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Home
LEARN TO LEARN SKILLS YOURSELF
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METHODOLOGY
1. Learn Job Skills from Webinars, Videos & Blogs
2. Research the subject using ChatGPT & AI Tools
3. Practice the Skill using Exercises in oversimplify.in
4. Apply in ‘Real Life’ & master the skill
5. Chose another Skill & Master it
· This guides students in grooming themselves to become employable (Industry- Ready) & get a Job
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It introduces a daily
schedule for students to use short Videos on a daily basis.
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This habit will propel the
student to Top Leaders in the Corporate World –
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What is the biggest predictor of
Success – It is GRIT (Passion + Perseverance) – https://youtu.be/GfF2e0vyGM4?si=AIMZC5Tgpf2ioi3U
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Watch these short videos
before you start the Course
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Job Interview Training – https://youtu.be/gCrA-pFe7Zo?si=FxK_XHpeUuQqN4LR
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Biggest
predictor of Success – It is GRIT (Passion + Perseverance) – https://youtu.be/GfF2e0vyGM4?si=AIMZC5Tgpf2ioi3U
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Top Interview Questions https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BguYUJ7cWrs
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Salary Negotiations’ Guide https://www.youtube.com/shorts/6bXJBLWBecA
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How to overcome the fear of Public Speaking- https://youtu.be/80UVjkcxGmA?si=Cqo1w3-cVWnjuBa5
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What words spoken well can do https://youtu.be/Iqq1roF4C8s?si=PLhufNvIvye6hIdC
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Why Public Speaking is important for your career https://youtu.be/cmwTl7LXAR8?si=Teg7uXFTaY1YdZ_d
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How to speak fluently https://youtu.be/VVhuLMELEcY?si=vzc676KQ142G9Prs
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Behavioral Skills’ Training https://www.youtube.com/watch?vPUTbDB6etVs
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Top 7 Interview Questions https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ar_lpoZi-cl&list=PLvoqzZu9FF7dlfcpzt-SMF1xLMncTPi79&index=3
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Skills You Need in Life Plan (AI
& Chat GPT)
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1. Written & Spoken
English (Prepare for IELTS for working in a Foreign Country)
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2. Leadership & Management
of a Team
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3. Administrative Skills
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4. Cracking Competitive Exams
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Why Choose Us?
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Team of Industry Experts headed
by Dr (Colonel) JC John a War Veteran, Trainer & Public Speaker
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Learn Online through out your
life under a Mentor at Your Own Pace using AI & Chat GPT
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Profile of Dr (Colonel) JC
John
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He is an Army veteran with 22
years of Corporate experience as CEO, COO, Chief Marketing Officer, Director
and as PROJECT HEAD of the WORLD BANK Gujarat Earthquake Reconstruction Project
at Bhuj. He also set up a joint venture with Clough Engineering (Australia).He
is a well known Public Speaker, Motivator & Coach with a passion for
training the under privileged youth.
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OUR LOCATION
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https://youtu.be/80UVjkcxGmAhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cjs7dyzLVco%20%20https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XIXvKKEQQJohttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o3K_HbpWNpghttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XHOmBV4js_Ehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cjs7dyzLVco%20%
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Oversimplify.in is a powerful
platform that simplifies acquisition of complex skills and practices you in
these skills in an easy-to-understand manner.
About Us
We are a Team of Industry Experts &
Trainers who have dedicated ourselves to building an online platform which will
provide an opportunity to the under privileged youth to train themselves. The
aim is to develop them into competent managers by developing a daily habit of
continuous learning through out their lives under a Mentor using AI & Chat
GPT. The focus is on Soft Skills like Public Speaking, Leadership,
Negotiations, Team Work etc to make them ‘Industry Ready’
Our Moto is -Class Room to
Board Room
We’re All About Skilling & Prosperity
‘Learn to Learn Yourself’ using Chat GPT & other AI Tools
and practice these skills through exercises in oversimplify.in and then apply
it in ‘Real Life’ Soon you will master one skill after another
First focus on ‘Getting a good job by skilling yourself with
Interview Skills, Group Discussions, Public Speaking,
Leadership. This will supercharge your career growth and you will discover
yourself
- Job
Interviews, Group Discussions & Resume Building
- Communications
Skills – Exercises
- Public
Speaking.
- Social
Skills
- Life Plan
& Self Study
- Leadership
& Administrative Skills
- Competitive
Exams & Written English
- IELTS
Exam English and Grammar
Get Job
Job Interview
Videos you must watch before you start
Most Common Job Interview Question you may be asked https://youtu.be/gCrA-pFe7Zo?si=FxK_XHpeUuQqN4LR
– Tell me about yourself. https://youtu.be/rtVbdyMbjRI?si=Mb9tUOAtHYK2NpBc
–What are your Strength & Weakness? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M5905oDA34c
Tell me about your Work Experience https://youtu.be/Bz9H8nErdDY?si=JvaOgRbS8lLj7L1A
Strategy to Clear any Job Interview https://youtu.be/9IT9Xi76Sds?si=J1YK-OETqBN8b4Vf
How to Prepare for a Job Interview
Psychological
HOW TO PREPARE EMOTIONALLY FOR THE
INTERVIEW
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Focused, enthusiastic, confident,
crisp & to the point, passionate, ambitious, team person.
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Your energy, maturity, emotional
stability& Cultural fit will determine whether you get hired.
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First impression matters.
Normally the most qualified person never gets hired.
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Read the job description and
research company carefully. Ask for more details
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Look into the eyes of the
interviewer and act confidently.
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Be honest and enthusiastic and
highlight your strengths by giving examples of Important Qualities
– Personality, Motivation, Leadership, Flexibility, Decision Making, Go Getting
Attitude, Conflict & Problem Solving Skills, Loyalty, Integrity,
Creativity
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Describe your personality
honestly and why this job excites you. Do not speak ill of your previous
company.
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Do not try making a Positive when
asked about a Weakness “I’m a perfectionist” and turn it into a positive.
Interviewers are not fooled. Honestly highlight a skill that you wish to
improve upon and describe what you are proactively doing to enhance your skill.
Beliefs
you must develop
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You are a Winner & Good
Things Will Happen
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Failure is Not Final; Failure is
Feedback
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Patience is a Virtue
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No One is a Finished
Product
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Everyone is Created for a Bigger
Purpose
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· How
to Dress up
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• Males – Formal (Coat & Tie), Females
Formals or Saree, Sober Make up, light Deodorant/Perfume, bag, Pen ,
Highlighter, Certificates, CV, Visiting Card, Mobile Off, Reach 15 minutes
early
- Qualities the interviewer is looking for :-
- Focused,
enthusiastic, confident, crisp & to the point, passionate, ambitious,
team person. - Your
energy, maturity, emotional stability& Cultural fit will determine
whether you get hired. - First
impression matters. Normally the most qualified person never gets
hired. - Read
the job description and research company carefully. Ask for more details
- Look
into the eyes of the interviewer and act confidently.
- Be
honest and enthusiastic and highlight your strengths by giving examples of
your Good Qualities – eg Personality, Motivation, Leadership,
Flexibility, Decision Making, Go
Getting Attitude, Conflict & Problem Solving Skills, Loyalty,
Integrity, Creativity - Describe your personality honestly and why this job
excites you. Do not speak ill
of your previous company. - Do not try making a Positive when asked about a
Weakness – Example – “I’m a
perfectionist” and turn it into a positive. Interviewers are not fooled.
Honestly highlight a skill that you wish to improve upon and describe what
you are proactively doing to enhance your skill.
How to Dress up
- Males – Formal (Coat & Tie)
- Females Formals or Saree, Sober Make up, light
Deodorant/Perfume, bag,
Must Carry the following
- Pen , Highlighter, Certificates, CV, Visiting Card,
Mobile Off, Reach 15 minutes early
HOW TO HOLD THE INTERVIEWER’S ATTENTION?
Attention Level
– 0 to 10 Seconds is 100% ,10 to 60 Seconds it falls to 50%, 60 to 90 it
falls to almost 10% if there are no interruptions. Near the end of your long
response the interviewer starts to formulate their next question unless you
keep them engaged. By asking a question you promote two-way communications and
minimize the risk of talking too much. This helps you ensure they are
listening while you talk
SOME QUESTIONS YOU SHOULD PREPARE FOR
Tell me about yourself?
EXAMPLE
“I am a presently ‘Senior Executive
Accounts’. I have a lot of experience in tax
issues and audit. (expertise and skills) My experience includes carrying
internal audit for ISO 9000 and resolving tax issues for the last 2 years
(insert knowledge or skill) I have worked in the Construction Industry
and the Media Industry. My background also includes roles as Junior Accountant
(position title), Senior Accountant (position title) and Senior Auditor
(position title). My education/certifications include CA (degree or
certification) and M. Com. I would like to be described by my Colleagues
as ‘results focused’ & ‘details oriented. Highlights of my professional
accomplishments include winning the “Employee of the Year Award in 2003 and the
‘Best Suggestion Award in 2004
- Why
do you want to leave your previous organization and join us?
EXAMPLE –
“My company merged with another firm and the new management wanted to bring in
their own team. Prior to the merger I was a strong performer with positive
performance reviews.” Provide References and Proof – Provide
references from a former colleague and boss to verify his performance.
Demonstrating a confidence and willingness to provide references to support
your reasons for leaving is a powerful way to ensure you are believed.
- Give an example of a successful project, your role
& why it succeeded?
- How would your subordinates describe your management
style, strengths &
Weaknesses?
- Give
me an example of handling underperforming employee
- Where
do you see the industry going? What are you doing to stay on top of these
changes? - What
are the most important things to you about any job? Is it the pay,
the
opportunities, feelings of self-worth, fellow employees, location,
benefits, etc.? - Tell
me about a time when you accomplished something significant that wouldn’t
have happened if you had not been there to make it happen. - Describe
for me a time when you may have been disappointed in your behavior.
- Tell
me about a time when you had to discipline or fire a friend.
- Tell
me about a time when you’ve had to develop leaders under you.
- Do
you want to ask me something?
EXAMPLE OF QUESTIONS YOU MAY ASK
– What position are you considering me for?
– What are the top challenges that I’ll
face in this job?
– What are the characteristics of people who
are most successful in your company?
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EXAMPLES OF SOME QUESTIONS FRESHERS MUST PREPARE FOR |
1. Tell me about yourself.
2). Why do you want to do an MBA
3. Where do you see yourself 10 years down the
line?
4. What are your ambitions in life?
5. Who is your hero and why?
6. Which is the field you want to take
and Why?
7.What are the qualities of a good
Leader?
8. What if you do not get selected?
9.You are a woman. How will you balance
professional life and home?
1.Tell me about yourself?
I have just completed my degree in
biotech. I have an army background. My dad was
in the army. He has taken premature retirement and is now in the corporate
world. My mom is a home maker and I have got a younger brother. We are a small
close knit family . I am a friendly and open person.
2. Why do you want to do an MBA
I come from In fact an army background.
Everyone in my family has been in the
army or has been an employee. No one has ever started a business on their own.
I want to do MBA and get the knowledge of marketing & finance so that
sometime later I can start a business of my own. My role model is Mrs. Kiran M
Shaw who has opened a successful biotech co. I have just appeard for my final
year biotech. But I don’t want to continue Btech & do Msc. b’coz I feel it
is more important to know how to manage the business. I actually do not know
much about business now. My father is in the corporate world and would guide
me. I will work hard and build a successful future for myself.
3. Where do you see yourself 10 years down the
line?
I will take up marketing because it is very
interesting and very important to
build a business. I want to pick up some knowledge in finance and
hopefully get employment in a biotech firm later. Here I’ll learn how business
is done and gain experience. I’ll try to start business and
hopefully down the line I see myself as a budding entrepreneur. I work
hard
to make my enterprise a success. I’ll try to build a good team of dedicated
people with whom I’ll share the success & the money which the enterprise
makes.
5.Who is your hero and why?
My role model is Kiran Majumdar
Shaw. I like her and admire her. I too want
to do something constructive in the field of business. She is one who has
started an enterprise built a strong team of managers around her & who can
be credited for being Pioneers in the biotech field in India. She has
mastered biotech as a subject and the mechanics of setting up and growing a
business. She has proved beyond doubts that a women have a good chance of
being successful in business.
6. Which is the field you want to take and
Why?
I would like to take up marketing because its
very interesting and also a very
important step in business because unless the products of the company are
marketed well, there is no scope for the expansion of the business by getting
good contracts and deals.
7. What are the qualities of a good
Leader?
A good leader is firstly, a good
listener. He must listen to others and consider
their suggestions. He must be patient. And he should not be self centred. He
should think of the group as a whole. He should be a motivator & should be
able to get the best out of the people. He should have a good understanding of
human behaviour. He should know when he should be compassionate and when
he should be aggressive and demanding. I believe, a correct balance of this
would make a good leader. He should have a ot of professional knowledge.
8. What if you do not get selected?
I’m quite sure I will get into one of the best
business schools.
I will go pick up some work in marketing or
finance in a good company and learn
to work in a team
How a Fresher should to prepare
emotionally for the Interview
- Worst case – Not hired. –This is practice and I will
learn from it. It is one out of the 100 chances you will get. .
- I will be honest & frank – God will decide the
result
- I will be Patient. I will not get stressed out. I will
be positive and hopeful to the end.
- There is nothing to lose and all to gain.
- I will not be negative about my present Employer or any
thing else.
Group Discussion Tactics (Funny video in Hindi) https://youtu.be/QqGOUFVfoWI?si=Anh8k2omL4vnWiFX
1. Identify your
Passions, Strengths & Weakness and decide ‘Type of Job, Company &
Location.
2. Open a gmail
account & fix a password that you will never forget.
3. Select a mobile
number that you will not change and a smart phone.
4. Take a passport
photograph in a Formal Suit and a Tie (Bust -Chest & Face only)
6. Post CV on
LinkedIn, Indeed, Naukri, Monster, Facebook, Twitter (Short profile)
7. Email CV as many
placement agencies & contacts.
8. Look for companies
trying hire and register in Careers on their websites.
9. Speak to &
Visit Placement Agencies & discuss your skills & Salary expectations.
10. Send CV to
friends & use get referred through Employee Referral Schemes.
www.naukri.com
https://www.topexecutivesearchfirms.com/
- Group
Discussions
) https://youtu.be/QqGOUFVfoWI?si=Anh8k2omL4vnWiFX
HOW TO DO WELL IN A GROUP DISCUSSION
- Grab
the opportunity to be the first speaker and to Introduce the topic. Keep a
pre-prepaired 5 sentence – EXAMPLE – Good Morning friends. – Name the
Topic. – This has been the center of discussion in many forums and it the
media. This topic has great importance s in our lives and I am glad that
we are discussing this today. As per my view – I believe that ———.
Now let us have the views of some of us.
- Listening carefully and look for a chance of butting in
(Don’t do this too often).
- Agreeing with a person and elaborating it by giving an
experience or examples
- Disagreeing & giving examples.
- Looking on both sides of a coin. Intervening to get a
balanced view.
