • Vacancy rate
  • Human capital return on investment (ROI)
  • Training return on investment (ROI)
How can I learn more?
Check out our free summary paper on training and development here. Or contact us here.
Let’s share experiences. Leave a comment below, send me an email, or find me on Twitter.

Thursday 12 March 2020

What The Heck Is Executive Coaching


“What the heck is executive coaching?” I get asked that question many times a day.

I admit that coaching is a nebulous term. When I say that I’m a certified coach, people ask if I coach sports teams. When I say that I actually coach work teams, people look surprised. ‘Why would a work team need coaching?’ they ask. Because work teams are just like sports teams:
  • They are made up of different people who try to reach a team goal together.
  • Each person on the team has two types of goals in mind: individual goals and team goals.
  • Every team member has his/her own communication style, which may or may not work well with the others on the team.
  • Although there is one official leader (the coach or captain), there are usually other team members who carry as much weight, if not more weight, than the official leader.

Similar to a sports team, thriving work teams need an ‘outsider’ to coach them to success, whether the whole team or just some of the team leaders. That’s what CHCI does. We coach teams and leaders to get from Point A to Point B, in the most effective way possible.

During the years, many people have asked for a practical book on coaching, so they can bring coaching skills to their own teams. That’s how Anne Loehr’s book, “A Manager’s Guide to Coaching” was created. Here is an excellent write up about one of the book topics: How to create effective coaching questions. Enjoy!

Let’s share experiences. Leave a comment below, send me an email, or find me on Twitter.

Tuesday 18 February 2020

Conflict in the Workplace? 7 Ways to Resolve It




Crucial conversation sounds like a serious life or death conversation. It’s not. Instead, it’s a concept pioneered by Kerry Patterson, Joseph Grenny, Ron McMillan, and Al Switzler that describes a conversation between two or more people where the stakes are high, opinions vary, and emotions run strong.
We tend to avoid crucial conversations at work. However, it’s important to learn how to handle them productively. There are seven steps to creating a successful crucial conversation:
  1. Start with the heart
  2. Master your story
  3. Learn to look
  4. Make it safe
  5. State your path
  6. Explore the other’s path
  7. Move to action
1. Start with the heart: During the crucial conversation, start with the heart. Why are you having this conversation? Because you’re angry and want to prove your point? Or because you want to improve your working relationship? Focus on healthy goals like learning, finding the truth, and strengthening relationships.

2. Master your story:When managing crucial conversations, stick to concrete facts and avoid judgements about those facts. Instead of saying, “You’re late, again.”, try saying “This is the 3rd time you’ve been late in 3 weeks. What’s causing these delays?”

3. Learn to look:Look at your role in the situation before accusing the other person. How have you contributed to the problem and how can you improve it?

4. Make it safe:While engaging in crucial conversations, create safety which includes being fully present without distractions and avoiding dangerous phrases, such as “You always do this.” or “You never do that”.

5. State your path:Create a culture where asking for help is encouraged. State how you’d like the issue to be resolved and ask for help in finding that solution.

6. Explore the other’s path:Now it’s time to listen and hear what the other person wants. Looking at the other person’s perspective calms the conversation and helps move the discussion in the right direction.

7. Move to action:Moving to action plays a significant role in crucial conversation. What action steps have you both agreed to and how will you ensure those steps take root?

With practice, a crucial conversation can be simple and bring a positive outcome. Keep these three tips in mind:

1. Adjust your mindset

Gearing up for a crucial conversation can create anxiety. Instead of getting nervous, try to adjust your mindset to be more positive. A crucial conversation goes best when you think of it as a normal conversation in a normal day.
These types of conversations could trigger strained working relationships within the organization. To avoid the painful effect, be compassionate with yourself and the other person. No one is perfect so be gracious with those around you.

2. Listen

Listening actively before responding to the other person can often give you enough time to choose the right words. By doing so, you can address the right issues leading to fruitful conversations.
During the crucial conversation, listen deeply with an open mind. While listening to the other person’s points of view, you will get to know their needs and requirements.
After listening, acknowledge the other’s viewpoint. Expressing interest in understanding the other’s point of view helps clarify the difference between the perspectives.

The best way to listen in a crucial conversations is to keep yourself calm and relaxed. Don’t just rush into things. To keep yourself calm, try to take regular breaths and relax your mind. A relaxed mind helps you refocus, providing the capacity to absorb any blows coming your way.

3. Plan

Planning is an essential aspect of crucial conversations so make sure to understand all the factors related to your crucial conversation. Being prepared in advance helps you hold a simple, clear, balanced and direct conversation. Bringing a few notes is one technique; you could also role play with another colleague before the actual crucial conversation.

Ready to improve your crucial conversation skills? Start by asking for feedback on your ability to handle stressful situations, which will help identify your areas of improvement. Then practice, practice, practice. Practice makes crucial conversations substantially more relaxed and less daunting!
Want to learn more about crucial conversations?

