Total Success

A different type of training

 

For more information:

 email us: tsuccess@dircon.co.uk

call us on (+44) 020 8269 1177 or fax us on (+44) 020 8305 0555

 

NEWSLETTER: The New Manager

High Performance Management Superstars

If you are on your way to becoming a new manager or would like to learn the fundamentals of how to become a better manager then this will be the ideal course for you.  This course will focus on the essential requirements needed to execute managing for the first time if you are a newly qualified manager and will also allow you to gain knowledge of the skills needed for leading a new team effectively if you are a newly promoted manager

Total Success is well renowned for our management training courses as we cater to all levels of management.  We are able to design courses for specific needs, whether it be improving management skills or providing management refresher training.

This course is designed for newly appointed managers and supervisors. Its modular approach builds into a toolkit of essential management skills and gives practical ‘real life’ examples, scenarios and techniques to enable the New Manager to manage with confidence. We place great emphasis on workshops, role-plays, active participation and group discussion to allow the knowledge to be understood and used quickly and easily in the work place.

The course consists of a series of six modules which are taught over the two days. After each session delegates will be given work assignments and post-course action plans which reinforce the skills and techniques taught on each session. Each assignment is designed to be reviewed after one month with the delegate’s line manager so the knowledge gained is assessed and analysed.  

Each module comes with its own set of notes and follow up exercises and builds into a portfolio of management skills. Management Skills, The New Manager, Appraisal skills and Time Management are some of the courses trained by Total Success Training in London and throughout the UK. We have over 18 years experience training people on strategies to improve productivity and enhance self development.

** Course Dates 2010:

26th - 27th April // 20th – 21st July // 19th – 20th October

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Appraisal skills (one day) - updated to include new legislation

Assertiveness Skills (one day)

Assertiveness and managing conflict (one day)

Coaching for managers (one day)

Customer Service and Customer Care (one day)

Correcting poor performance and disciplinary procedures (one day) - updated to cover current legislation

Dealing with difficult people (one day)

Interviewing skills (one day) - updated to cover current legislation

Introduction to selling (one day)

Leadership and team building (one day)

Letter and report writing (one day) - updates include writing e-mails

Negotiation skills (one day)

Presentation skills (two days)

PowerPoint Presentation skills (one day)

Advanced Presentation skills (one day)

Project planning for non-project managers (one day)

Stress Management (one day)

Telesales and Telemarketing (one day)

Telephone skills and customer care (one day)

Time Management (one day) 

Time management working with Microsoft Outlook (one day)

Time management working with Microsoft Outlook 2007 (one day) 

Management Training / New Manager (two days)

Training the trainer (one day)


We provide many free articles packed with valuable information about the topics we train. Our newsletter page contains many more. Here are some of our more recent articles

Presentation tips

Overcoming presentation fear

How to structure a presentation

Interviewing Skills

Good work through praise

Time management tips

Time management skills

Managing your e-mail

Time management and working from home

Assertiveness Self Assertion Analysis

Self Assertion Analysis

Becoming More Assertive

Dealing with difficult people

Customer Service on the telephone

Telephone skills and Customer Care

Managing your stress

Organisational stress management

Practical appraisal skills

Planning an appraisal and setting objectives

Giving feedback in an appraisal

The power of attitude in selling

Opening the call effectively

PowerPoint presentation tips and techniques

Using visual aids in PowerPoint presentations

How to use transitions in PowerPoint presentations

Management Competencies

 

Research into the productivity of high-performance managers has found that they share these common characteristics:

 

When they make decisions, they make them with the end in mind. This comes from a clear vision of what their organisation is trying to achieve. Here management must play a critical role in creating a mission statement that crystallises the company's key business goals. This should not be framed and hung on the wall like a piece of office art, but instead must be communicated over and over again through memos, newsletters, and meetings. This helps everyone to make decisions with the end in mind.