- Intervening during a conflict between 2 people fighting
immaturely.
- Co-operating & leading.
- No cornering or making fun of participants
- Intervening & giving a chance to a timid
participant.
- Giving examples & experiences
- If you did not get a chance to start the discussion
then you must try Concluding (EXAMPLE –This has been an interesting
discussion. We have got diverse views. It appears to be evenly balances
and hence we need to make our individual choices —— not your own view, no
final decision )
Personality Traits Gauged in Group Discussion
- Ability to interact in a team
- Communications Skills
- Reasoning ability.
- Leadership skills.
- Initiative & Enthusiasm.
- Assertiveness.
- Flexibility.
- Nurturing & Coaching Ability.
- Creativity.
- Ability to think in ones feet.
GROUP DISCUSSIONS
STARTING A GD – Introducing the topic
Friends, the topic given to us is —-This is
perhaps among the most discussed topics.
OR
This is almost an abstract topic or this is a
very controversial topic & has been a subject of debate in the media
and open forums.
As there are always cain 2 sides of a a coin,
this topic also will be viewed from both sides.
Our aim should be to evolve a balanced view or
a consolidated opinion on this. The way I understand this topic is —- some may
say —- some may say —-. So let us proceed.
Intervening when discussion goes out of
control.
Friends! friends! I think we have to control
this discussion. Otherwise vwe will end up with everyone speaking & no one
listening. And we will not be able to come to a conclusion.
Let us speak one by one & let us start
with the people who have not got a chance yet.
As for me, as I’ve spoken now, I don’t
mind being the last to speak.
Ok! No.5 what is ur view on this? What woud u
like to say?
CONCLUDING THE DISCUSSION
Ok friends, for the last 10-15 minutes, we
have generated a very interesting discussion. Some of us (smile) really pushing
it very hard
So what is our consolidated view on this?
I think that the overall consensus is
that —
Although we need to consider the points
brought out by some of us —-
Thus I believe that we should do the
following:-
1.—————–
2.—————–
How to use ChatGPT & AI to build Resume for Job Search https://youtu.be/B8WQBHjlvA4?si=15QWqb5NA-awqNav

Course Program
- CV
Exams English
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1. Identify your
Passions, Strengths & Weakness and decide ‘Type of Job, Company & Location.
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2. Open a gmail
account & fix a password that you will never forget.
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3. Select a mobile
number that you will not change and a smart phone.
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4. Take a passport
photograph in a Formal Suit and a Tie (Bust -Chest & Face only)
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6. Post CV on
LinkedIn, Indeed, Naukri, Monster, Facebook, Twitter (Short profile)
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7. Email CV as many
placement agencies & contacts.
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8. Look for
companies trying hire and register in Careers on their websites.
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9. Speak to &
Visit Placement Agencies & discuss your skills & Salary expectations.
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10. Send CV to
friends & use get referred through Employee Referral Schemes.
·
·
www.naukri.com
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https://www.topexecutivesearchfirms.com/
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GETTING AN INTERVIEW CALL (RULES)
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Best place to start is your
mobile phone contacts and your email / Facebook / LinkedIn contacts.
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Ask your friends, Family,
teachers, mentors to help you.
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Make a personal connection
with everyone you contact.
o
Speak in your own voice and
words.
o
Keep track of every contact
and schedule your follow-up calls.
o
Save mobile no & email
the first chance you get.
o
Walk around when you make the
calls.
o
Describe what you’re looking
for in detail.
o
Ask for what you want
specifically.
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Commit to making a few calls
every day.
o
Set your pace and keep going.
o Get
over any hurdles. Keep contacting
people.
• If Pick up is necessary then be there
atleast 15 minutes early
• Sitting in car – Open the door for
the lady normally left rear seat. (No need to do that for a male. If the lady is alone then you must sit in the
right side. If it is a couple then you should sit in the co driver’s seat.
Avoid looking into the rear view mirror.
• Speaking to Driver should be polite
and business like. Try using a language known to the guest
• Address the lady as Mrs. ___ or Madam
• When you reach the destination get
out first – walk around and open the Car door for lady.
• Walking abreast is best – leading is also ok
• Avoid touching – it can be
misunderstood
• It is good to introduce your guests
and offer the first drink.
• Holding Glass to help is ok. But
don’t do it too often
• Avoid winking & staring. It can
be misunderstood.
• Laughing too much is not good
• Stopping conversation & guiding
out
• Avoid hanging on to Top people
• Must take time to speak to your
juniors & the host
• Avoid speaking with food in your
mouth or while Proposing a toast
• Should prepare a Short speech well in
advance
• Organizing a party a multi – course
dinner
• Leading to table 7 pulling a chair
for a lady is good
• Napkin, forks, knifes, wiping hands
• Belching, coughing, sneezing,
scratching head, combing hair, mining gold, yawning, loud speech, speaking
without target hearing, giggling, ganging up
• Soup, Water, Finger bowl should be
handled carefully
• Salt, pepper should be done carefully
without affecting the person sitting next to you
• Serving & passing bowls should be
done promptly
• Pushing back the chair
• Leading to husband.
• Thanking the lady of the house, cook
waiters after the meal is a polite thing to do.
• Tips, speaking on behalf all guests.
• Short speech
• Leading the guest to the table and
offering a plate is acceptable. But don’t try to serve the guest. Let the
waiter do that.
• Napkin should be used for Wiping
hands or face. Do not use it as a hand kerchief
• Water & Finger bowl should be
asked only from the waiter.
• Soup / Tea sipping without noise
• Serving food for the person sitting to
you is ok. Not for the one sitting opposite you
Telephone Etiquette
•
Answering the call
–
Answer the call within 2-3
rings
–
Greeting as per time of the
day
–
Top Security – – – May I Help
You Please.
–
May I Know Who is Calling Sir
/ Madam
–
Be cheerful while speaking
•
Body of the Call
–
Listen carefully to the
Caller
–
Take permission to hold and
announce the transfer
–
When returning to the Caller
remember to Thank him / her for holding the Call.
–
Take accurate notes of
addresses, date, time, telephone numbers and figures of amounts etc repeating
back to recheck where necessary
–
Avoid negative phrases like –
I don’t know.. Instead you can say Please let me find out.
–
Be aware of your tone and
politeness
•
Ending the Call
–
Inform the caller the action
you will be taking to resolve their problem.
–
Thank you for calling
–
It was a pleasure speaking to
you.
–
I am very Glad you called
–
Please feel free to call back
in case you have any clarifications or problems in future.
–
Good bye Sir / Madam
Net Working
- Preparing
- Practice
- Starting
- Dos
& DONTs
Public
Speaking & Soft Skills


MUST SEE VIDEOS BEFORE YOU START
What words can do
when spoken well https://youtu.be/Iqq1roF4C8s?si=PLhufNvIvye6hIdC
Importance of Public
Speaking https://www.youtube.com/watch?=Cjs7dyzLVco
How I overcame fear of Public Speaking https://youtu.be/80UVjkcxGmA
- IMPORTANCE OF PUBLIC
SPEAKING
- Most important to
rise in career
- Leaders greatest
asset
- Shows confidence
and competence
- Convey information
correctly and motivate
- Saves effort and
achieves quick dissemination of information
- Most useful in
Motivating and Team Building
H
I coach & groom young people for Managerial Jobs 5y
Please look up my blog http://www.communicationssimplified.blogspot.com and do the first 8 simple exercises.
I will give the following simple suggestions:-
(a) Your first effort should be to narrate a real experience you
had in your life to 2 or 3 friends.
(b) You should write the full script in your own language using
short sentences and practice it atleast 10 times.
(c) You and your friends should be sitting on chairs and you
should have the script in your hands (Most difficult problem in Public speaking
is “What to do with my hands?”)
(d) Speak casually to one friend at a time.
(e) Despite all this you will definitely panic and forget what
to say next!!!
(f) Take a deep breadth, smile at your friends and look at the
script in style and continue.
IF YOU CAN REALLY DO THAT – THEN YOU WILL NOT NEED MY ADVICE FOR
THE REST OF YOUR LIFE TIME !!!!!
Preparation
MENTAL PREPARATION
BEFORE YOU START
·
FIRST THING -Stop finding ways to escape.
·
NO HURRY – TAKE TWO WEEKS !!! Before you start you have to
psyche yourself !!! Take your time for this !!!
·
ONCE FOR ALL DECIDE!!! There is no way you can avoid learning this
skill as it will cost your whole career. Get into a room alone and speak loudly
to yourself. Take your time to force your mind to believe that YOU CAN DO
IT.
·
You don’t have to be great at the English language to be a good
speaker.
·
No one is a born speaker. All the great speakers have worked hard
at this. To some it is easier in the beginning. But if you decide to work hard
– There is no way you can fail.
·
IF YOU CAN DO WELL FOR THE FIRST TWO MINUTES ON STAGE – YOU WILL
SURVIVE. Hence NEVER NEVER get on stage for the first time unless you are fully
prepared – Practice, Practice, Practice!!!
Steps
·
STEPS BEFORE FIRST TIME ON STAGE :-
-
- STEP 1
- Best to start
with a bed time story in your mother tongue and then in English
- STEP 2
- To gain
confidence and to prove to yourself practice in front of your friends or
family – First in your mother tongue. Second time in English. Do this till
you are confident.
- The arrangement
should be as follows:-
- 1.You and your
friends should be sitting on chairs and you should have a script in
hand
- 2.Start speaking
casually to one friend at a time in no particular order of sitting
- 3.Psyche
yourself and pretend that you are confident
- 4. Despite this
you will certainly panic some times and will forget what to say next
- 5. Take a deep
breath and give a broad confident smile
- 6. To buy time – ask a
Question or an opinion or tell someone to “Summarize what you have grasped
so far.
- 7. Look at the
script in style and continue as if nothing has happened
- 8.One trick to
remember when you forget what to say next is to start telling about an incident
or story you have experienced.
STEP 3 Write the whole
script again in your own words. Use only
short sentences and only words you are very familiar with. Include a
story or an experience if possible
STEP 4 Highlight the Key
words in YELLOW – Make a separate list of
these KEY WORDS in a small card and pin it to your script.
STEP 5 You should have
memorized the first 20 lines.
STEP 6 Rehearsed
at least 7 times before a Mirror.
STEP 7 On the day of the
presentation go at least 30 minutes before the event and mentally get used to
the environment. Have a spare copy of your Script and the Card with the Key
Words in your pocket.
Start or Opening- (see this video)- https://youtu.be/hN7vsXAUCgk?si=ln6xgq6aPLQLeRna
- A question
- A
newsworthy incident
- A
startling statement
- A quote
- A human
interest story
- Elevator
Pitch
- Clear
- Catchy
- Creating impact
- Tell them what
you are going to tell and how long
- Use
facts/analogies / statistics / opinions
- (provide reasons
for the same).
HOW TO START YOUR
PRESENTATION.
·
Walk up to the rostrum briskly (watching your steps) and place
your
script on it. Keep the Key Words’ Card in your shirt pocket.
·
Wait for the Audience to settle down before you start speaking.
·
Speak your first 3 sentence and then take a deep breath.
·
THREE THINGS WILL DEFINITELY HAPPEN!!
1. FIRST THING – You will forget your
script
2. SECOND THING Your heart will start
pounding
3. THIRD THING You will panic.
·
THIS IS THE MOMENT YOU NEED TO COLLECT YOURSELF –
1.
Take a deep breath. DO NOT LOOK UP
2.
Take the Key Word Card. Look at in
style. DO
NOT HIDE IT.
3.
Have a glass of water while looking at
the Key
Word Card.
4.
If you feel confident – Then restart.
No harm
mixing languages
5.
If you don’t feel confident JUST TAKE
OUT THE
SCRIPT AND START READING.
6.
Keep reading and you will feel
confident in
about 30 seconds.
7.
If still not confident continue reading
till
you feel confident.
8.
Once
you come back do it alone again and again till you feel confident.
DOs & DON’Ts
DOs
- Have direct Eye
Contact with one individual at a time
- Speak to one
individual at a time
- Shift your gaze
randomly to another individual and start speaking to him
- Never look at
the floor or at the ceiling as that disconnects you from the Audience
- Use short
sentances and words you usually use in your private conversation
- Speak
deliberately and loudly enough to be heard clearly on the last bench – but
do not scream!
- Do not speak to
the audience while changing the slide or when you are writing on the board
or when you are not looking directly at them
- Use your natural
accent and never try to copy any one else
·
DON’Ts
Never insult someone. Never corner, joke
about or embarrass a person.
Never beat your own drums Never speak to
fast – be slightly slower than your natural speed
Never jump to answer a Question from
the audience — Throw it back – ask 2 – compile
Never speak with your back to audience –
pointing or writing.
Never read. Note important points –
Highlight – likely to forget
Never apologize – Keep going -Don’t
call attention to worst
After you have finished your speech pause
briefly, take a couple of steps back and then return to your seat slowly
Never wink and show the relief as if you
have escaped.
Never run after you finish – After
you have finished your speech pause briefly, take a couple of steps back
and then return to your seat slowly
Never try to impress using big words. – try
to simplify and make it understandable
Never try manipulating the thought
process of the Audience
Avoid Mumbling, Reading, Filler Words,
Looking Down, Panning, Looking at the roof.
Avoid Overshooting Time Allotment
Avoid Shouting but it is better than being
too soft
- BEST WAYS TO
OPEN A SPEECH
–
Survival
Kit for Public Speaking (On
Stage)
- (Must practice this
before hand)
- Take a deep breath,
give abroad smile – Hide your panic – if you do this – then you will
recover within a second
- Look at your notes
boldly in style and start reading from it till you are confident again
- There is no shame
in reading from your notes or looking at your points or even forgetting
what to say next
- Buy time by asking
the audience by asking a question or “Clear so far?” or?”
- The best way to
recover is to say ” Let me tell you a story — I remember —-“
Exercises
in Public Speaking
- Exercise 1 – Call out to
a person 200m away
- Exercise 2 –
Announce (Shout) on Shop Floor ” Factory closed due to heavy rains”
- Exercise 3 – Read out to
your partner who will write on aboard facing away
- Exercise 4 – Dictate to
partner 15 feet away
- Exercise 5 – Dictate to
the whole class
- Exercise 6 – Read out
essay to the class
- Exercise 7 – Prepare
lecture & deliver to 1
- Exercise 8 – Prepare
lecture & deliver to 10
- Exercise 9 -Extempore
Lecture to class
- Exercise 10 –
Motivational Lecture to team
- Exercise 11 – Introduce a
Guest Speaker
- Exercise 12 –
Pacify to Trade Union Leaders
- Exercise 13 – Convince
Boss on a new biz
- Exercise 14 – Con call of
Team with Boss
- Exercise 15 – Introduce a
topic for GD
- Exercise 16 – Conclude a
topic in GD in class
- Exercise 17 – Extempore
Speech on unknown topic -Survival on stage (Tricks) Ask Qs, Summarize with
e.g.
