| by Stephen Fairley With the
economy bordering on a recession, every company is looking for
ways to increase revenues while decreasing costs. Some companies
believe one of the easiest ways to do this is to cut their
employee training budget. However, businesses interested in
long-term viability recognize that to be successful they must
continually develop their people, especially their leaders.
According to recent research by the American Society of Training
and Development companies with regular employee training
consistently outperform companies who do not train their people.
In a recent survey we conducted of HR Directors at small,
Chicago-based, start-up companies leadership development was
reported as their number one professional challenge.
There are many books, seminars and prepackaged programs that
claim to help you do this more effectively and efficiently. Most
have varying success because they are not customized to meet
your company's specific needs. Canned approaches have little
lasting effect.
Leadership development is not about reading a book or attending
a seminar. Sustained leadership development is a process. It
must be tailored to meet your company's specific needs and goals
to be successful. Our research indicates there are some common
criteria among successful leadership development programs. The
best ones promote leadership in three phases:
Plan for Leadership Development.
The first part of planning a leadership program is to examine
what you currently have in place.
In order to gauge your efforts, answer the following five
questions:
Does your company have a comprehensive plan for developing
people?
- What are the benefits you would receive from having an
effective leadership development program?
- What are the estimated costs in turnover, lower
productivity, and lower morale to not having one now?
- What would a successful leadership development program
look like for your company?
- How much time, energy, and money are you willing to invest
to develop one?
The next planning step is to begin identifying
characteristics of people who are already successful leaders in
your company. Every company has a unique corporate structure and
culture that rewards particular characteristics. The key to
building a successful program begins with looking at successful
people. Think about the people who are or have been most
successful at your company and ask:
- What kind of training experiences have they had?
- What kind of educational background do your most
successful people have?
- How many years of experience in your line of work do they
have?
- How do they fit in with your corporate culture?
- How would you describe their personality style?
What best motivates them?
Practice Leadership Development.
Once you have formed an outline of how you want to develop your
leaders and what "success" looks like, you must start
implementing the program. Start small, with one or two people.
This will allow you to work out the bugs inconspicuously. There
are different ways to begin the program, but nearly all
successful ones have at least two clear parts: specific
leadership training and coaching/mentoring. The training can
include elements of:
- Effective business communication
- Conflict resolution skills
- Team building
- Relating to different personality styles
- Time management
- Delegation skills
- Goal setting
- Critical coaching skills
- Other areas specific to your business
The second part is coaching or mentoring. All of the top
professional and Olympic athletes recognize the importance of a
personal coach to help them reach peak performance. A mentor or
coach can provide your leaders with the one-on-one attention
needed to help take them to the next level quickly.
Most organizations use some form of sales to drive their product
or services. In many of these businesses the sales team leader
is the one who does the coaching or mentoring. The majority of
these sales leaders are in a position of leadership because they
were good at selling. Unfortunately, there is not a direct
correlation between being a good salesman and being a good coach
or leader. Many leaders have some natural tendencies: they train
others how they were trained, they try to motivate other
according to how they are motivated, and they tend to miss-focus
their energies.
Even the best intentioned sales leaders often display a subtle
tendency to focus on two groups of people: the employees who are
top performers and those who are under performing. The average
performers are usually left to fend for themselves. If sales
leaders are aware of this natural tendency, they can usually
self-correct it. With some additional coaching, it is easier to
help the average performer become a top performer than it is to
transform the under performer. When you have developed a
comprehensive training program you can strategize about where
your investment of time will result in the best ROI.
An effective mentor or coach can help decrease learning curves.
Many businesses have a learning curve in which people at the
front of the curve significantly under perform the people at the
top of the curve. For example, if you realize that it takes a
new sales associate 12 to 18 months to start really performing,
how much would it be worth to your company to dedicate a leader
to spending one-on-one time coaching with new sales associates
if that coaching could decrease their time to optimal
performance from 12-18 months to 6-8 months?
Promote Leadership Development.
Once you have refined your program by working with a couple of
leaders it's time to start promoting the program.
- Start by making it known during the interview process with
potential employees. Many small company's use their leadership
development program to draw in high-potential applicants that
otherwise would go to larger organizations.
- Sell your leadership training program to applicants by
telling them (and showing them) how invested you are in
helping them develop as a leader. The kind of people who do
well in small to medium-sized businesses are keenly aware of
the importance of self-development. These people will be
impressed that you want to make an investment in them.
- Start highlighting successful characteristics to your
current employees and draw attention to the employees that are
doing well. Be careful to point out that your goal is for
every employee to be their best.
- Work hard not to create an atmosphere of cut-throat
competition where one person can win only when another loses.
Show every employee how they can succeed.
- Use your leaders to coach others and consider bringing in
an outside coach to help your leaders coach their employees
more effectively.
Summary
Leadership training is absolutely critical to the success of
business, especially small to medium sized companies. One of the
mantras of the 1990's human potential movement was "people are
our most valuable asset." There was a lot of verbal
acknowledgement of this truth, but not a lot of companies acted
on it. Smart companies are beginning to recognize that
leadership development and people training is a process, not an
event and this process has bottom line results.
For companies looking to increase their revenues and cut their
costs, leadership development is a must. Over the long run
companies who develop their leaders and train their people
significantly outperform companies who do not.
Stephen Fairley, M.A., RCC
is the President of Today's Leadership Coaching, a premier
executive coaching and training firm, and a Registered Corporate
Coach (RCC). Today's Leadership Coaching focuses on “Developing
Leaders Who Deliver Results.” You can
contact him at 480-659-9700
or at
Stephen@TodaysLeadership.com
© 2001 by
Stephen Fairley. All rights reserved. Please contact author for
reprints.
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