Posts Tagged ‘corporate training’

How do you develop a follow-up plan that confirms that a session accomplished what it was supposed to? Executive Presentation Skills

Wednesday, June 1st, 2011

 

Presentation Skills

First, in our executive presentation skills training, we show you that you need to determine what the point of the session should be before you can ascertain what an appropriate follow-up plan should be. To simplify this, one should determine if the meeting was a training session, a sales meeting, or an internal meeting.

Training:

If you’re conducting a training session, the most important thing is that people can actually do what you are training them to do. They must be able to recall the information when necessary.

In your training session, pick out the top three to five things you want them to remember, and repeat them often throughout the training.

The second thing you want to do is make sure each participant writes down, in their own handwriting, those three to five things you want them to remember. Information written in one’s own handwriting is retained much longer than information simply acquired in a handout.

The third thing you can do is to have them turn to each other and share three things they learned and how they will apply them. Then have that twosome turn to another twosome and share once again. Then bring the discussion up to the front of the room. This will give people confidence to share openly in front of the group because they’ve already shared with each other. It will also tell you if the information was learned, was misinterpreted, or was completely forgotten by the participants.

Sales meeting:

In our Sales Training Seminars we show how to have a productive meeting with a sales prospect. You want to close by recapping what was agreed on, what the next steps are, and how you will follow up. Most sales people miss the opportunity to find out from the client how they want you to follow up with them. Some prefer phone calls and some prefer e-mails. If you find out in the meeting exactly how to follow up with them, and agree on when, then you are not pestering the client.

Make sure you have included all the decision makers if you set another meeting! Notice how we went from a mild follow up of, “Sure, I’ll send you information,” to a closing situation where you get in front of the decision-makers. The worst thing you can ever do is to merely send a proposal and hope and pray that they buy from you.

Internal meeting:

Try to keep your internal meetings short, interactive, and focused on reinforcing the theme, “This is important to you because…”

If you have regular meetings, you can always ask one or two people to recap what was talked about in the meeting and why it is relevant to the group. You can also handle it like a training session, where you have each person share with someone what they’ve learned and how they can apply it. Or you can simply ask the group as a whole, “What are the top two things we will do based on what we’ve shared?”

If you are sharing information one-on-one with a person who has a tendency to “forget,” raise their accountability by asking them to recap what was agreed to. Then ask them how they would like you to follow up with them to make sure that the action has been taken. Then ask them what you should do if they have not performed as agreed. This way you are putting right up front what the expectations are as well as the consequences, so there is no surprise or anger later.

Use Outcome Thinking® and Impression Management Professionals to ensure you have full agreement, and there will be no surprises!


How To Work Under A Crazy Boss- is she the devil who wears Prada??

Wednesday, November 10th, 2010

We all want to be that leader that inspires, motivates and gets people to give their all.  Unfortunately, even if you are that type of leader, there are times when you are working under a boss that is not easy to work with.

Here are some of the top Nightmare Bosses according to BestLifeOnline.com:

Steve Jobs- He has been known to ask unconvential questions of job applicants such as, “How old were you when you lost your virginity?”

Bobby Knight- He was known for his chair launching escapades as well as for choking a player.

Naomi Campbell- She has been known to launch her jeweled cell phone at a housekeeper’s head when a pair of jeans went missing.  The housekeeper sustained a laceration from the phone.

Miranda Priestly in The Devil Wears Prada-The woman who couldn’t even take the time to learn her assistants names because, after all, did it really matter?

Okay, not your ideal bosses.  Matter-of-fact, you may be saying, “well guess my boss is not so bad.”  The reality is we all deserve to work in an atmosphere that inspires trust rather than one that inspires fear.

So how do you create a good atmosphere for you and your team if you work under a difficult boss?

First, look at what your boss is trying to protect.  I find that most difficult bosses actually OPERATE out of fear themselves, thus they project this fear on to their team.  Try to figure out what they are afraid of and how you can help them look good.  I find that most difficult bosses often feel people “don’t get them.” Once you realize that they are operating more out of fear you can put their craziness in to perspective rather than be consumed by it.

Second, start working under “ask forgiveness, rather than ask permission” model.  When you work under “ask permission” you will give too much control and authority over to a difficult boss.  Suddenly they can give you information at the last minute and make you dance to their tune.  Instead focus on what you need to do to excel and add value to them.  Be proactive with what you can so you aren’t dancing to their tune in the middle of the night.

Follow these two simple things and you can begin to regain some control in an out of control world with a dysfunctional boss.

Outcome Thinking®

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Would You Rather be Intelligent or Smart?

Wednesday, August 18th, 2010

It seems like there is a semantics play-off here but in reality this is a good question.

Here is why I am posing it- a common comment I hear from companies is, “He is really intelligent but the audience can’t comprehend what he is saying.”  So if you are intelligent but no one can take action on what you say, are you really effective? And if power is in the application of knowledge but no one can apply your knowledge, do you really have power at all?

The answer is no.  The most effective leaders are not the ones who are the most intelligent; they are the leaders that are smart.  They are smart in business and they are smart in common sense.  They know when to pull the plug and when to take risk.