- Exercise 18 – Debate
Prepared
- Exercise 19 – Debate
Unprepared
- Exercise 20 – Conduct a
Group Discussion
- Exercise 21 – Moderate a
Brain Storming
- Exercise 22 – Panel
Interview
- Exercise 23 –
Negotiation Skills
- Exercise 24 – Bullying a
subordinate
- Exercise 25 – Happy
Leader projection
- Exercise 26 – Try
Suddenly Losing Temper
- Exercise 27 -Cornering
an over smart subordinate
- Exercise 28 – Threatening
termination
- Exercise 29 – Organizing
a seminar
- Exercise 30 – Introducing
a Speaker
- Exercise 31 – Giving a
farewell speech
- Exercise 32 – Addressing
your Department for the first time
·
Definitions
Leadership is the process of
influencing the thinking, behavior and efforts of team members towards the
achievement of organizational goals.
Leadership is a winning combination
of personal traits and the ability to think and act as a leader, a person who
directs the activities of others for the good of all.
“Leadership is the art of getting
someone else to do something you want done because he wants to do it.”– Dwight
D. Eisenhower
“A leader has the vision and
conviction that a dream can be achieved. He inspires the power and energy to
get it done.”– Ralph Lauren
“The best leaders are those most
interested in surrounding themselves with assistants and associates smarter
than they are. They are frank in admitting this and are willing to pay for such
talents.”
– Amos Parrish
“Reason and judgment are the
qualities of a leader.” – Publius
Cornelius Tacitus
100 Answers to the Question: What Is
Leadership?
If you Google the word leadership
you can get about 479,000,000 results, each definition as unique as an
individual leader.
It’s a difficult concept to define,
perhaps because it means so many things to different people.
Here are 100 of the best ways to define
leadership–choose the ones that fits best for you.
1. “A leader is best when people
barely know he exists, when his work is done, his aim fulfilled, they will say:
we did it ourselves.” –Lao Tzu
2. “A good leader takes a little
more than his share of the blame, a little less than his share of the credit.”
–Arnold Glasow
3. “The ultimate measure of a man is
not where he stands in moments of comfort, but where he stands at times of
challenge and controversy.” –Martin Luther King Jr
4. “You don’t need a title to be a
leader.” –Mark Sanborn
5. “It is better to lead from behind
and to put others in front, especially when you celebrate victory when nice
things occur. You take the front line when there is danger. Then people will
appreciate your leadership.” –Nelson Mandela
6. “Leadership and learning are
indispensable to each other.” –John F. Kennedy
7. “The greatest leader is not
necessarily the one who does the greatest things. He is the one that gets the
people to do the greatest things.” –Ronald Reagan
8. “Successful leadership is leading
with the heart, not just the head. They possess qualities like empathy,
compassion and courage.” –Bill George
9. “The task of leadership is not to
put greatness into people, but to elicit it, for the greatness is there already.”
–John Buchan
10. “A great person attracts great
people and knows how to hold them together.”–Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe
11. “When the leadership is right
and the time is right, the people can always be counted upon to follow–to the
end at all costs.” –Harold J. Seymour
12. “Leaders must be self-reliant
individuals with great tenacity and stamina.”–Thomas E. Cronin
13. “Leadership: The capacity and
will to rally people to a common purpose together with the character that
inspires confidence and trust.” –Bernard Montgomery
14. “All of the great leaders have
had one characteristic in common: it was the willingness to confront
unequivocally the major anxiety of their people in their time. This, and not
much else, is the essence of leadership.” –John Kenneth Galbraith
15. “Leadership is the capacity to
translate vision into reality.” –Warren Bennis
16. “Leadership defines what the
future should look like, aligns people with that vision, and inspires them to
make it happen, despite the obstacles.” –John Kotter
17. ” I start with the premise that
the function of leadership is to produce more leaders, not more followers.”
–Ralph Nader
18. “I think leadership comes from
integrity–that you do whatever you ask others to do. I think there are
non-obvious ways to lead. Just by providing a good example as a parent, a
friend, a neighbor makes it possible for other people to see better ways to do
things. Leadership does not need to be a dramatic, fist in the air and trumpets
blaring, activity.” –Scott Berkun
19. “Leadership is the capacity to
influence others through inspiration motivated by passion, generated by vision,
produced by a conviction, ignited by a purpose.” –Myles Munroe
20. “Leadership is unlocking
people’s potential to become better.” –Bill Bradley
21. “The art of leadership is saying
no, not saying yes. It is very easy to say yes.” —-Tony Blair
22. “Effective leadership is not
about making speeches or being liked; leadership is defined by results not
attributes.” –Peter F. Drucker
23. “One measure of leadership is
the caliber of people who choose to follow you.” –Dennis Peer
24. “Innovation distinguishes
between a leader and a follower.” –Steve Jobs
25. “Leadership is simply causing
other people to do what the leaders want. Good leadership, whether formal or
informal, is helping other people rise to their full potential while
accomplishing the mission and goals of the organization. All members of an
organization, who are responsible for the work of others, have the potential to
be good leaders if properly developed.” –Bob Mason
26. “Leadership is the art of
getting someone else to do something you want done because he wants to do it.
“–Dwight Eisenhower
27. “The very essence of leadership
is that you have to have a vision. It’s got to be a vision you articulate
clearly and forcefully on every occasion. You can’t blow an uncertain trumpet.”
–Theodore Hesburgh
28. “Leadership is the art of
mobilizing others to want to struggle for shared aspirations.” –James Kouzes
and Barry Posner
29. “A leader takes people where
they want to go. A great leader takes people where they don’t necessarily want
to go, but ought to be.” –Rosalynn Carter
30. “If your actions inspire others
to dream more, learn more, do more and become more, you are a leader.” — John
Quincy Adams
31. “Leadership is not a person or a
position. It is a complex moral relationship between people, based on trust,
obligation, commitment, emotion, and a shared vision of the good.” –Joanne
Ciulla
32. “The challenge of leadership is
to be strong, but not rude; be kind, but not weak; be bold, but not bully; be
thoughtful, but not lazy; be humble, but not timid; be proud, but not arrogant;
have humor, but without folly.” –Jim Rohn
33. “Leadership is lifting a
person’s vision to high sights, the raising of a person’s performance to a
higher standard, the building of a personality beyond its normal limitations.”
–Peter Drucker
34. “Leadership is an opportunity to
serve. It is not a trumpet call to self-importance.” –J. Donald Walters
35. “Leadership is a matter of
having people look at you and gain confidence, seeing how you react. If you’re
in control, they’re in control.” –Tom Landry
36. “A leader is one who knows the
way, goes the way, and shows the way.” –John Maxwell
37. “Leadership is the process of
persuasion or example by which an individual (or leadership team) induces a
group to pursue objectives held by the leader or shared by the leader and his
or her followers.”–John W. Gardner
38. “My definition of a leader… is a
man who can persuade people to do what they don’t want to do, or do what
they’re too lazy to do, and like it.” –Harry S. Truman
39. “Leadership is the capacity to
translate vision into reality.” –Warren Bennis
40. “A leader is a dealer in hope.”
–Napoleon Bonaparte
41. Leadership is the collective
action of everyone you influence. Your behavior–your actions and your
words–determines how you influence. Our job as leaders is to energize whatever
marshals action within others. –David Caullo
42. “A leader has to be somebody
who’s getting people to do things which don’t seem to make sense to them or are
not in their best interest–like convincing people that they should work 14
hours a day so that someone else can make more money.” –Scott Adams
43. “Leadership is the ability to
guide others without force into a direction or decision that leaves them still
feeling empowered and accomplished.” –Lisa Cash Hanson
44. “The task of the leader is to
get his people from where they are to where they have not been.” –Henry
Kissinger
45. “Leadership is about service to
others and a commitment to developing more servants as leaders. It involves
co-creation of a commitment to a mission.” –Robert Greenleaf
46. “Leadership is working with and
through others to achieve objectives.” –Paul Hersey
47. “Management is about arranging
and telling. Leadership is about nurturing and enhancing.” –Tom Peters
48. “Leadership is a potent
combination of strategy and character. But if you must be without one, be
without the strategy.” –Norman Schwarzkopf
49. “A leader’s role is to raise
people’s aspirations for what they can become and to release their energies so
they will try to get there.” –David R. Gergen
50. “Leadership is unlocking
people’s potential to become better.” –Bill Bradley
51. “Effective leadership is putting
first things first. Effective management is discipline, carrying it out.”
–Stephen Covey
52. “Leadership is solving problems.
The day soldiers stop bringing you their problems is the day you have stopped
leading them. They have either lost confidence that you can help or concluded
you do not care. Either case is a failure of leadership.” –Colin Powell
53. “Leadership is the key to 99
percent of all successful efforts.” –Erskine Bowles
54. “Leadership is a matter of how
to be, not how to do it.” –Frances Hesselbein
55. “Leadership is the ability to
establish standards and manage a creative climate where people are
self-motivated toward the mastery of long-term constructive goals, in a
participatory environment of mutual respect, compatible with personal values.” –Mike
Vance
56. “Leadership is getting people to
work for you when they are not obligated.” — Fred Smith
57. “One of the tests of leadership
is the ability to recognize a problem before it becomes an emergency.” –Arnold
Glasow
58. “Leadership is the art of
influencing others to their maximum performance to accomplish any task,
objective or project.” –W.A. Cohen
59. “A good leader is a caring
leader — he not only cares about his people, he actively takes care of them.”
–Harald Anderson
60. “There are almost as many
definitions of leadership as there are persons who have attempted to define the
concept.” –Ralph Stogdill
61. “The growth and development of
people is the highest calling of leadership.” –Harvey S. Firestone
62. “Keep your fears to yourself,
but share your inspiration with others.” –Robert Louis Stevenson
63. “Without passion, a person will
have very little influence as a leader.” –Michele Payn-Knoper
64. “Leadership is an intangible
quality with no clear definition. That’s probably a good thing, because if the
people who were being led knew the definition, they would hunt down their
leaders and kill them.” –Scott Adams.
65. “Leadership is doing what is
right when no one is watching.” –George Van Valkenburg
66. “Leadership is someone who
demonstrates what’s possible.” –Mark Yarnell
67. “Leadership is practiced not so
much in words as in attitude and in actions.”–Harold Geneen
68. “Never tell people how to do
things. Tell them what to do and they will surprise you with their ingenuity.”
–George Smith Patton
69. “Leadership by example is the
only kind of real leadership. Everything else is dictatorship.” –Albert Emerson
70. “The leader is one who mobilizes
others toward a goal shared by leaders and followers. … Leaders, followers and
goals make up the three equally necessary supports for leadership.” –Gary Wills
71. “The leader must know, must know
that he knows, and must be able to make it abundantly clear to those around him
that he knows.” –Clarence Randall
72. “Leadership is about taking
responsibility and not making excuses.” –Mitt Romney
73. “Leadership is difficult but it
is not complex.” –Michael McKinney
74. “Great leadership is about human
experiences, not processes. Leadership is not a formula or a program, it is a
human activity that comes from the heart and considers the hearts of others.”
–Lance Secretan
75. “Leadership is a process whereby
an individual influences a group of individuals to achieve a common goal.”
–P.G. Northouse
76. “Followers are the gem cutters
of leadership coaxing out its full brilliance.” –Ira Chaleff
77. “A leader cannot lead until he
knows where he is going.” –Anonymous
78. “Leaders aren’t born, they are
made.” ―Vince Lombardi
79. “The final test of a leader is
that he leaves behind him in other men, the conviction and the will to carry
on.” –Walter Lippmann
80. “The function of a leader within
any institution: to provide that regulation through his or her non-anxious,
self-defined presence.” –Edwin H. Friedman
81. “The greatness of a leader is
measured by the achievements of the led. This is the ultimate test of his
effectiveness.” –Omar Bradley
82. “The leadership instinct you are
born with is the backbone. You develop the funny bone and the wishbone that go
with it.” –Elaine Agather
83. “The best way to lead people into
the future is to connect with them deeply in the present.” –James Kouzes and
Barry Posner
84. “Leadership consists of picking
good men and helping them do their best.” — Chester W. Nimitz
85. “To get others to come into our
ways of thinking, we must go over to theirs; and it is necessary to follow, in
order to lead.” –William Hazlitt
86. “Leadership requires using power
to influence the thoughts and actions of other people.” –A. Zalenik
87. “The mark of a great man is one
who knows when to set aside the important things in order to accomplish the
vital ones.” –Brandon Sanderson
88. “Our work is our most important
resource to develop our people.” –Jim Trinka and Les Wallace
89. “Successful leaders see the
opportunities in every difficulty rather than the difficulty in every
opportunity.” –Reed Markham
90. “The most important thing about
a commander is his effect on morale.” –Viscount Slim
91. “While a good leader sustains
momentum, a great leader increases it.” –John C. Maxwell
92. “The mediocre teacher tells. The
good teacher explains. The superior teacher demonstrates. The great teacher
inspires.” –William Arthur Ward
93. “He who cannot be a good
follower cannot be a good leader.” ―Aristotle
94. “For me, leadership is making a
difference. It’s using your agency to bring about change.” –Melanne Verveer
95. “That is what leadership is all
about: staking your ground ahead of where opinion is and convincing people, not
simply following the popular opinion of the moment.”–Doris Kearns Goodwin
96. “The way I would measure
leadership is this: of the people that are working with me, how many wake up in
the morning thinking that the company is theirs?” –David M. Kelley
97. “You don’t lead by pointing and
telling people some place to go. You lead by going to that place and making a
case.” –Ken Kesey
98. “Not the cry, but the flight of
a wild duck, leads the flock to fly and follow.” –Chinese Proverb
99. “To command is to serve, nothing
more and nothing less.” –Andre Malraux
100. “Leadership is leading people
with your whole heart.” – Lolly Daskal
Six Traits of Effective Leaders
1. Make others feel important
2. Promote a vision
3. Follow the golden rule
4. Admit mistakes
5. Criticize others only in private
6. Stay close to the action
– Christian Nevell Bovee
STEPS TO BECOME A LEADER
1. Get
your employees to want to do their job. Avoid controlling their every move.
2. Share
your vision, enthusiasm and energy
3. Motivate
employees with tangible rewards&your concerns for their wellbeing & progress
4. Be
accessible and transparent
5. Be
strong and effective
6. Be
a role model
7. Avoid
exploiting your position
8. Find
&Take full advantage of the skills and talents of your staff
9. Give
credit and take the blame care of yourself
YOU MUST SHIFT YOUR STYLE FROM
TRADITIONAL LEADERSHIP – TO –COLLABORATIVE LEADERSHIP
1. Belief that Power comes from
Designation – TO – Power is greatest in
building Teamwork
2. Secretive – Maintains Ownership of
information – TO – Transparent sharing
of Info & Knowledge
3. Non participative management – TO – Inviting Suggestions and Ideas
4. Top – Down Strategy – TO – Bottom – Up and Democratic Brainstorming Style
5. Focus on Execution Process &
Efficiency – TO – Allow Flexibility & encourage Innovation & Risk taking
6. Resolve problems Firefighting with focus
on Symptoms – TO – Focus on Root Cause
Analysis and prevention
7. Annual Performance Review – TO – Provide
continuous Feedback & Personal Coaching
________________________________________
N A T I O N A L B E S T S E L L E R
THE LEADERSHIP GAP
What Gets Between You and Your
Greatness
After decades of coaching powerful
executives around the world, Lolly Daskal has observed that leaders rise to
their positions relying on a specific set of values and traits. But in time,
every executive reaches a point when their performance suffers and failure
persists. Very few understand why or how to prevent it.