 

They create action plans designed to implement the company's mission. Typically, star performers establish precisely what they intend to accomplish in specific time frames, such as one month, six months, a year. Although they remain focused on these time-sensitive objectives, they remain flexible enough to change their tactics if business conditions or the prevailing economic environment change.

 

Turning intentions into actions, effective managers muster the resources necessary to accomplish their action plans. First, they determine what they will need - raw materials, additional employees, creative input, capital, alliances inside and outside of the company. Then they act to assemble these resources in a way that makes the work process more efficient.

 

For example, a sales manager who is determined to speed shipments to customers may create an alliance with the warehouse manager, promising faster sales and re-order data in return for accelerated order processing. They recognise that influencing colleagues and motivating staff workers is integral to getting things done on time and to the correct specifications.

 

They are good at managing priorities to reflect the company's objectives. Their thinking goes like this: "Here's what I am going to do today. This task is a top priority not because it is the project I want most to clear from my desk, or because someone is pressing me to do it, but because it will draw the straightest line between my work and the company's goals."

 

They are skilled at balancing the quality/quantity equation that is inherent in all work. For example, a well-intentioned but relatively unproductive employee may take pride in saying, "I always do everything perfectly." When management counters that the quest for perfection caused the company to miss the deadline for a key delivery, he returns to the same myopic theme: "Yes, but you have to admit my work was done beautifully."

 

Recognising instinctively that this is unacceptable, the best performers strive to achieve the delicate balance between quality and quantity. This means doing the best work in the time frame and the quantities required to meet the customer's expectations and the company's strategic goals.

 

They take ownership of the projects and responsibilities assigned to them. Superior performers have a "can do" attitude. They rarely shun responsibility. Instead, they consider completion of a project to be a personal responsibility, and they work to influence others along the assembly line to help achieve stated goals (which, as we have noted, are always linked to the company's objectives). Assume, for example, that your IT manager is asked to produce monthly reports tracking the company's sales trends. Soon after the manager sets out to generate the data, he faces a roadblock: an administrator in the sales department is reluctant to release the necessary reports on a timely basis. Rather than pointing a finger at the administrator and taking a "don't blame me" attitude, the IT manager goes through back channels to tap new sources of data, making certain that the reports are produced on time. Because he "owned" the project, he refused to let it be derailed. This resourcefulness and determination makes the super performer an unstoppable and powerful force for increased productivity.

 

The first steps in becoming a great leader, manager or supervisor is first we must decide what it is we are going to grow, make or process.

 

All work should begin with the end in mind.

 

What is it we want to have when all is said and done? This seems relatively obvious and straight forward when the work involved is farming or manufacturing. Where it often gets murky is when you are dealing with knowledge and service work. Most workers seem to lose sight of the long-term objective when they become overwhelmed with the short-term tasks they are performing.

 

Once the decisions have been made, the work must then get done. The field must be planted, the product made or the information processed. Once the work is done, it must be delivered. This may be to an external or an internal recipient. At that point, the work either meets the recipient's needs - or it doesn't.

 

Modern day work has the same basic anatomy of deciding, doing, delivering, but at each step there are more complex issues:

 

Deciding

Managers have a key role to play in the initial process of decision making and planning. They must be able to develop effective strategies, focusing on the end result and working their way back to the present day. This plan must form part of the team’s vision and be presented as the goals and objectives of the team and its individuals.

 

Quite simply, managers whose communication skills predominate in this part of the work process can be defined as ‘What Managers’. They may be great planners, strategists and tellers but may lack the interpersonal and motivational skills; and the process and operation skills needed to ensure delivery of the work or project.

 

Doing

Once a decision has been made, the process of completing the task is also more complicated. Modern day workers typically have to transform the work, not just value-add to it. An idea may be transformed into a memo; an agenda might result from an incoming fax. This is much more than just adding to an existing piece of work. When things break down, it is typically a process or series of processes, not the people, which are out of control.

