Content about Politics

February 20, 2012

Miami Children’s Hospital (MCH) faced a steep challenge: a doubling of the demand for talented people in health care coupled with a labor supply that continues to dwindle. The hospital answered that challenge with initiatives that attract, train, and retain the kind of talented people the organization needs to lead it into the future.

By Margery Weinstein

With the health-care industry currently the largest employer in the United States and its labor market expected to achieve a 49 percent growth in the next five years, Miami Children’s Hospital (MCH) faced a steep challenge: a doubling of the demand for talented people in health care coupled with a labor supply that continues to dwindle. The hospital answered that challenge with initiatives that attract, train, and retain the kind of talented people the organization needs to lead it into the future.

February 20, 2012

Return on expectations (ROE) is a foolproof way to show the value of training in the terms desired by key stakeholders. ROE demonstrates the degree to which training initiatives satisfy the expectations of key business stakeholders.

Return on expectations (ROE) is a foolproof way to show the value of training in the terms desired by key stakeholders. ROE demonstrates the degree to which training initiatives satisfy the expectations of key business stakeholders. Assumptions that may assist training professionals include:

  • Key stakeholders are high-level managers or executives.
  • Stakeholder expectations primarily include the accomplishment of the organization’s highest-level goals and mission.

Figure 1: The Kirkpatrick Model

February 20, 2012

Singapore believes in providing the best basic and higher education to supply and maintain the required skills needed by the economy in order to develop continuously and improve its economic competitiveness.

By Jessie Lee Mills

February 10, 2012

Recently, a Training & Organizational Development manager implemented the first Learning Management System (LMS) in his company, Multi-Chem. He says it has been a rewarding venture, providing functionality the company has needed for some time. The experience yielded many lessons that might be helpful for others. Here are some of the lessons he learned along the way.

By Glenn Drysdale, Training & Organizational Development Manager, Multi-Chem

Recently, I embarked upon an adventure: implementing the first Learning Management System (LMS) in our company. It has been a rewarding venture, providing functionality we have needed for some time. The experience yielded many lessons that might be helpful for others. Here are some of the lessons we learned along the way.

January 31, 2012

The Wellness Council of America reports a $24 return for every $1 spent on a company wellness program for small businesses. Another survey reported companies instituting employee health and wellness programs realized a 30 percent reduction in medical and absenteeism costs in less than four years. To recognize these benefits and more, implement a workplace fitness program by following three simple steps.

By Michael Rich

The Wellness Council of America reports a $24 return for every $1 spent on a company wellness program for small businesses. Furthermore, a 2005 survey by The Art of Health Promotionreported companies instituting employee health and wellness programs realized a 30 percent reduction in medical and absenteeism costs in less than four years.

To recognize these benefits and more, implement a workplace fitness program by following these simple steps:

January 20, 2012

In this podcast, Corporate Leadership Council Director Kimberly Shells shares more Council research findings and discusses how manager-led development can help managers drive employee performance and development.

Only 45 percent of managers are effective at developing their direct reports. Research shows, however, that managers who ARE effective can improve staff performance by 25 percent and significantly increase retention/commitment. So, what makes the difference? Quite simply, manager-led development. Managers who deliberately help employees maximize the learning potential of every project while connecting them with proper training and other development opportunities offer the winning development combination.

January 18, 2012

In “The Trainer’s Handbook of Leadership Development,” Karen Lawson, Ph.D., CSP, presents a practical, easy-to-use leadership development tool kit easily adaptable for both group and individual application. The book also provides resources and methods for addressing “difficult-to-teach” leadership traits such as empathy, agility, authenticity, resilience, and trustworthiness.

January 4, 2012

Sluggish economic recovery, the debt crisis in Europe, and ongoing political uncertainty are creating challenges for many businesses, particularly when it comes to human capital management. As companies continue to face these challenges in 2012, effective collaboration and communication will become mission critical in maintaining a business’ health, and human resource directors and CLOs will have to adopt new practices and new perspectives to meet them.

By Halley Bock, CEO, Fierce, Inc.

January 3, 2012

Highlights of an impact study conducted by an organization that successfully delivered positive return on expectations (ROE) to its stakeholders.

By Dr. James D. Kirkpatrick and Wendy Kayser Kirkpatrick

The Challenge

The training division of a federal agency was in trouble. In a conversation with their leaders, three increasingly common events were detailed:

December 30, 2011

A 2011 study commissioned by the American Psychology Association indicates incidents of stress are commonplace, with 36 percent of employees reporting feeling some degree of stress on a daily basis and 20 percent feeling extremely stressed. Here are some tips to help mitigate stress in your workplace.

By Michael Rich

We all have seen it in the workplace: an employee so overcome with stress he or she struggles to complete work and becomes a distraction to others.

November 22, 2011

Before creating a holistic talent management team, organizations have to be more honest about what kind of environment is wanted and what exists (inclusive, collaborative, separate, self-preservation). What type of leadership style is wanted and what exists? Is all leadership held to the same standards with regard to producing the optimal work environment?

By Richard Lynell

What does a holistic talent management team look like?

Well, that answer varies, depending on your organization and its leadership, culture, and environment. But regardless of this, I believe a talent management team should be an independent function of the organization, similar to an internal audit team.

November 7, 2011

Many company owners talk about their efforts to build a strong staff in terms of teambuilding activities. But building a strong team starts with talent—identifying, attracting, and deploying the right players to achieve your company’s goals and take on your mid-level responsibilities, thereby freeing you up to focus on performance and sustainability.