________________________________________
Additional Reading you might enjoy:
•
12 Successful Leadership Principles That Never Grow Old
•
A Leadership Manifesto: A Guide To Greatness
•
How to Succeed as A New Leader
•
12 of The Most Common Lies Leaders Tell Themselves
•
4 Proven Reasons Why Intuitive Leaders Make Great Leaders
•
The One Quality Every Leader Needs To Succeed
•
The Deception Trap of Leadership
Negotiations
• Take clear boundaries from the
management before you go for negitiations
• Never lead. Listen to the other party
first.
• Take notes and see that you want
complete the assignments before time
• At all times be prepared to walk out
• Final rate given is never the last
rate
• Play other parties and take assurances
in writing if possible.
• Negotiate from a position of strength
with many alternatives ready.
• Never show joy or regret.
• Never give false commitments.
Networking
Teaching
The skills needed for effective
teaching involve more than just expertise in an academic field. It is not an
easy job.
• You must be able to interact with
people and help them underrstand a new way of looking at a topic or at the
world as a whole.
• The main function of a teacher is to
prese.nt the topic in the best way so that it is easy to understand for the
students depending on their level of awareness.
• Over simplifying is ok but the other
way is not ok.
• Good teachers – the take pains to
prepare themselves well, they set clear and fair expectations
• They are good motivators.
• The start with the over all macro
level understanding of the subject and then get to the nuts and bolts.
• They always make a list of points to
remember.
• They have a possitive attitude, are
patient and never riducule students or make fun of them.
• The act as role models and have a
mentoring attitude.
• They find multiple ways of explaininga
point and give real life examples and use training aids.
• They show enthusiasm and commitment.
• The use simple language and words which the students understand.
• They are impartial.
Team Building
• Be fair.
• Interview in detail before selection
• Get good attitude and good competence
• Look for cultural fit
• Maintain balanced distance as a leader
as the situation demands
• Be transparent
• Show your personal energy and
competence
• Have clear expectations.
• Maintain good communications within
the team.
• Never play one against the other.
• Give credit for success but take the
blame.
• Delegate and coach adequately.
• Have professional revenues and
encourage accountability.
• Counsel alone but appreciate in front
of others
• Never speak behind any one’s back.
• Show enthusiasm and energy and
willingness to take bigger loads.
Motivating
• Lead by example
• Hold team members in high esteem
• Trust fully
• Delegate and empower
• Discuss problems and obstacles and
coach how to overcome them.
• Be honest and focus on training.
• Share information freely and give them
the bigger picture and the vision
• Show enthusiasm and energy and
willingness to take bigger responsibilities.
Boss Handling
• Don’t try to get too close too soon
• Take notes and see that you complete
assignments before time
• Discuss problems and obstacles
directly with the boss well before the time line.
• Be honest and ask for training as soon
as a task is assigned to you.
• Go well prepared for meetings and show
that you fit into his team culturally and competence wise
• Never speak behind any one’s back.
• Show enthusiasm and energy and
willingness to take bigger responsibilities.
Building a reputation
• Project a business like personality
with great dependability and hardworking nature
• Don’t try to please everyone or get
too close to seniors
• Show focus to adhere to time lines.
• Be honest and show willingness to
learn.
• Show that you are a good team man and
a good cultural fit
• Show dislike for gossip and politics.
• Show enthusiasm and energy and
willingness to take bigger responsibilities.
Handling Office Politics
• Don’t try form groups
• Never try to corner any one
• Discuss personal problems in private
with your boss only.
• Be honest and never try to manipulate.
• Understand the power structure and the
tendencies of each person and the groupism.
• Never speak behind any one’s back.
Conferences
1.
CHOOSE NOT MORE THAN 5
POINTS
2.
Make sure you are clear
about the key points
that you want to make and repeat and emphasize them in
the course of your
presentation.
3.
Transition from one point to
another should be
seamless.
4.
Use facts/analogies /
statistics / opinions
(provide reasons for the same)
5.
Talk, instead to reading
6.
Stand up & Move around.
Make eye contact with
your audience & Don’t only look at one side of
the room
VISUAL
AIDS
1. Do not use complete sentences. Only bullet
points.
2. Follow the 6 x 6 rule: not more than 6 lines
(max) per slide,
not more than 6 words per line.
3. Points should appear one at a time, using
animation – helps to
elaborate.
4. Do not use more than three colour’s on your
slides. If you
have to, then keep the shades the same.
5. Ensure clear visibility of content through good
contrast and big
fonts. Dark background, light font.
6. Use effective titles/headings
7. Lucid/self explanatory content on slide.
If not,
elaborate.
8. Talk to audience and not to the visual.
Draw attention
whenever you want them to see.
9. Don’t do the death by power point act. Use
flip charts and
the white board too.
10. Have a great last slid and NEVER use Thank You
on a slide. Say
it.
DRESSING
UP
1.
Dress to suit occasion,
weather, your
personality
2.
Err on the conservative side
when uncertain!
3.
Avoid too much jewellery
4.
Hair- neat, combed, gelled
5.
Shave!
6.
Ladies: Pin those dupattas
& palloos
GESTURES
1.
Natural
2.
Use gestures to complement
your speech
3.
Avoid putting your hands in
your pocket
4.
Do not use exaggerated
gestures that come up to
the level of your face.
5.
Avoid clasping, fig leaf
position etc.
Questions Handling
After
or during a presentation the presenter encourages
the audience to ask questions. This greatly improves the quality of the
assimilation
of the subject matter. Most of these are genuine but some of
them may be mischievous or tricky. It is a skill the differentiate these.
However it is wise to buy maximum time before you actually answer the question.
You should also try first get other members of the audience involved in the
effort. However the presenter should be always be in control of the situation.
Hence the steps to be followed are as follows:-
1.
Encourage the person to come out with the
question and mike.
2.
Let the person ask the question without
interruptions. (Never
say anything sarcastic or discouraging)
3.
Rephrase the question in your own words and
ask the person if that
is exactly what he /she meant
4.
After getting the confirmation repeat the
question deliberately
for the whole audience. EXAMPLE – “Rohit’s question
is – What are the other
factors which we should consider to ensure that
there are no injuries”-
Friends now “Who would like this question?”
5.
Encourage the 2 or 3 members of the audience
to give their opinions.
6.
Then consolidate those answers and give your
own opinion and bring
out the contradictions that have emerged. If the
case is not resolved
completely then let the person that you will get back
to him.
7.
Ask the person if he is satisfied with the
answer before you
proceed.
8.
THUMB RULES –
- Encourage & take the question from one
individual, but answer for all in the audience - Address the questioner
directly only at the start and end of your response
Sales Training
SOFT SKILLS
• Communication. (Written and Verbal) are of utmost importance
in the workplace because they set the tone for how people perceive you.
• Teamwork.
• Adaptability.
• Problem solving&Critical
observation.
• Conflict resolution.
• Strong Work Ethic.
• Positive Attitude.
• Good Communication Skills.
• Time Management Abilities.
• Problem-Solving Skills.
• Acting as a Team Player.
• Self-Confidence.
• Ability to Accept and Learn From
Criticism.
• Leadership Skills. Companies want
employees who can supervise and direct other workers.
• Problem Solving Skills.
• Work Ethic. …
• Flexibility/Adaptability
&Interpersonal Skills.
TYPES OF COMMUNICATION
Only 7 % of communication happens
through words and 93% of communication happens through non-verbal cues of
which:
1.
o 55%
through facial expressions
o 38%
through vocal tones
VERBAL COMMUNICATION
1. Conversations
2. Discussions
3. Telephonic
discussions
4. Video
Conference
NON VERBAL COMMUNICATION
2. –
Communication is far more than what you say. It’s how you say. Body Language is
“How you say it”. It involves intrapersonal communication, understanding
yourself and participating in effective self-communication
3. Body
language includes :-
• Kinesics,
Proxemics & Paralanguage
• Intention
• Manner:
directness, sincerity
• Dress
and clothing (style, color, Appropriateness for situation)
• Signs
& Symbols.
INTERESTING THINGS ABOUT BODY
LANGUAGE
• It
has no words or sentences, but it does send bits of information that combine
into messages.
• Those
messages, which are sometimes clear and sometimes fuzzy, are mostly about your
feelings.
• People
can learn to read those messages with a fair degree of accuracy.
• You
cannot not have body language- you are sending messages nonverbally all the
time. Especially when you are trying not to!
• Your
preferred body positions and movements do say something about the kind of
person you are.
• If
your words say one thing and your body another then people will believe your
body, not your words.
• You
can change how you’re feeling by consciously changing your body language.
COMMUNICATION SECRETS
• Effective
and persuasive communication is the greatest of all the keys to success.
• Success
= Talking so people listen and listening so people talk
• People
are attracted to the people who make them feel secure, free and happy.
• By
making others feel special; they will realize how special you are.
• How
do you inspire people to communicate your point of view?
• How
do you encourage people in your life who currently ignore your ideas may
reconsider and take notice?
• What
simple things can you do so people will pay attention to what U have to say at
home, at work, among professional circles ?
ACTIVE LISTENING
• It’s
about listening and responding and the act of mutually disclosing inner
feelings and thoughts to others. Listening goes beyond attentively waiting for
other people to stop talking. It really means getting inside of their hearts
and minds and experiencing life situations
• Listen
for concepts, key ideas and facts.
• Be
able to distinguish between evidence and argument, idea and example, fact and
principle.
• Analyze
the key points
• Look
for unspoken messages in the speaker’s tone of voice or expressions
• Keep
an open mind.
• Ask
questions that clarify.
• Reserve
judgment until the speaker has finished
• Take
meaningful notes that are brief and to the point
• Avoid
distractions
• Do
not interrupt unnecessarily
• Be
active (show interest)
• Paraphrase
what you’ve heard
• Throw
an echo
BODY LANGUAGE OF AN ACTIVE LISTENER
• The
Listener keeps looking at the speaker
• The
Listener’s body is in ‘open’ position
• The
listener is smiling with a pleasant &encouraging expression
• Listener
looks relaxed but alert, neither tense nor slouching
• Listener
utters humming sounds
WHILE SPEAKING OVER PHONE
• Write
down in advance what you want to say and in what order
• Smile
• Speak
slowly
• Always
be polite and friendly
• For
long messages, follow a script
• Monitor
your time
• Be
clear and concise (tone, accent, emphasis, pronunciation)
• Cite
negative opinions honestly, but in a positive manner
• Seek
Feedback
Administrative Skills
ADMINISTRATION TRAINING (OUTLINE)
VIDEO 1 –
INTRODUCTION TO ADMINISTRATION
Importance.
Need and Role
Administration as a
Career
1.
Start with an
Example, or a joke or a comic (like Dilbert) –
- EXAMPLE
- Reminded of the experience when the
Government introduced the Conditional Access System (CAS) in the Cable
Television Industry.
- I was Vice President HR &
ADMINISTRATION.
- I was appointed head of the entire
Process of Importing Testing, Software downloading, QC and physical
deployment of SET TOP BOXES (STBs) pan India for my company. The secret
was that whichever cable company was able to quickly deploy maximum SET
TOP BOXES would gather those many Clients (Increase in Market Share and
gaining of Competitive Advantage)
- We increased our Market Share by 100%
- That is the time even I understood the true
importance of ADMINISTRATION
VIDEO 2 –
PROJECTS FOR GP / SYNDICATE SOLUTION
Importance.
Allocation of
Syndicates to Students for all 4 Projects
Time Frame
Plan for Syndicate
Presentations
2.
PROJECTS (PHYSICAL
EXERCISE IN GROUPS OF 4 STUDENTS)
- 2 Day Flood Management Exercise
- 1 Day Hiring & Relocation of Head Office
- 3 Day Setting up a Project Site for a Construction
Project
- 2 Day Exercise on Organizing an Annual Out Door Trip
· VIDEO 3 – SYLLABUS & BASICS
· General Commandments.
· Technical and Non Technical Aspects
· Specialized Subjects
· Important of Planning, Coordination & Cost Control
3.
General Commandments
for the course to create employability
- ADMINISTRATION is normally taken as an
Add-on function of HR and normally Security is added on to that Add-on.
- Biggest mistake made by the corporate
world which pays it with serious reduction in Operational Efficiencies,
Costs, Safety and Morale of employees.
- Industry must realize that ADMINISTRATION
is a highly specialized full time job.
- It will also get very technical when
we include maintenance of sophisticated equipment / facilities like
Electrical Systems, Generators, Water supply, Sewerage Treatment Plants
etc
- Skill in handling Vendors, Fraud
detection and controlling costs become critical.
4.
Stories to the script
- STORY ON PROJECT MANAGEMENT AS WORLD BANK
PROJECT HEAD FOR GUJARAT
EARTHQUAKE RESTRUCTUIN PROJECT.
- Criticality ADMINISTRATION at 17 Project
sites in an area of 500 Sq Km.
- Reasons for Project delays and cost over
runs
- Difficulty in transportation of personnel
and stores
- Errors in coordination resulting in legal
disputes
5.
Topics for the Syllabus
· What do you mean by administration?
The definition of administration refers to the
group of individuals who are in charge of creating and enforcing rules and
regulations, or those in leadership positions who assist all departments to
complete important tasks.
· What is the role of an administrator?
An Administrator provides office and
administrative support to all Departments, teams or individuals.
This role is vital for the smooth-running of a business. Duties may
include fielding telephone calls, receiving and directing visitors, word
processing, creating spreadsheets and presentations, and filing. The activities
involved is coordinating, supporting & managing the organizational
efforts in the most efficient and cost effective way. The typical complaint
received is “I don’t want my best salespeople spending all their time
doing admin jobs”.
VIDEO 4 –
RESPONSIBILITIES OF ADMINISTRATOR
· Responsibilities.
· Top Management Support
· Preparation of Budgets
· Empanelment of Vendors
· Monitoring & Cost Control
· Qualites required
· Tricks of the trade for High Performance
· Responsibilities of an Administrative Manager:
(a) Supervising day-to-day operations of
the administrative department and staff members.
(b) Planning and coordinating administrative procedures and systems
and devising ways to streamline processes
(c) Recruiting and training personnel and allocate responsibilities
and office space
(d) Assessing staff performance and provide coaching and guidance to
ensure maximum efficiency
(e) Developing SOPs and reviewing, and
improving administrative systems, policies, and procedures.
(f) Maintenance of all assets including sophisticated equipment /
facilities like Electrical Systems, Generators, Water supply, Sewerage
Treatment Plants etc
(g) Handling Vendors, Fraud detection and controlling costs.
(h) Security & Safety of all locations and facilities.
(i) Movement / Transportation of Stores, Equipment and people and
accounting of expenses.
(j) Fire Fighting and Disaster Management.