 

‘How Managers’ understand the power of process and break down the operational plan into ‘realistic’ segments that the team can visualise and add their input. They instinctively realise that decisions must be made in relation to the prioritisation of work and keep a keen eye on ‘quality versus quantity’ issues. This is an important issue of leadership because the leader must be able to communicate complex or difficult issues and make them easy for team members to carry out.     

 

Delivery

Not surprisingly, the delivery phase of work is as complex as the first two phases. It is no longer enough just to finish a report or a project and 'pass it on'.  All workers must take a performance role in the delivery phase. They typically have to take an active role in making sure that the work they have done makes an effective transfer to the appropriate recipient - the customer (whether internal or external).

 

Leaders need the motivational skills to influence team members towards task completion. ‘Why Managers’ concentrate their efforts on communicating individual, team and organisational benefits to the team. They are obsessive about individual ‘ownership’ and responsibility which are key elements of effective team building. They also ensure that effective review and evaluation occurs so that results can be constantly improved.

What drives all of this is the continuous learning processes of both the individual and the organisation.

 

Once we understand the anatomy of work, we can more clearly understand the processes which drive it. Research has identified eight distinct processes which underpin all work. Each of these processes is, in turn, driven by a cluster of core competencies. A ‘core competency’ is, by definition, the skill set or ability which is fundamental to the completion of a process. For example, the ability to hammer a nail through wood is a ‘core competency’ in the process of building a wood-frame house.

 

These are the same competencies leaders need to ensure task completion. Managers who incorporate the What, How and Why into their daily operations will empower their staff to function at their most effective.

 

Exercise:

Review the 8 management competencies and assess your performance against each one. Give yourself a score out of 10 for each and determine what actions you need to take to improve on each competency.

 

Competency

My score

Action plan for improvement

Time scale

Setting goals and objectives

 

 

 

 

Thinking strategically

 

 

 

 

Communicating effectively

 

 

 

 

Managing time and priorities

 

 

 

 

Achieving quality

 

 

 

 

 

Taking ownership and responsibility

 

 

 

 

Motivating and influencing

 

 

 

 

Reviewing and evaluating

 

 

 

 

 

For other New Manager newsletter pages please follow the links below:

Delegation Skills 1

Delegation Skills 2

Leadership Skills

Delivering Effective Course Content

 

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OUR PREVIOUS CLIENTS INCLUDE:

 

Rothschild

Thames Valley Police

National Air Traffic Control

Tesco

Luton Borough Council

Legal Services Commission

Remploy

Physiological Society

British Retail Consortium

University of East London

Amnesty International

Hyde Housing

Carbon Trust

Glaxo Smith Kline

Game Conservancy Trust

Serco

Docklands Light Railway

Suffolk County Council

Thale Translink

Tennyson Group

Goldman Sachs

Merseyside Police

Mencap

Renaissance Hotels

Berners Hotel

South East Essex College

Johnson and Johnson

Ernst and Young

Toshiba

London Borough of Greenwich

Direct Line Insurance

Rank Leisure

Epilepsy Society

Lloyds of London

Bank of America

Level 3 Communications

Abbey Life

Thistle Hotels

Tetrapak

Informa Group

Marcus Evans

Legal and General

Nationwide Building Society

Eurostar

HJ Heinnz

Halifax

Barclays Global Investors

BAE Systems

Holmes Place Health Clubs

Action Energy and the Carbon Trust

British Airways

STA Travel

Ernst and Young

London Borough of Greenwich

The Royal Society

Cancer Research

The Film Council

Pfizer

Diageo

London Chamber of Commerce

Metro Newspaper

Universal Pictures

Nestle

London Borough of Lambeth

British Gas

Age Concern

ICI

St John's Ambulance

HOME PAGE BOOKING A COURSE
-DATES&PRICES-
TRAINING PODCASTS TRAINING MATERIALS
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CLIENT TESTIMONIALS FREE TRAINING NEWSLETTER FAQs OUR UNIQUE SERVICES CONTACT US

 

TOTAL SUCCESS PAGES:

Site Navigation aid - Links to all our web pages are listed below

 

- Training Pages -

Assertiveness Skills - Assertiveness and managing conflict - Time Management - Management Training / New Manager - Sales Course / Introduction to Selling - Telesales and Telemarketing - Presentation skills - PowerPoint Presentation Skills - Appraisal skills - Interviewing Skills - Stress Management - Leadership and team building - Coaching for managers - Letter and report writing - Dealing with difficult people - Customer Service and Customer Care -Correcting poor performance and disciplinary procedures - Negotiation skills - Training the trainer - Telephone skills and customer care

- Newsletter Pages -

Presentation tips - Overcoming presentation fear - How to structure a presentation - How to master body language plus a useful presentation checklist - Asking questions in interviews - Structuring a recruitment interview - Good work through praise - Time management tips - Time management skills - Managing your e-mail - Time management and working from home - Time management links - Assertiveness Self Assertion Analysis - Assertiveness links - Self Assertion Analysis - Becoming More Assertive - Constructive criticism and disciplinary procedures - Dealing with difficult people - Dealing with difficult customers on the telephone - Customer Service on the telephone - Telephone skills and Customer Care - Managing your stress - Organisational stress management - Practical appraisal skills - Planning an appraisal and setting objectives - Giving feedback in an appraisal - The power of attitude in selling - Opening the telephone call effectively - PowerPoint presentation tips and techniques - Using visual aids in PowerPoint presentations - How to use transitions in PowerPoint presentations - Negotiating with difficult people - Planning a successful negotiation - Managing meetings - Train the trainer training - Presentation planning form - Handling conflict in appraisals - Project management - Neuro-Linguistic Programming - Management skills - Leadership Skills - Stress Management and Control - Customer Service and Customer Care - Management checklists for Training courses - Planning form for Public Speaking Presentation - Managing your e-mails - Stages of Competence in Training - Time Management and Technology - Training Stories and Anecdotes -

- NEW Newsletter Pages -

Stress Quiz: How Stressed are you? - Recognising and Combating stress - Managing Stress - Relaxation techniques for managing stress - Relaxation using simple and personal mantras - Stress and the Credit crunch - Using Humour in Presentations - Attention gaining tips for Public Speakers - How to make the best of closing your presentation - Making Powerful Presentations - Using Visual Aids in Presenting - The importance of FlipCharts in Presentations - Improving your presenting style - Vocal and Diet tips for presenters - Rate you Presentation effectiveness - Dealing with Difficult Audiences - Overcoming Presentation Anxiety - More Presentation Anxiety tips - Dealing with Difficult people at work - Tips for Dealing with difficult people - Dealing with Difficult People-the arrogant person - Dealing with Difficult People-the aggressive person - Customer Service during Christmas - Time and Stress Management - Successful Telesales - What type of leader are you? - Vocal Elements of Communication in Leadership - Managing Pressure - Handling Very Difficult Customers - Opening Negotiations Effectively - Tips and Techniques for Sales Presentations - Rules of Assertiveness - Product Demonstration Skills - Personality and Stress - Handling Objections - Methods of Overcoming Resistance - Effective Communication in Negotiations - Your Response to Stress - Dealing with conflict and aggression - Co-Presenting Tips and Techniques - Controlling the Call - Contact Strategy - Becoming Assertive in Negotiations - Situation Leadership for Coaches - What is your managerial style? - Giving Praise - How great can you delegate 1 - How great can you delegate 2 - Management superstars - Delivering effective course content - Dealing with complaints - Practical guide to punctuation - The sequence of a report - Top tips for writing effective emails - Aims and Objectives for the New Manager - Question Techniques in Group Training - Its not What you say, but How you say it! - How to overcome and channel fear - Why is project management important - Project definition and proposal - Estimating time accurately - 10 step guide for Project Planning - Project Progress Meetings - Assess your problem employee - Disciplinary Procedures Guide - Disciplinary Rules