Let’s share experiences. Leave a comment below, send me an email, or find me on Twitter.

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Thursday 23 January 2020

To Be a Great Leader You Have to Listen


Two skills make up the backbone of coaching: listening and asking questions. Today we are going to focus on listening.
Often leaders and managers under develop their listening skills. Why? For one, they aren’t taught how to truly listen. Second, leaders are expected to have all the answers. And third, it’s physiologically hard to listen.
The human mouth plods along at 125 words per minute, while a neuron in the brain can fire about 200 times a second. No wonder our mind wanders when there’s so much time in between the words of a conversation! This is part of the reason why we remember only 25% to 50% of what we hear.
Plus, when we are talking, we get a rush of chemicals sent to our reward and pleasure centers. There is no such reward for listening. When you listen, you are halting your natural ways of thinking. It is like holding your breath. When you practice listening, it’s a fitness test for the brain.
And don’t forget about the fact that feelings, assumptions and anxieties tend to dominate much of our attention while communicating, which makes it difficult to concentrate on what others are saying.
The good news is that listening skills can be learned and improved. While leaders can be coached in listening skills, it’s also important for managers who want to coach their team to master the art of listening. In other words, it’s a fundamental aspect to coaching no matter which side of the equation you’re on.


Why Listen?

Why bother? If you’re not listening at work, it’s easier to misinterpret a discussion as a decision. You may underestimate the importance of objections and ambivalence. And not listening is a quick way to dissolve trust between leaders and their teams.
Many of the reasons people choose to be better listeners include:
  • Increase their emotional intelligence
  • Gain more trust and influence with others
  • Better understand their client’s and customer’s needs, in order to innovate ways to meet those needs
  • Have people experience what it is like to be completely heard and understood
  • Build respect, and to learn from others
Being a better listener takes effort and a strategy. Much like any sport, you will want to learn the steps, and then practice, practice, practice. Your coach will help you do this, but you can also practice on your own. 

Master Active Listening

The first thing to master is called active listening. What is it? There are five parts of communication—what’s said, what’s not said, words, tone of voice, and body language. Here’s an interesting article on the language of leadership.
Active listening is the process of fully attending to all parts of someone’s communication.
To improve your active listening skills, practice these three steps: 1) Focus on yourself, 2) focus on the other person, and 3) focus on the environment.
Here are some tips:

Three Steps to Improve Your Active Listening Skills

1. Focus on Yourself

  • Quiet your own thoughts and emotions
  • Make eye contact with the speaker (it will help you concentrate on them)
  • Mentally restate what you’re hearing them say
  • If you miss anything, or something seems unclear, ask them to repeat it

 2. Focus on the Other Person

  • Make eye contact with the speaker (to let them know you’re listening)
  • Make appropriate reactions and sounds
  • When they’re done, repeat what you heard out loud
  • Do this until you’ve clearly heard what they were trying to say

3. Focus on the Environment

  • What do you hear? (Restlessness? Calm?)
  • What do you see? (Head-nodding? Phone use? Taking notes?)
  • What does your emotional intelligence say? (They’re losing interest? They like this idea!)
Next time you’re in a meeting, glance around. Is what you are hearing different than what you are seeing? Is what you are seeing different from what you are feeling?
Practice each step of listening until you feel you’ve mastered all three. Ask a few nonbiased people if they perceive you as a strong listener. Then actively listen to their responses! Active listening will greatly improve your coaching, and will benefit all of your relationships—inside or outside the workplace.
There are also things you can do day-to-day to improve your listening skills. Read over these tips on a regular basis until they are set in your mind.

Day-To-Day Listening Practices

To improve your listening, DO:

  • Be 100% present. This means turning off all electronics, and keep your eyes on the person.
  • Be content to listen and to stay in the conversation until the person feels like they are fully heard.
  • Ask questions and take notes, including word clarification. Many words in the English language have more than one meaning, or can vary drastically (such as the word “soon”).
  • Show engagement in your posture and your tone of voice by leaning into the conversation, and keeping your voice level.

To improve your listening, DON’T:

  • React emotionally. Stay calm and focused on the other person.
  • Offer suggestions or advice. This is a hard one! Yet if you are truly listening, all you’re doing is pulling information out. As soon as you start suggesting solutions, you are no longer listening.
  • Talk about yourself. Even if you have had the same experience, don’t tell your story. It takes the attention off the person and back onto you. A simple “I have been there” can do the trick.
  • Look at anything but the person. Stay focused on the person’s eyes, facial expressions, and body language.
It can’t be stressed enough just how important listening skills are for coaching. Whether you invest in building your listening skills by working with a coach, or commit to practicing yourself, it will be well worth your while. Paired with a strong grasp on how to ask the right questions in a coaching environment, which you can review here, you are well on your way to using coaching as a tool to enhance your impact as a leader.