(k) Ensure the smooth and adequate flow of information within the
company to facilitate other business operations
(l) Manage schedules and deadlines
(m) Monitor inventory of office supplies and the purchasing of new
material with attention to budgetary constraints
(n) Monitor costs and expenses to assist in budget preparation
(o) Organize and supervise other office activities (recycling,
renovations, event planning etc.)
(p) Keep abreast with all organizational changes and business
developments
1.
Job Brief (Advertisements
for ADMINISTRATOR JOB)
· We are looking for an experienced Administration Manager to
supervise daily support operations of our company and plan the most efficient
administrative procedures. You will lead a team of professionals to complete a
range of administrative duties in different departments.
· A great administration manager has excellent communication and
organizational skills. The ideal candidate will be well-versed in departmental
procedures and policies and will be able to actively discover new ways to do
the job more efficiently.
· The goal is to ensure all support activities are carried on
efficiently and effectively to allow the other operations to function properly
1.
Qualities & Experience
Required
- Good Communication Skills and Man Management abilities.
- Coordination and Experience in handling people and
assets
- In-depth understanding of Office Management Procedures,
Facility Management.
- Knowledge of Visa, Passport, Travel and Ticketing
- Knowledge of Legal provisions and Contracts
- Familiarity with financial and facilities management
principles
- Proficient in MS Office
- An analytical mind with problem-solving skills
- Excellent organizational and multitasking abilities
- A team player with leadership skills
- BSc/BA in business administration or
relative field
VIDEO 5 –
CONDUCT OF PROJECT PRESENTATIONS
· Project Presentation Syndicate 1.
· Project Presentation Syndicate 2.
· Project Presentation Syndicate 3.
· Project Presentation Syndicate 4.
· Top Management Review.
·
Life Plan by Parents
Year Age Loc/Event/Education/Professional/Financial/Family/Sports
/Others
1965 10 Learn cycling & Swimming
1966 11 Apply for Science Tallent, Individual
Sport Tennis, Golf, Badminton. Billiards
1967 12 Join NCC, Team Sport
1968 13 Open Bank Savings Account,Debate &
Essay Competition
1969 14 SSC,Do Part time Job,Learn Banking, FD,
Draft, Do Social Work
1970 15 Apply for NDA, Run 10 Miles Marathon
1971 16 HSC,NCC Republic Day Parade,Run Full
Marathon
1972 17 Learn Stock Market, Rock Climbing
1973 18 Do 5 Launches in Glider
1974 19 NDA, B Sc, NCC C Certificate,Learn how
to book Air Tickets and
1975 20 BE
1976 21 NDA Pass, MBA1, Do Power Flying
1977 22 IMA Pass,MBA2
1978 23 Start Saving
1979 24 PUBLIC SPEAKING COURSE, ULIP STARTS,
Term Insurance
1980 25 BUY M/CYCLE, MARRIAGE
1981 26 IIM(A) MID LEADERSHIP, Apply for Housing
Loan,Start Yearly Holiday Scheme
1982 27 BUY HOUSE 1, Train Wife to be
Independent
1983 28 JOB 2, CHILD
1
1984 29 NEGOTIATION SKILLS COURSE,Start support
one orphan’s Education
1985 30
1986 31 PERSONALITY DEVELOPMENT COURSE, CHILD 2
1987 32
1988 33 Do Entrepreur’s Course
1989 34 GM LEVEL, BUY HOUSE 2
1990 35
1991 36 START COMPANY
1992 37 IIM(A) Strategy Course Make Child 1 LIFE PLANNER
1993 38 VP LEVEL
1994 39
1995 40 Make Child 2 LIFE PLANNER
1996 41 Start Ph.D, CHILD 1 SSC
1997 42 CEO, BUY HOUSE 3
1998 43 CHILD 1 HSC
1999 44 CHILD 2 SSC
2000 45 Finish Ph.D
2001 46 CHILD 1 B Sc/CHILD 2 HSC
2002 47 Start own company, CHILD 1 BE
2003 48 CHILD 1MBA1
2004 49 CHILD 1MBA2/CHILD 2 B Sc
2005 50 CHILD 2 BE
2006 51 CHILD 2 MBA1
2007 52 CHILD 1 MARRIAGE/CHILD 2 MBA2
2008 53
2009 54
2010 55 CHILD 2 MARRIAGE
2011 56
2012 57
2013 58 Take Company Public RETIREMENT
2014 59
2015 60
2016 61 Go on world tour with Family
2017 62
2018 63
2019 64
2020 65
2021 66
2022 67
2023 68
2024 69
2025 70
2026 71
2027 72
2028 73
2029 74
2030 75
Self Study
Skills You Need in
Life Plan (AI & Chat GPT)
1. Written &
Spoken English (Prepare for IELTS for working in a Foreign Country)
2. Leadership
& Management of a Team
3. Administrative
Skills
4.
Cracking Competitive Exams
AI &
ChatGPT
AI & ChatGPT
Click
here
We should start Bing Chat (MICROSOFT).
It is actually Chat GPT 4.0 enabled and is very
powerful if you learn ‘Prompt Writing’
We should start using other FREE ARTIFICIAL
INTELLIGENCE TOOLS to improve our PRODUCTIVITY like:-
(a) 12 Ft .com – for summarizing large White Papers
and long Articles
(b) YODDILLI.ai – for improving
Communication Skills
(c) Signalhire.com for LEAD GENERATION and
finding Emails and Mobile numbers from LinkedIn, Twitter and other social media
(d) GPT SLIDES.com to get any Presentations on any
subject within seconds
(e) Formula.dog.com – to get formulas in GOOGLE
SHEET, EXCEL, SQL, VBA, Python etc
etc, etc & many more !!!!
I will cover these in the Monthly Training Session.
We must include this in the INDUCTION &
SALES Training Modules.
Artificial intelligence (AI) and chatbots are two
technologies that have been making waves in the business world. AI is a
technology that enables machines to learn from data and make decisions based on
that data. Chatbots are computer programs that use natural language processing
(NLP) to simulate human conversation. Together, these technologies can be used
to improve business operations in a number of ways.
One way that AI and chatbots can be used in business
is to improve customer service. Chatbots can be used to answer customer
questions and provide support 24/7, freeing up human customer service
representatives to handle more complex issues. AI can also be used to analyze
customer data and provide insights into customer behavior, which can help
businesses improve their products and services.
Another way that AI and chatbots can be used in
business is to automate routine tasks. For example, chatbots can be used to
schedule appointments or process orders, freeing up employees to focus on more
important tasks. AI can also be used to automate data entry tasks or other
repetitive tasks, which can save businesses time and money.
SUMMARY ABOUT Chat GPT
AI and chatbots can also be used to improve internal
communication within a business. Chatbots can be used to answer employee
questions about company policies or benefits, while AI can be used to analyze
employee data and provide insights into employee behavior.
Overall, AI and chatbots have the potential to
revolutionize the way that businesses operate. By automating routine tasks,
improving customer service, and providing
insights into customer and employee behavior, these
technologies can help businesses become more efficient and effective.
IMPROVE QUESTIONING (PROMPT ENGINEERING)
1. Get Your Answers in Tabular Form
ChatGPT can give you responses in the form of a table
if you ask. This is particularly helpful for getting information or creative
ideas.
2. Using follow-up prompts and natural language, you
can have ChatGPT make changes to the tables its drawn and even produce them in
a standard format that can be understood by another program (such as Microsoft
Excel).
3. Output Text in the Style of Your Favorite Author
With some careful prompting, you can get ChatGPT out
of its rather dull, matter-of-fact, default tone and into something much more
interesting—such as the style of your favorite author, perhaps.
You could go for the searing simplicity of an Ernest
Hemingway or Raymond Carver story, for instance, or the lyrical rhythm of a
Shakespearean play, or the density of a Dickens novel. The end results don’t
come close to the genius of the actual authors themselves, but it’s another way
of being more creative with the output you get.
3. Screenshot of ChatGPT messages on desktop
ChatGPT can produce output in all kinds of styles.
CHATGPT VIA DAVID NIELD
4. Set Limits on the Answers You Get
ChatGPT can really impress when it’s given
restrictions to work inside, so don’t be shy when it comes to telling the bot
to limit its responses to a certain number of words or a certain number of
paragraphs.
It could be everything from condensing the
information in four paragraphs down into one, or even asking for answers with
words of seven characters or fewer (just to keep it simple). If ChatGPT doesn’t
follow your responses properly, you can correct it, and it’ll try again.
5. Keep Your Audience in Mind
Another way of tweaking the way that ChatGPT responds
to you is to tell it who its audience is. You might have seen the videos in
which complex subjects are explained to people with different levels of
understanding, and this works in a similar way.
For example, you can tell ChatGPT that you are
speaking to a bunch of 10-year-olds or to an audience of business entrepreneurs
and it will respond accordingly. It works well for generating multiple outputs
along the same theme.
6. Screenshot of ChatGPT messages on desktop
Specify the audience to change the way that ChatGPT
responds. CHATGPT VIA DAVID NIELD
7. Produce Prompts for Other AI Engines
ChatGPT is a very capable prompt engineer itself. If
you ask it to come up with creative and effective inputs for artificial
intelligence engines such as Dall-E and Midjourney, you’ll get text you can
then input into other AI tools you’re playing around with. You’re even able to
ask for tips with prompts for ChatGPT itself.
8. When it comes to generating prompts, the more
detailed and specific you are about what you’re looking for the better: You can
get the chatbot to extend and add more detail to your sentences, you can get it
to role-play as a prompt generator for a specific AI tool, and you can tell it
to refine its answers as you add more and more information.
9. Get Your Outputs in the Form of ASCII Art
While ChatGPT is based around text, you can get it to
produce pictures of a sort by asking for ASCII art. That’s the art made up of
characters and symbols rather than colors. It won’t win you any prizes, but
it’s pretty fun to play around with.
10.The usual ChatGPT rules apply, in that the more
specific you are the better, and you can get the bot to add new elements and
take elements away as you go. Remember the limitations of the ASCII art format
though—this isn’t a full-blown image editor.
11. Copy and Paste Text From Other Sources
You don’t have to do all the typing yourself when it
comes to ChatGPT. Copy and paste is your friend, and there’s no problem with
pasting in text from other sources. While the input limit tops out at around
4,000 words, you can easily split the text you’re sending the bot into several
sections and get it to remember what you’ve previously said.
Perhaps one of the best ways of using this approach
is to get ChatGPT to simplify text that you don’t understand—the explanation of
a difficult scientific concept, for instance. You can also get it to translate
text into different languages, write it in a more engaging or fluid style, and
so on.
12. Screenshot of ChatGPT messages on desktop
Pull in text from elsewhere on the web to use with
ChatGPT.
13. Provide Examples to Work With
Another way to improve the responses you get from
ChatGPT is to give it some data to work with before you ask your question. For
instance, you could give it a list of book summaries together with their genre,
then ask it to apply the correct genre label to a new summary. Another option
would be to tell ChatGPT about activities you enjoy and then get a new
suggestion.
There’s no magic combination of words you have to use
here. Just use natural language as always, and ChatGPT will understand what
you’re getting at. Specify that you’re providing examples at the start of your
prompt, then tell the bot that you want a response with those examples in mind.
14. Act Out a Role-Play
In the same way that ChatGPT can mimic the style of
certain authors that it knows about, it can also play a role: a frustrated
salesman, an excitable teenager (you’ll most likely get a lot of emojis and
abbreviations back), or the iconic Western star John Wayne.
The types of roles you can play around with are
almost endless. These prompts might not score highly in terms of practical
applications, but they’re definitely a useful insight into the potential of
these AI chatbots.
15. Screenshot of ChatGPT messages on desktop
ChatGPT can answer in any style you like, if you ask.
CHATGPT VIA DAVID NIELD
Get Answers That Are More Than the Sum of Their Parts
Your answers can be seriously improved if you give
ChatGPT some ingredients to work with before asking for a response. They could
be literal ingredients—suggest a dish from what’s left in the fridge—or they
could be anything else.
16.So don’t just ask for a murder mystery scenario.
Also list out the characters who are going to appear. Don’t just ask for ideas
of where to go in a city; specify the city you’re going to, the types of places
you want to see, and the people you’ll have with you.
17. Hear Both Sides of a Debate
You’ve no doubt noticed how binary arguments have
tended to get online in recent years, so get the help of ChatGPT to add some
gray in between the black and white. It’s able to argue both sides of an
argument if you ask it to, including both pros and cons.
From politics and philosophy to sports and the arts,
ChatGPT is able to sit on the fence quite impressively—not in a vague way, but
in a way that can help you understand issues from multiple perspectives.
For the purposes of this guide, we tested these
prompts with GPT-4: The latest version of ChatGPT at the time of writing, but
only available to some users. However, they should work fine with older
versions of ChatGPT too.
18. Get Your Answers in Tabular Form
ChatGPT can give you responses in the form of a table
if you ask. This is particularly helpful for getting information or creative
ideas. For example, you could tabulate meal ideas and ingredients, or game
ideas and equipment, or the days of the week and how they’re said in a few
different languages.
ADVERTISING
19. Using follow-up prompts and natural language, you
can have ChatGPT make changes to the tables its drawn and even produce them in
a standard format that can be understood by another program (such as Microsoft
Excel).
20. Output Text in the Style of Your Favorite Author
With some careful prompting, you can get ChatGPT out
of its rather dull, matter-of-fact, default tone and into something much more
interesting—such as the style of your favorite author, perhaps.
You could go for the searing simplicity of an Ernest
Hemingway or Raymond Carver story, for instance, or the lyrical rhythm of a
Shakespearean play, or the density of a Dickens novel. The end results don’t
come close to the genius of the actual authors themselves, but it’s another way
of being more creative with the output you get.
ADVERTISEMENT
21. Screenshot of ChatGPT messages on desktop
ChatGPT can produce output in all kinds of styles.
CHATGPT VIA DAVID NIELD
Set Limits on the Answers You Get
ChatGPT can really impress when it’s given
restrictions to work inside, so don’t be shy when it comes to telling the bot to
limit its responses to a certain number of words or a certain number of
paragraphs.
22. It could be everything from condensing the
information in four paragraphs down into one, or even asking for answers with
words of seven characters or fewer (just to keep it simple). If ChatGPT doesn’t
follow your responses properly, you can correct it, and it’ll try again.
23. Keep Your Audience in Mind
Another way of tweaking the way that ChatGPT responds
to you is to tell it who its audience is. You might have seen the videos in
which complex subjects are explained to people with different levels of
understanding, and this works in a similar way.
For example, you can tell ChatGPT that you are
speaking to a bunch of 10-year-olds or to an audience of business entrepreneurs
and it will respond accordingly. It works well for generating multiple outputs
along the same theme.
ADVERTISEMENT
Screenshot of ChatGPT messages on desktop
Specify the audience to change the way that ChatGPT
responds. CHATGPT VIA DAVID NIELD
Produce Prompts for Other AI Engines
ChatGPT is a very capable prompt engineer itself. If
you ask it to come up with creative and effective inputs for artificial
intelligence engines such as Dall-E and Midjourney, you’ll get text you can
then input into other AI tools you’re playing around with. You’re even able to
ask for tips with prompts for ChatGPT itself.