By Mary Hladio, Founder and CEO, Ember Carriers Leadership Group

October 31, 2011

Chesterfield County, VA, trainers believe a loss of executive leadership typically is not due to lack of talent or skill set, but due to misunderstandings or an inability to become “organizationally savvy.” With that in mind, the county launched its Transition Acceleration program.

By Margery Weinstein

October 17, 2011

Critical to Cerner Corporation’s success, the company says, is the way it creates a culture of leadership and builds a company of leaders. To ensure Cerner generates a pool of talented leaders, the company designed a framework to define its overall strategy for leadership development. Its goal in creating this model is to empower organizations across Cerner to systematically identify and grow prospective leaders.

By Margery Weinstein

Critical to Cerner Corporation’s success, the company says, is the way it creates a culture of leadership and builds a company of leaders. To ensure Cerner generates a pool of talented leaders, the company designed a framework to define its overall strategy for leadership development. Its goal in creating this model is to empower organizations across Cerner to systematically identify and grow prospective leaders. Additionally, Cerner aims to decrease turnover and increase its internal promotions vs. external hire ratio.

October 17, 2011

If a leader inspires, aligns, motivates, and enables the organization around a common vision, then a company has taken the first step toward becoming fearless.

By Tom Rieger, Senior Practice Expert, Gallup

There are no fearless leaders, but there are courageous ones. Everyone has fears they need to face. The key is to learn to overcome those fears. Mark Twain said, “Courage is resistance to fear, mastery of fear—not absence of fear.” To create a fearless company, leaders must master fear—their own and others’. They have to have the courage to fix what’s wrong.

October 7, 2011

Trainingmagazine taps 2011 Training Top 125 winners and Top 10 Hall of Famers to provide their learning and development best practices in each issue. Here, we look at strategies for technology and technical development.

Technology

By Andrew B. Wolff, PhD, L&D Educational Methods Leader, PricewaterhouseCoopers

October 7, 2011

Building a presence in Poland will give organizations a critical entry point into the European Community and beyond. All global organizations need to enter this market. The time is now.

By Dr. Neil Orkin, President, Global Training Systems

September 19, 2011

When Cbeyond wanted to challenge its next generation of leaders, it launched A Leader of the Future program. Piloted in 2009-2010, the program focused on existing leaders at the director and senior director levels, with leaders teaching leaders, as well as providing a Hogan Assessment and a development plan.

By Margery Weinstein

When Cbeyond wanted to challenge its next generation of leaders, it launched A Leader of the Future program. Piloted in 2009-2010, the program focused on existing leaders at the director and senior director levels, with leaders teaching leaders, as well as providing a Hogan Assessment and a development plan.

Here are the highlights of the program:

September 8, 2011

Congress and the executive branch have taken steps toward implementing performance improvement measures in the federal government. How can federal training executives lead their own staff to improve the performance of government? They must develop performance measurements for each training program and attendee, and they must create an individual Action Plan to address performance gaps.

By Brian Green, Federal Sector Manager – Performance Solutions, Learning Tree International

The national debt of the U.S. is $14,344,503,407,708 (source: http://www.usdebtclo...)give or take a couple billion dollars. Now is not the time for government agencies to accept more of the status quo. What the country demands now is leaders within the halls of government agencies who are able to identify business problems and fix them. What the country needs is an Accountable Government.

August 31, 2011

Great leaders have more engaged and satisfied employees, which affects the satisfaction of customers, which, in turn, affects profitability. Great leaders have four times the number of highly committed employees, which affects productivity. Great leaders also have developed a set of highly effective skills that lead to their success, but do not necessarily need to be great at every competency.

By John H. “Jack” Zenger, D.B.A., CEO and Co-Founder, Zenger Folkman

August 26, 2011

When interest rates are low, it tells us that we should invest today because any return will be prized more in the future, believes Todd G. Bucholz, author of “Rush: Why You Need and Love the Rat Race.” Societies that make tomorrow more appealing show more progress. And not just material, GDP-measured progress. They also show less bloodshed and longer lives. Time is of the essence of human progress. Either we imagine progress and move forward, or we sink into entropy.

By Todd G. Buchholz

August 2, 2011

One hallmark of credible leaders is that they know they have to continuously develop the capacity of their constituents to put shared values into practice. When individuals, teams, departments, and organizations grow more able to perform their jobs and keep their promises, not only are their reputations enhanced, the leader’s credibility also grows. As a leader, in order to grow your own asset base, you have to invest in others.

By Jim Kouzes and Barry Posner

Much has been written about what leaders do to get extraordinary things done, but little has been written about leadership from the constituent’s point of view. These turbulent times require energized constituents who enthusiastically participate in the process and take up the call for more leadership at all levels. We thought it was essential to look into the specific behaviors constituents need from a leader if they are to become fully engaged in and committed to a leader’s call to action.

July 25, 2011

You want your employees to be happy, so you reward them with raises and incentives when they do well. But can you also offer them more freedom in determining their work schedules without sacrificing productivity?

By Margery Weinstein

July 25, 2011

Training departments face the dual challenge of providing talent development and reward and recognition in a culturally appropriate manner, and developing employees to lead and work in a multicultural, global economy.

By Neal Goodman, Ph.D.

Training departments face the dual challenge of providing talent development and reward and recognition in a culturally appropriate manner, and developing employees to lead and work in a multicultural, global economy.

Cultural Assumptions