It intrigues me how I have never found a top leader describe themself as intelligent but many will use the word smart.  There are different applications and implications by both words.  I find too many corporations spend too much money and time on people they see as brilliant or intelligent but who create chaos behind them because no one can understand what they are to do or when to do it.

So when you are hiring, go for the person who is smart, high in EQ, and willing to grow and stretch.     

 
 
 

 

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Leadership Development

Sept 23, 2010 at 1:00 CST

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How to Disengage in an Idiotic Conversation

Tuesday, August 10th, 2010
 
 
 

 

Corporate Sales Training | Leadership Development | Presentation Skills

Corporate Sales Training and Leadership Development

“Never argue with an IDIOT, first you have to stoop to his level & than he will beat you with his experience.”

 

I don’t know who said this but I think it is brilliant.  I have seen too many people spend energy fighting a person who’s brain is not going to fight logically with you.

What most people don’t realize is the toll your body actually takes when you move into an illogical argument.  Here are some of the things that happen:

1. What ever physical reaction you have to what the other person is saying (even if the reaction is only a 5 minute reaction) it stays in your body for eight hours.  So why give an illogical person eight hours of holding your body and brain hostage?  Not worth it.

2. Your emotional response escalates in proportion to the other person’s illogical response.  Pretty soon you have hawked your character and integrity over a discussion that will never render you any value.

So here is what I recommend you do instead.

1. Take a deep breath all the way to your toes and into the ground.  This will triggert your physical system and brain to remain calm.

2. Then let it go.  When a person fights you so hard illogically what they are really telling you is they have a high fear and they need to protect that fear.  Let them.  As long as they aren’t hurting someone.

If it is an argument with someone that you can’t walk away from (for example a family member) then expend your energy, not on sharing your viewpoint, but on asking them to share with you theirs.  I often find that as I move away from confrontation so do they.  Most of the time they even reverse their opinion without you ever having to point out the flaws in thinking.

And, hey, there are always those times when halfway through you realize the idiot isn’t the other person.  At those times it is nice to save face because you didn’t push your point so hard!

Leadership Development

September 23, 2010 at 1:00 CST

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Think it Through: The Open Window

Monday, August 9th, 2010
Think it Through

Anne Warfield, CEO, Impression Management Professionals

So did you figure out the riddle from Friday? I must admit, I answered it rather smugly thinking, “Of course, the candle”.  So I chuckled when I realized that my brain had focused on the three objects rather than the striking object- the match.  Of course you have to light the match first.

So what has led you astray by focusing you on what the end game is rather than what you need to DO in order to make it happen.  Don’t get caught focusing on the candle when you should concentrate on the match.  Givens can often be the most overlooked thing that trips you up.

Here is your riddle for tomorrow:

A man stares through the dirty window of the 22nd story apartment. Overcome with grief he opens the window and jumps through! However, he is alive and nothing cushioned his fall. How can that be?

Think it Through, Not Just About

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010
Think it Through

Anne Warfield, CEO

Most of us spend hours thinking about a problem so we get stuck on the details as we see them.  This means assumptions we make block us from coming to the real solution.

I want to invite you instead to start thinking THROUGH problems rather than just thinking ABOUT them.  To help you do that, I am going to leave you with a riddle.  Tomorrow I will give you the answer but see how long it takes for the answer to POP into your head when you least expect it.  Tell me when it came to you, how it came to you and tomorrow I will share why that happened.

Here is the riddle:

What starts with e, ends with e, and usually contains one letter?

How to be Ever Present, Ever Ready – Leadership Development & Tips

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010

We all like to be part of an inclusive and exclusive club. We like to get deals.  We like to be remembered.

I am continually amazed how clients answer this questions when we pose it to them, “How are you keeping in touch with your clients?”  Most do the “deal” and then they forget about the client until it is time for contract renewal.  If you are the customer, does that make you feel special? Or do you feel like a coin machine and they want more money from you?

Consider starting a special grouping for clients.  We mail a gift, article or some “touch” piece every 6-8 weeks to our clients.  These are NEVER solicitations for business or to try to sell them new products or services.

The sole purpose of these mailings is to let our clients know that we care about them, remember them and want to continue to add support to their business whether they are actively doing business with us right now or not.  We send out things that will be relevant to them, not us.  For example, we sent out the book Chasing Daylight to all the executives because it was a good reminder of the legacy you are leaving.  We knew how many were under great stress with the economy and how easy it is to lose sight of the life legacy you are trying to leave.  So it reminded them to take a breath, relax and put things in perspective.

The funny thing is that in you remembering them, they remember you.  They call to just chat, to share what is happening with their team and often to suggest a way we can work together again.

So don’t forget your customers.  They aren’t a name on a contract but rather a person. Remember and honor that person at all times and the old saying, “What goes around, comes around” will come true for you!

TAKE ACTION:  Start your own client touch list and send out gifts to them.  Make sure they are relevant to the client and in no way, shape or form do they ask them to do business with you.  The purpose of this is just to let them know you remember them and that you are there to add value to them.

 

Corporate Leadership Development & Tips

Corporate Leadership Development & Tips

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