When it comes to generating prompts, the more
detailed and specific you are about what you’re looking for the better: You can
get the chatbot to extend and add more detail to your sentences, you can get it
to role-play as a prompt generator for a specific AI tool, and you can tell it
to refine its answers as you add more and more information.
23. Get Your Outputs in the Form of ASCII Art
While ChatGPT is based around text, you can get it to
produce pictures of a sort by asking for ASCII art. That’s the art made up of
characters and symbols rather than colors. It won’t win you any prizes, but
it’s pretty fun to play around with.
The usual ChatGPT rules apply, in that the more
specific you are the better, and you can get the bot to add new elements and
take elements away as you go. Remember the limitations of the ASCII art format
though—this isn’t a full-blown image editor.
24. Copy and Paste Text From Other Sources
You don’t have to do all the typing yourself when it
comes to ChatGPT. Copy and paste is your friend, and there’s no problem with
pasting in text from other sources. While the input limit tops out at around
4,000 words, you can easily split the text you’re sending the bot into several
sections and get it to remember what you’ve previously said.
Perhaps one of the best ways of using this approach
is to get ChatGPT to simplify text that you don’t understand—the explanation of
a difficult scientific concept, for instance. You can also get it to translate
text into different languages, write it in a more engaging or fluid style, and
so on.
ADVERTISEMENT
Screenshot of ChatGPT messages on desktop
25. Pull in text from elsewhere on the web to use
with ChatGPT. CHATGPT VIA DAVID NIELD
Provide Examples to Work With
Another way to improve the responses you get from
ChatGPT is to give it some data to work with before you ask your question. For
instance, you could give it a list of book summaries together with their genre,
then ask it to apply the correct genre label to a new summary. Another option
would be to tell ChatGPT about activities you enjoy and then get a new
suggestion.
There’s no magic combination of words you have to use
here. Just use natural language as always, and ChatGPT will understand what
you’re getting at. Specify that you’re providing examples at the start of your
prompt, then tell the bot that you want a response with those examples in mind.
26. Act Out a Role-Play
In the same way that ChatGPT can mimic the style of
certain authors that it knows about, it can also play a role: a frustrated
salesman, an excitable teenager (you’ll most likely get a lot of emojis and
abbreviations back), or the iconic Western star John Wayne.
The types of roles you can play around with are
almost endless. These prompts might not score highly in terms of practical
applications, but they’re definitely a useful insight into the potential of
these AI chatbots.
ADVERTISEMENT
Screenshot of ChatGPT messages on desktop
ChatGPT can answer in any style you like, if you ask.
CHATGPT VIA DAVID NIELD
Get Answers That Are More Than the Sum of Their Parts
Your answers can be seriously improved if you give
ChatGPT some ingredients to work with before asking for a response. They could
be literal ingredients—suggest a dish from what’s left in the fridge—or they
could be anything else.
So don’t just ask for a murder mystery scenario. Also
list out the characters who are going to appear. Don’t just ask for ideas of
where to go in a city; specify the city you’re going to, the types of places
you want to see, and the people you’ll have with you.
Hear Both Sides of a Debate
You’ve no doubt noticed how binary arguments have
tended to get online in recent years, so get the help of ChatGPT to add some
gray in between the black and white. It’s able to argue both sides of an
argument if you ask it to, including both pros and cons.
From politics and philosophy to sports and the arts,
ChatGPT is able to sit on the fence quite impressively—not in a vague way, but
in a way that can help you understand issues from multiple perspectives.
BEST QUESTIONS TO ASK CHAT GPT IN 2023
Artificial intelligence (AI) has recently emerged as
a powerful tool with the potential to revolutionize numerous aspects of our
life. Recently, OpenAI released its new ChatGPT system. This is a system
designed for natural language traffic based on machine learning. It can
influence human speech and is, therefore, capable of communicating with humans.
ChatGPT can learn to respond to specific messages and adapt to the conversation.
Over time, the more a tool is utilized, the better it will become.
A prompt is a phrase or set of keywords used as input
to an artificial intelligence tool like ChatGPT. The tool then attempts to
analyze and comprehend the input and generates a response automatically.
Therefore, you must formulate your prompts so the tool can comprehend.
AI is beginning to affect the creation of chatbots.
Today, chatbots play an increasingly important role in our lives, providing
quick access to information and assistance. Chatbots are computer programs
designed to simulate human-to-human interaction, particularly over the
internet.
ChatGPT is a model of artificial intelligence that
can hold a conversation. It’s a chatbot like the ones used in automated chat
support systems for customers. It was developed by OpenAI, a technology
research company dedicated to ensuring that artificial intelligence benefits
humanity.
ChatGPT recognizes and responds to various
conversational inputs, such as questions, assertions, and instructions. It can
hold a conversation with users more naturally and human-like, making it useful
for chatbots, customer service representatives, and digital assistants.
ChatGPT is a sibling model to InstructGPT, which is
trained to follow a command in a prompt and provide a detailed response.
With Chat GPT’s powerful natural language processing,
SEO experts can optimize website content and boost search engine rankings.
Using Chat GPT prompts, SEOs can create high-quality, unique, and engaging
content to attract and retain users while demonstrating to search engines that
their website is valuable and relevant.
Chat GPT is a vital tool for natural language
processing that SEO specialists can use to improve search engine rankings and
optimize website content. By utilizing Chat GPT prompts, SEOs can generate
high-quality, original, and engaging content that will attract and retain users
while signaling to search engines that their website is highly relevant. Here
are some examples of Chat GPT prompts for developers:
“Create a list of five Chat GPT features that
facilitate debugging.”
“Create a blog post outlining the benefits of using
Chat GPT for agile development.”
Create a list of five Chat GPT features that can be
used to improve documentation.”
“Discuss a Chat GPT plugin for your preferred IDE.”
Moreover, As a game designer, you understand the
significance of providing players with engaging and immersive experiences. Chat
GPT is a potent tool that can assist you in all facets of game development,
from idea generation to testing and debugging. Examples include:
“Write a tutorial on how to generate game ideas using
Chat GPT.”
“Create a list of five Chat GPT features that can aid
in the creation of games.”
Utilizing such Chat GPT prompts can maximize this
powerful tool and enhance your game development skills. Whether you’re
developing a small indie game or a massive AAA game, Chat GPT has the resources
to help you succeed.
Finally, Chat GPT is a useful tool for programmers of
all experience levels, whether you’re a seasoned pro or just starting. Using
the 12 best Chatp GPT prompts, you can maximize Chat GPT and improve your
programming skills. So, why wait? Try Chat GPT to see how it can assist your
programming career.
- Digital
Marketing
- All Courses

Learn Something Every Day Yourself
Learn to Learn Yourself using ChatGPT & AI
Dr Colonel John Chenetra
Founder
Student
to Manager to CEO through Continuous Learning
Get Job

LEARN TO LEARN SKILLS
YOURSELF
METHODOLOGY
1. Learn Job Skills from Webinars, Videos & Blogs
2. Research the subject using ChatGPT & AI Tools
3. Practice the Skill using Exercises in oversimplify.in
4. Apply in ‘Real Life’ & master the skill
5. Chose another Skill & Master it
This guides students for grooming themselves
to become employable (Industry Ready).
It introduces a daily schedule for
students to use short Videos on a daily basis.
This habit will propel the student to Top
Leaders in the Corporate World –
What is the biggest predictor of Success – It
is GRIT (Passion + Perseverance) – https://youtu.be/GfF2e0vyGM4?si=AIMZC5Tgpf2ioi3U
Watch these short
videos before you start the Course
|
|
Job
Interview Training – https://youtu.be/gCrA-pFe7Zo?si=FxK_XHpeUuQqN4LR
Biggest predictor of
Success – It is GRIT (Passion + Perseverance) – https://youtu.be/GfF2e0vyGM4?si=AIMZC5Tgpf2ioi3U
Top
Interview Questions https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BguYUJ7cWrs
Salary
Negotiations’ Guide https://www.youtube.com/shorts/6bXJBLWBecA
How
to overcome the fear of Public Speaking- https://youtu.be/80UVjkcxGmA?si=Cqo1w3-cVWnjuBa5
What
words spoken well can do https://youtu.be/Iqq1roF4C8s?si=PLhufNvIvye6hIdC
Why
Public Speaking is important for your career https://youtu.be/cmwTl7LXAR8?si=Teg7uXFTaY1YdZ_d
How
to speak fluently https://youtu.be/VVhuLMELEcY?si=vzc676KQ142G9Prs
Behavioral
Skills’ Training https://www.youtube.com/watch?vPUTbDB6etVs
Top
7 Interview Questions https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ar_lpoZi-cl&list=PLvoqzZu9FF7dlfcpzt-SMF1xLMncTPi79&index=3
Why Choose Us?
Team of Industry
Experts headed by Dr (Colonel) JC John a War Veteran, Trainer & Public
Speaker
Learn Online through
out your life under a Mentor at Your Own Pace using AI & Chat GPT
Profile of Dr
(Colonel) JC John
He is an Army veteran with 22 years of
Corporate experience as CEO, COO, Chief Marketing Officer, Director and as
PROJECT HEAD of the WORLD BANK Gujarat Earthquake Reconstruction Project at
Bhuj. He also set up a joint venture with Clough Engineering (Australia).He is
a well known Public Speaker, Motivator & Coach with a passion for training
the under privileged youth.
OUR LOCATION
https://youtu.be/80UVjkcxGmAhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cjs7dyzLVco%20%20https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XIXvKKEQQJohttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o3K_HbpWNpghttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XHOmBV4js_Ehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cjs7dyzLVco%20%
Oversimplify.in is a powerful platform that
simplifies acquisition of complex skills and practices you in these skills in an
easy-to-understand manner.
SOFT
SKILLS
• Communication. (Written and
Verbal) are of utmost importance in the workplace because they set the
tone for how people perceive you.
• Teamwork.
• Adaptability.
• Problem solving&Critical observation.
• Conflict resolution.
• Strong Work Ethic.
• Positive Attitude.
• Good Communication Skills.
• Time Management Abilities.
• Problem-Solving Skills.
• Acting as a Team Player.
• Self-Confidence.
• Ability to Accept and Learn From Criticism.
• Leadership Skills. Companies want employees who can supervise and direct
other workers.
• Problem Solving Skills.
• Work Ethic. …
• Flexibility/Adaptability &Interpersonal Skills.
Communications
TYPES OF COMMUNICATION
Only
7 % of communication happens through words and 93% of communication happens
through non-verbal cues of which:
1.
o 55% through facial expressions
o 38% through vocal tones
VERBAL COMMUNICATION
1.
Conversations
2.
Discussions
3.
Telephonic discussions
4.
Video Conference
NON VERBAL COMMUNICATION
2.
– Communication is far more than what you say. It’s how you say.
Body Language is “How you say it”. It involves intrapersonal communication,
understanding yourself and participating in effective self-communication
3.
Body language includes :-
- Kinesics, Proxemics & Paralanguage
- Intention
- Manner: directness, sincerity
- Dress and clothing (style, color, Appropriateness for
situation)
- Signs & Symbols.
INTERESTING THINGS ABOUT BODY LANGUAGE
- It has no words or sentences, but it does send bits of
information that combine into messages.
- Those messages, which are sometimes clear and sometimes
fuzzy, are mostly about your feelings.
- People can learn to read those messages with a fair
degree of accuracy.
- You cannot not have body language- you are sending
messages nonverbally all the time. Especially when you are trying not to!
- Your preferred body positions and movements do say
something about the kind of person you are.
- If your words say one thing and your body another then
people will believe your body, not your words.
- You can change how you’re feeling by consciously
changing your body language.
COMMUNICATION SECRETS
- Effective and persuasive communication is the greatest
of all the keys to success.
- Success = Talking so people listen and listening so
people talk
- People are attracted to the people who make them feel
secure, free and happy.
- By making others feel special; they will realize how
special you are.
- How do you inspire people to communicate your point of
view?
- How do you encourage people in your life who currently
ignore your ideas may reconsider and take notice?
- What simple things can you do so people will pay
attention to what U have to say at home, at work, among professional
circles ?
ACTIVE LISTENING
- It’s about listening and responding and the act of
mutually disclosing inner feelings and thoughts to others. Listening goes
beyond attentively waiting for other people to stop talking. It really
means getting inside of their hearts and minds and experiencing life
situations
- Listen for concepts, key ideas and facts.
- Be able to distinguish between evidence and argument,
idea and example, fact and principle.
- Analyze the key points
- Look for unspoken messages in the speaker’s tone of
voice or expressions
- Keep an open mind.
- Ask questions that clarify.
- Reserve judgment until the speaker has finished
- Take meaningful notes that are brief and to the point
- Avoid distractions
- Do not interrupt unnecessarily
- Be active (show interest)
- Paraphrase what you’ve heard
- Throw an echo
BODY LANGUAGE OF AN ACTIVE LISTENER
- The Listener keeps looking at the speaker
- The Listener’s body is in ‘open’ position
- The listener is smiling with a pleasant
&encouraging expression
- Listener looks relaxed but alert, neither tense nor
slouching
- Listener utters humming sounds
WHILE SPEAKING OVER PHONE
- Write down in advance what you want to say and in what
order
- Smile
- Speak slowly
- Always be polite and friendly
- For long messages, follow a script
- Monitor your time
- Be clear and concise (tone, accent, emphasis,
pronunciation)
- Cite negative opinions honestly, but in a positive
manner
- Seek Feedback
STEPS
TO BECOME A LEADER
1.
Get your employees to want to do their job. Avoid controlling
their every move.
2.
Share your vision, enthusiasm and energy
3.
Motivate employees with tangible rewards&your concerns for
their wellbeing & progress
4.
Be accessible and transparent
5.
Be strong and effective
6.
Be a role model
7.
Avoid exploiting your position
8.
Find &Take full advantage of the skills and talents of your
staff
9.
Give credit and take the blame care of yourself
Life Plan & Self
Study: Learn Digital Marketing
Website Building

As
we enter the year 2023, the world of business continues to evolve at an
unprecedented pace. One of the key drivers of success in today’s marketplace is
having a strong online presence, and a website plays a crucial role in
achieving this goal.
In
this day and age, a website is more than just a digital business card. It’s a
powerful marketing tool that can help you reach new customers, build brand
awareness, and establish credibility in your industry. Let’s take a closer look
at the importance of having a website in 2023.
First
and foremost, a website allows you to be present where your customers are: online.
As the internet becomes more and more integrated into our daily lives, the
majority of people turn to search engines to find products and services. Having
a website means that you can be found by potential customers who are searching
for exactly what you offer.
In
addition, a website is the perfect platform to showcase your products or
services. You can use high-quality images, videos, and written content to
highlight the features and benefits of what you offer. This helps you to
attract new customers and keep existing ones engaged.
Another
important aspect of having a website is that it allows you to establish
credibility in your industry. A well-designed and professional-looking website
sends a message to your customers that you are serious about what you do. It
shows that you are willing to invest time, effort, and resources into providing
a high-quality product or service.
Furthermore,
a website is a powerful tool for building relationships with your customers.
You can use your website to communicate with them, provide valuable
information, and offer special deals or promotions. By keeping your customers
engaged and informed, you can build trust and loyalty that will translate into
long-term success.
But
it’s not just about attracting new customers and building relationships with
existing ones. A website can also streamline your business operations and
improve your bottom line. For example, you can use your website to automate
sales processes, accept payments online, and manage customer data. This can save
you time and money, and allow you to focus on other important aspects of your
business.
In
today’s digital age, having a website is also crucial for staying competitive.
Your competitors are most likely online, and if you’re not, you’re missing out
on potential business. By having a website, you can level the playing field and
compete with other businesses in your industry.
Lastly,
a website is an investment in the future of your business. As the world becomes
more and more interconnected, having a strong online presence will only become
more important. By establishing a website now, you are setting yourself up for
success in the years to come.
In
conclusion, a website is no longer a luxury, but a necessity for businesses in
2023. It’s an essential tool for attracting new customers, building
relationships with existing ones, establishing credibility, streamlining
operations, staying competitive, and investing in the future of your business.
Whether you’re a small business owner or a large corporation, having a website
should be a top priority. So, if you haven’t already, it’s time to take the
leap and invest in a website for your business.
Search Engine
Optimaisation
Grow
Your Business In a Competitive Marketplace With Search Engine Marketing
Search
engine marketing, or SEM, is one of the most effective ways to grow your
business in an increasingly competitive marketplace. With millions of
businesses out there all vying for the same eyeballs, it’s never been more
important to advertise online, and search engine marketing is the most
effective way to promote your products and grow your business.
In
this guide, you’ll learn an overview of search engine marketing basics as well
as some tips and strategies for doing search engine marketing right.
SEO – Search Engine Optimisation

Increase
Your Digital Visibility with SEO
SEO
stands for “search engine optimization.” In simple terms, it means the process
of improving your site to increase its visibility when people search for
products or services related to your business in Google, Bing, and other search
engines. The better visibility your pages have in search results, the more
likely you are to garner attention and attract prospective and existing
customers to your business.
Search
engines such as Google and Bing use bots to crawl pages on the web, going from
site to site, collecting information about those pages and putting them in an
index. Think of the index as a giant library where a librarian can pull up a
book (or a web page) to help you find exactly what you’re looking for at the
time.
Next,
algorithms analyze pages in the index, taking into account hundreds of ranking
factors or signals, to determine the order pages should appear in the search
results for a given query. In our library analogy, the librarian has read every
single book in the library and can tell you exactly which one will have the
answers to your questions.
Our
SEO success factors can be considered proxies for aspects of the user
experience. It’s how search bots estimate exactly how well a website or
web page can give the searcher what they’re searching for.
Unlike
paid search ads, you can’t pay search engines to get higher organic search
rankings, which means SEO experts have to put in the work. That’s where we come
in.
Our
Periodic Table of SEO Factors organizes the factors into six main categories
and weights each based on its overall importance to SEO. For example, content
quality and keyword research are key factors of content optimization, and
crawlability and speed are important site architecture factors.
The
newly updated SEO Periodic Table also includes a list of Toxins that detract
from SEO best practices. These are shortcuts or tricks that may have been sufficient
to guarantee a high ranking back in the day when the engines’ methods were much
less sophisticated. And, they might even work for a short time now — at least
until you’re caught.
We’ve
also got a brand new Niches section that deep-dives into the SEO success
factors behind three key niches: Local SEO, News/Publishing, and e-commerce
SEO. While our overall SEO Periodic Table will help you with the best
practices, knowing the nuances of SEO for each of these Niches can help you
succeed in search results for your small business, recipe blog, and/or online
store.
The
search algorithms are designed to surface relevant, authoritative pages and
provide users with an efficient search experience. Optimizing your site and
content with these factors in mind can help your pages rank higher in the
search results.
Search Engine Marketing – An Overview
Search
engine marketing is the practice of marketing a business using paid
advertisements that appear on search engine results pages (or SERPs).
Advertisers bid on keywords that users of services such as Google and Bing
might enter when looking for certain products or services, which gives the
advertiser the opportunity for their ads to appear alongside results for those
search queries.
These
ads, often known by the term pay-per-click ads, come in a variety of formats.
Some are small, text-based ads, whereas others, such as product listing ads
(PLAs, also known as Shopping ads) are more visual, product-based
advertisements that allow consumers to see important information at-a-glance,
such as price and reviews.
Search
engine marketing’s greatest strength is that it offers advertisers the
opportunity to put their ads in front of motivated customers who are ready to
buy at the precise moment they’re ready to make a purchase. No other
advertising medium can do this, which is why search engine marketing is so
effective and such an amazingly powerful way to grow your business.
SMO -Social Media Optimisation

As
we enter the year 2023, the world of business continues to evolve at an
unprecedented pace. One of the key drivers of success in today’s marketplace is
having a strong online presence, and a website plays a crucial role in
achieving this goal.
In
this day and age, a website is more than just a digital business card. It’s a
powerful marketing tool that can help you reach new customers, build brand
awareness, and establish credibility in your industry. Let’s take a closer look
at the importance of having a website in 2023.
First
and foremost, a website allows you to be present where your customers are:
online. As the internet becomes more and more integrated into our daily lives,
the majority of people turn to search engines to find products and services.
Having a website means that you can be found by potential customers who are
searching for exactly what you offer.
In
addition, a website is the perfect platform to showcase your products or
services. You can use high-quality images, videos, and written content to
highlight the features and benefits of what you offer. This helps you to
attract new customers and keep existing ones engaged.
Another
important aspect of having a website is that it allows you to establish
credibility in your industry. A well-designed and professional-looking website
sends a message to your customers that you are serious about what you do. It
shows that you are willing to invest time, effort, and resources into providing
a high-quality product or service.
Furthermore,
a website is a powerful tool for building relationships with your customers.
You can use your website to communicate with them, provide valuable
information, and offer special deals or promotions. By keeping your customers
engaged and informed, you can build trust and loyalty that will translate into
long-term success.
But
it’s not just about attracting new customers and building relationships with
existing ones. A website can also streamline your business operations and
improve your bottom line. For example, you can use your website to automate
sales processes, accept payments online, and manage customer data. This can
save you time and money, and allow you to focus on other important aspects of
your business.
In
today’s digital age, having a website is also crucial for staying competitive.
Your competitors are most likely online, and if you’re not, you’re missing out
on potential business. By having a website, you can level the playing field and
compete with other businesses in your industry.
Lastly,
a website is an investment in the future of your business. As the world becomes
more and more interconnected, having a strong online presence will only become
more important. By establishing a website now, you are setting yourself up for
success in the years to come.
In
conclusion, a website is no longer a luxury, but a necessity for businesses in
2023. It’s an essential tool for attracting new customers, building
relationships with existing ones, establishing credibility, streamlining
operations, staying competitive, and investing in the future of your business.
Whether you’re a small business owner or a large corporation, having a website
should be a top priority. So, if you haven’t already, it’s time to take the
leap and invest in a website f
Social Media
Optimaisation
SMM – Social Media Marketing

Social
Media Marketing To Reach Prospects & Customers
Social
media marketing is a powerful way for businesses of all sizes to reach
prospects and customers. People discover, learn about, follow, and shop from
brands on social media, so if you’re not on platforms like Facebook, Instagram,
and LinkedIn, you’re missing out! Great marketing on social media can bring
remarkable success to your business, creating devoted brand advocates and even
driving leads and sales.
Social
media marketing is a form of digital marketing that leverages the power
of popular
social media networks to achieve your marketing
and branding goals. But it’s not just about creating business accounts and
posting when you feel like it. Social media marketing requires an evolving
strategy with measurable goals and includes:
- Maintaining
and optimizing
your profiles.
- Posting pictures,
videos, stories, and live videos that represent your brand and attract a
relevant audience.
- Responding to
comments, shares, and likes and monitoring your reputation.
- Following and
engaging with followers, customers, and influencers to build a community
around your brand.
Social
media marketing also includes paid
social media advertising, where you can pay to
have your business appear in front of large volumes of highly targeted users.
.
Direct Marketing
Learn
Direct Marketing To Generate More Sales
Direct
marketing is a type of marketing that involves communicating directly with
potential customers through various channels, such as email, direct mail,
telemarketing, and SMS. Unlike traditional forms of marketing that are intended
for mass audiences, direct marketing is highly targeted and personalized,
allowing businesses to reach specific individuals or groups with tailored
messages.
The
goal of direct marketing is to generate a response from the recipient, such as
making a purchase, signing up for a service, or attending an event. By creating
targeted campaigns that appeal to the interests and needs of specific
audiences, direct marketing can be an effective way to increase customer
engagement and drive sales.
Here
are some key benefits of direct marketing:
1.
Targeted messaging: Direct
marketing allows businesses to tailor their messages to specific audiences,
based on factors such as demographics, interests, and past purchase behavior.
By delivering highly relevant messages to the right people, businesses can
increase the likelihood of a response and improve ROI.
2.
Personalization: In addition to
targeting, direct marketing also allows for personalization. By using data such
as names, past purchases, and preferences, businesses can create messages that
feel more personal and engaging. This can help to build stronger relationships
with customers and increase loyalty.
3.
Measurable results: Direct
marketing campaigns are highly measurable, allowing businesses to track
responses and adjust their strategies accordingly. By analyzing metrics such as
open rates, click-through rates, and conversion rates, businesses can optimize
their campaigns for better results.
4.
Cost-effective: Direct marketing
can be a cost-effective way to reach specific audiences, especially when
compared to traditional forms of marketing such as TV or print advertising. By
targeting only those individuals who are most likely to respond, businesses can
avoid wasting money on ineffective campaigns.
5.
Quick feedback: Direct marketing
campaigns often generate quick feedback, allowing businesses to see the results
of their efforts in a short amount of time. This can help businesses to make
adjustments quickly and improve their ROI.
There
are several different channels that businesses can use for direct marketing.
Here are some of the most common:
1.
Email: Email marketing is a
popular form of direct marketing that involves sending promotional messages to
a list of subscribers. By segmenting email lists and tailoring messages to
specific audiences, businesses can increase the effectiveness of their
campaigns.
2.
Direct mail: Direct mail involves
sending promotional materials such as flyers, postcards, or catalogues to a
targeted list of recipients. While it can be more expensive than other forms of
direct marketing, direct mail can be highly effective when done correctly.
3.
Telemarketing: Telemarketing
involves calling potential customers directly to promote a product or service.
While it can be a controversial form of marketing, telemarketing can be
effective when done in a non-intrusive way.
4.
SMS: SMS marketing involves
sending text messages to potential customers with promotional messages or
offers. While it can be a relatively new form of direct marketing, SMS has
become increasingly popular in recent years due to its high open and response
rates.
.
Why Us?
Focuse
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ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.
Team
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ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.
In Time
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ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec
ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.
Result
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ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec
ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.
For Quotation Contact Us
Meet The Mentor

नमस्ते,
मैं हूँ संदीप भंसाली,
Digital
Azadi का रचेता। मैंने Digital Marketing का ज्ञान
अपने business
को ऑनलाइन ले जाने
के लिए सीखा।
जब मैं सीख रहा
था, मुझे डिजिटल मार्केटिंग में एक
Opportunity दिखाई दी। डिजिटल मार्केटिंग एक ग्रोइंग
सेक्टर है जिसमे हर
साल कई लाख जॉब
Opportunities आती हैं।
आज के इस डिजिटल
दौर में, हर कोई
अपने बिज़नेस को ऑनलाइन
ले जाना चाहता है
पर कई कारणों की वजह
से वह मुमकिन नहीं होता।
डिजिटल मार्केटिंग इतनी तेज़ी
से बढ़ रहा है,
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11 Sites for Free Online Education
10
Sites to learn Excel for free
1. Microsoft Excel Help Center
10
Sites to review your resume for free
10
Sites for Interview Preparation
1.
Identify your Passions, Strengths & Weakness and
decide ‘Type of Job, Company & Location.
2.
Open a gmail account & fix a password that you will
never forget.
3.
Select a mobile number that you will not change and a
smart phone.
4.
Take a passport photograph in a Formal Suit and a Tie
(Bust -Chest & Face only)
6.
Post CV on LinkedIn, Indeed, Naukri, Monster, Facebook,
Twitter (Short profile)
7.
Email CV as many placement agencies & contacts.
8.
Look for companies trying hire and register in Careers on
their websites.
9.
Speak to & Visit Placement Agencies & discuss your
skills & Salary expectations.
10.
Send CV to friends & use get referred through Employee
Referral Schemes.
www.naukri.com
https://www.topexecutivesearchfirms.com/
Interviews
HOW TO PREPARE
EMOTIONALLY FOR THE INTERVIEW
- Focused, enthusiastic,
confident, crisp & to the point, passionate, ambitious, team person.
- Your energy, maturity,
emotional stability& Cultural fit will determine whether you get
hired.
- First impression matters.
Normally the most qualified person never gets hired.
- Read the job description and research
company carefully. Ask for more details
- Look into the eyes of the
interviewer and act confidently.
- Be honest and enthusiastic and
highlight your strengths by giving examples of Important Qualities – Personality, Motivation, Leadership, Flexibility,
Decision Making, Go Getting Attitude, Conflict & Problem Solving
Skills, Loyalty, Integrity, Creativity
- Describe your personality
honestly and why this job excites you. Do not speak ill of your previous
company.
- Do not try making a Positive when
asked about a Weakness “I’m a perfectionist” and turn it into a positive.
Interviewers are not fooled. Honestly highlight a skill that you wish to
improve upon and describe what you are proactively doing to enhance your
skill.
Beliefs you must develop
You are a Winner & Good Things Will Happen
Failure is Not Final; Failure is Feedback
Patience is a Virtue
No One is a Finished Product
Everyone is Created for a Bigger Purpose
How to Dress up
- Males –
Formal (Coat & Tie), Females Formals or Saree, Sober Make up, light
Deodorant/Perfume, bag, Pen , Highlighter, Certificates, CV, Visiting
Card, Mobile Off, Reach 15 minutes early
HOW TO HOLD THE
INTERVIEWER’S ATTENTION?
Attention Level – 0 to 10 Seconds is 100% ,10 to 60
Seconds it falls to 50%, 60 to 90 it falls to almost 10% if there are no
interruptions. Near the end of your long response the interviewer starts to
formulate their next question unless you keep them engaged. By asking a
question you promote two-way communications and minimize the risk of talking
too much. This helps you ensure they are listening while you talk
SOME QUESTIONS YOU
SHOULD PREPARE FOR
Tell me about yourself?
EXAMPLE
“I am a presently ‘Senior
Executive Accounts’. I have a lot of experience in tax issues and audit.
(expertise and skills) My experience includes carrying internal audit for
ISO 9000 and resolving tax issues for the last 2 years (insert knowledge or
skill) I have worked in the Construction Industry and t6he Media
Industry. My background also includes roles as Junior Accountant (position
title), Senior Accountant (position title) and Senior Auditor (position
title). My education/certifications include CA (degree or certification)
and M. Com. I would like to be described by my Colleagues as ‘results focused’
& ‘details oriented. Highlights of my professional accomplishments include
winning the “Employee of the Year Award in 2003 and the ‘Best Suggestion Award
in 2004
- Why do you want to leave your
previous organization and join us?
EXAMPLE – “My company merged with another firm
and the new management wanted to bring in their own team. Prior to the merger I
was a strong performer with positive performance reviews.”
Provide References and Proof – Provide references from a former
colleague and boss to verify his performance. Demonstrating a confidence and
willingness to provide references to support your reasons for leaving is a
powerful way to ensure you are believed.
- Give an example of a successful
project, your role & why it succeeded?
- How would your subordinates
describe your management style, strengths & Weaknesses?
- Give me an example of handling
underperforming employee
- Where do you see the industry
going? What are you doing to stay on top of these changes?
- What are the most important
things to you about any job? Is it the pay, the opportunities,
feelings of self-worth, fellow employees, location, benefits, etc.?
- Tell me about a time when you
accomplished something significant that wouldn’t have happened if you had
not been there to make it happen.
- Describe for me a time when you
may have been disappointed in your behavior.
- Tell me about a time when you
had to discipline or fire a friend.
- Tell me about a time when
you’ve had to develop leaders under you.
- Do you want to ask me
something?
EXAMPLE OF QUESTIONS YOU MAY ASK
– What position are you considering me for?
– What are the top challenges that I’ll face in
this job?
– What are the characteristics of people who are most
successful in your company?
|
SOME QUESTIONS FRESHERS SHOULD PREPARE FOR |
1. Tell me about yourself.
2).
Why do you want to do an MBA
3.
Where do you see yourself 10 years down the line?
4)
What are your ambitions in life?
5.
Who is your hero and why?
6)
Which is the field you want to take and Why?
7.
What are the qualities of a good Leader?
8.
What if you do not get selected?
9.
You are a woman. How will you balance professional life and home?
1.
Tell me about yourself?
I
have just completed my degree in biotech. I have an army background. My dad was
in the army. He has taken premature retirement and is now in the corporate
world. My mom is a home maker and I have got a younger brother. We are a small
close knit family . I am a friendly and open person.
2.
Why do you want to do an MBA
I
come from In fact an army background. Everyone in my family has been in the
army or has been an employee. No one has ever started a business on their own.
I want to do MBA and get the knowledge of marketing & finance so that
sometime later I can start a business of my own. My role model is Mrs. Kiran M
Shaw who has opened a successful biotech co. I have just appeard for my final
year biotech. But I don’t want to continue Btech & do Msc. b’coz I feel it
is more important to know how to manage the business. I actually do not know
much about business now. My father is in the corporate world and would guide
me. I will work hard and build a successful future for myself.
3.
Where do you see yourself 10 years down the line?
I
will take up marketing because it is very interesting and very important to
build a business. I want to pick up some knowledge in finance and
hopefully get employment in a biotech firm later. Here I’ll learn how business
is done and gain experience. I’ll try to start business and hopefully
down the line I see myself as a budding entrepreneur. I work hard to make
my enterprise a success. I’ll try to build a good team of dedicated people with
whom I’ll share the success & the money which the enterprise makes.
5.Who
is your hero and why?
My
role model is Kiran Majumdar Shaw. I like her and admire her. I too want
to do something constructive in the field of business. She is one who has
started an enterprise built a strong team of managers around her & who can
be credited for being Pioneers in the biotech field in India. She has
mastered biotech as a subject and the mechanics of setting up and growing a
business. She has proved beyond doubts that a women have a good chance of
being successful in business.
6.
Which is the field you want to take and Why?
I
would like to take up marketing because its very interesting and also a very
important step in business because unless the products of the company are
marketed well, there is no scope for the expansion of the business by getting
good contracts and deals.
7.
What are the qualities of a good Leader?
A
good leader is firstly, a good listener. He must listen to others and consider
their suggestions. He must be patient. And he should not be self centred. He
should think of the group as a whole. He should be a motivator & should be
able to get the best out of the people. He should have a good understanding of
human behaviour. He should know when he should be compassionate and when
he should be aggressive and demanding. I believe, a correct balance of this
would make a good leader. He should have a ot of professional knowledge.
8.
What if you do not get selected?
I’m
quite sure I will get into one of the best business schools.
I
will go pick up some work in marketing or finance in a good company and learn
to work in a team
Psychological Preparation
How to prepare
emotionally for the Interview
- Worst
case – Not hired. –This is practice and I will learn from it. It is
one out of the 100 chances you will get. .
- I will
be honesty & frankness – God will decide the result
- I will
be Patient. I will not get stressed out. I will be positive and hopeful to
the end.
- There
is nothing to lose and all to gain.
- I will
not be negative about my present Employer or any thing else.
Group Discussion
HOW TO DO WELL IN A
GROUP DISCUSSION
- Grab the opportunity to be the
first speaker and to Introduce the topic. Keep a pre-prepaired 5 sentence
– EXAMPLE – Good Morning friends. – Name the Topic. – This has been the
center of discussion in many forums and it the media. This topic has great
importance s in our lives and I am glad that we are discussing this today.
As per my view – I believe that ———.
Now let us have the views of some of us.
- Listening carefully and look
for a chance of butting in (Don’t do this too often).
- Agreeing with a person and
elaborating it by giving an experience or examples
- Disagreeing & giving
examples.
- Looking on both sides of a
coin. Intervening to get a balanced view.
- Intervening during a conflict
between 2 people fighting immaturely.
- Co-operating & leading.
- No cornering or making fun of
participants
- Intervening & giving a
chance to a timid participant.
- Giving examples &
experiences
- If you
did not get a chance to start the discussion then you must try Concluding
(EXAMPLE –This has been an interesting discussion. We have got diverse
views. It appears to be evenly balances and hence we need to make our
individual choices —— not your own view, no final decision )
Personality Traits
Gauged in Group Discussion
- Ability
to interact in a team
- Communications
Skills
- Reasoning
ability.
- Leadership
skills.
- Initiative
& Enthusiasm.
- Assertiveness.
- Flexibility.
- Nurturing
& Coaching Ability.
- Creativity.
- Ability
to think in ones feet.
GROUP DISCUSSIONS
STARTING
A GD – Introducing the topic
Friends,
the topic given to us is —-This is perhaps among the most discussed
topics.
OR
This
is almost an abstract topic or this is a very controversial topic & has
been a subject of debate in the media and open forums.
As
there are always cain 2 sides of a a coin, this topic also will be viewed from
both sides.
Our
aim should be to evolve a balanced view or a consolidated opinion on this. The
way I understand this topic is —- some may say —- some may say —-. So let
us proceed.
Intervening
when discussion goes out of control.
Friends!
friends! I think we have to control this discussion. Otherwise vwe will end up
with everyone speaking & no one listening. And we will not be able to come
to a conclusion.
Let
us speak one by one & let us start with the people who have not got a
chance yet.
As
for me, as I’ve spoken now, I don’t mind being the last to speak.
Ok!
No.5 what is ur view on this? What woud u like to say?
CONCLUDING
THE DISCUSSION
Ok
friends, for the last 10-15 minutes, we have generated a very interesting
discussion. Some of us (smile) really pushing it very hard
So
what is our consolidated view on this?
I
think that the overall consensus is that —
Although
we need to consider the points brought out by some of us —-
Thus
I believe that we should do the following:-
1.
2.
3.
Written Test (Objective
& Essay Type)
OBJECTIVE TYPE
QUESTIONS : – Normally has 4 Answers
to select from
TYPES OF NEGATIVE MARKING
1. Correct Answer +1, Wrong Answer – 1 – ANSWER ONLY IF
YOU ARE SURE
2. Correct Answer +1, Wrong Answer – 0.5 – ANSWER ONLY IF
YOU CAN ELIMINATE 2
3. Correct Answer +1, Wrong Answer -0.25 – ANSWER EVEN IF
YOU CAN ELIMINATE 1
4. NO Negative Marking – MUST ANSWER ALL QUESTIONS
ASSUMPTION –
You are sure about (50 out of 100
Questions)
You can identify 1 wrong answer (34 out
of 100)
You can identify 2 wrong answers (16 out
of 100)
|
Negative
Marking |
+1& -1 |
+1 &-0.5 |
+1 -0.25 |
No Negative |
|
Strategy
– Answer if |
(Only sure) |
(Only if 2 eliminated) |
(if even 1 eliminated) |
Ans ALL |
|
Correct
Known(50) |
+50 |
+50 |
+50 |
+50 |
|
Eliminate
2 answer(16) |
0 |
+ (8*1)–(8*0.5)=4 |
+ (8*1)–(8*.25)=6 |
+8 |
|
Eliminate
1 answer(34) |
0 |
+(11.33*1)-(22.66*.5)=0 |
+(11.33*1)-(22.66*.25)=11.33-5.67=17 |
+17 |
|
Total
Marks |
+50 |
+54 |
+ 73 |
+75 |
ESSAY TYPE
PAPER:-
Divide Time by number of marks to find
number minutes you can spend per mark and multiply by the marks for each
Question. Then spend that much on that particular Question.
NOTE :- BASIC AIM IS NOT TO LEAVE ANY
QUESTION – WRITE SOMETHING (minimum 10 lines)
Try to use the below format where ever
possible:-
CENTER HEADING
Group Heading.
These are Group Headings like Introduction,
Factors to be Considered, Effects of Factors & Conclusion
Introduction
For Group Heading have no full stop in
the end & the writing starts on the 2 nd line. If you have multiple Factors
here also then you list them under Para Headings as follows:-
1. Cause 1. This is
described in sentences starting on the same line
2. Cause 2. Para Heading
are in Bold. The writing starts on the next line. When you have
multiple Factors to be considered then under each Para Heading you list
them under Sub Para Headings as follows:-
a. Sub Para Heading.
b. Effect of Cause 2:-
i. Sub Sub Para Heading
ii. Result 2 is Severe Poverty
NOTE –
ALL LEVELS OF THE
HEADINGS (Group Heading, Para Headings, Sub Para Headings and Sub Para Headings
are in BOLD & are underlined.
Exam Shortcuts
Read Syllabus
Highlight When Reading
Speech Notes (mobile app) to dictate into
(to get Notes)
2 to 5 Practice Papers must be done with
proper Time Management
Never leave any Question Blank except in
Objective Tests where Negative marking is more HALF
Studying for Retention
- Highlight
or underline as you are reading.
- Write
important points / new words in the margin
- Read
Preface, Executive Summary and about the Author before you start the book.
- First
run through the index.
- After
you finish each chapter dictate the main points into a voice dictation
software like Speech Notes (Android Play Store)
- Carry
out an exercise or project to use that knowledge practically within 1
week.
Salary
It is best to avoid this question about
your current salary during the first interview. However if it is asked again it
should be given correctly – otherwise it will create problems later. If asked
what your current expectations you can safely ask for an increase of 30%.
CAREER SETTLING DOWN
- Most
Important subject (both personal & professional).
- Not
taught but learned (eg Gandhi).
- Not
theory but practical.
- Most
important to understand the reporting structure and the “Norms for
communication laid down in a company & Rules for the class ”
These are not normally written down. You must read the HR Manual and the
Employee Hand book thoroughly. Ask the HR to brief you in detail.
- Find a
buddy who has been in the organization for over 2 years and take his help
to understand the internal politics and power struggles and avoid them.
- Understand
the etiquettes of not only speaking but also written, e mail, phone
call, body language that is established.
Boss Handling
- Don’t try to get too close too
soon
- Take notes and see that you
complete assignments before time
- Discuss problems and obstacles
directly with the boss well before the time line.
- Be honest and ask for training
as soon as a task is assigned to you.
- Go well prepared for meetings
and show that you fit into his team culturally and competence wise
- Never speak behind any one’s
back.
- Show enthusiasm and energy and
willingness to take bigger responsibilities.
Building a reputation
- Project a business like
personality with great dependability and hardworking nature
- Don’t try to please everyone or
get too close to seniors
- Show focus to adhere to time
lines.
- Be honest and show willingness
to learn.
- Show that you are a good team
man and a good cultural fit
- Show dislike for gossip and
politics.
- Show enthusiasm and energy and willingness to take bigger
responsibilities.
Handling Office Politics
- Don’t try form groups
- Never try to corner any one
- Discuss personal problems in
private with your boss only.
- Be honest and never try to
manipulate.
- Understand the power structure
and the tendencies of each person and the groupism.
- Never
speak behind any one’s back.
SOFT SKILLS
- Communication.
(Written and Verbal) are of utmost importance in the workplace
because they set the tone for how people perceive you.
- Teamwork.
- Adaptability.
- Problem
solving &Critical observation.
- Conflict
resolution.
- Strong
Work Ethic.
- Positive
Attitude.
- Good
Communication Skills.
- Time
Management Abilities.
- Problem-Solving
Skills.
- Acting
as a Team Player.
- Self-Confidence.
- Ability
to Accept and Learn From Criticism.
- Leadership
Skills. Companies want employees who can supervise and direct other
workers.
- Problem
Solving Skills.
- Work
Ethic. …
- Flexibility/Adaptability &Interpersonal Skills
Communications
TYPES OF COMMUNICATION
Only 7 % of communication happens
through words and 93% of communication happens through non-verbal cues of
which:
· 55% through facial expressions
· 38% through vocal tones
VERBAL COMMUNICATION
1. Conversations
2. Discussions
3. Telephonic discussions
4. Video Conference
NON VERBAL
COMMUNICATION
2. – Communication is far more than what you say. It’s
how you say. Body Language is “How you say it”. It involves intrapersonal
communication, understanding yourself and participating in effective
self-communication
3. Body language includes :-
- Kinesics,
Proxemics & Paralanguage
- Intention
- Manner:
directness, sincerity
- Dress
and clothing (style, color, Appropriateness for situation)
- Signs
& Symbols.
INTERESTING THINGS
ABOUT BODY LANGUAGE
- It has
no words or sentences, but it does send bits of information that combine
into messages.
- Those
messages, which are sometimes clear and sometimes fuzzy, are mostly about
your feelings.
- People
can learn to read those messages with a fair degree of accuracy.
- You
cannot not have body language- you are sending messages nonverbally all
the time. Especially when you are trying not to!
- Your
preferred body positions and movements do say something about the kind of
person you are.
- If your
words say one thing and your body another then people will believe your
body, not your words.
- You can
change how you’re feeling by consciously changing your body language.
COMMUNICATION SECRETS
- Effective
and persuasive communication is the greatest of all the keys to
success.
- Success
= Talking so people listen and listening so people talk
- People
are attracted to the people who make them feel secure, free and
happy.
- By
making others feel special; they will realize how special you are.
- How do
you inspire people to communicate your point of view?
- How do
you encourage people in your life who currently ignore your ideas may
reconsider and take notice?
- What
simple things can you do so people will pay attention to what U have to
say at home, at work, among professional circles ?
ACTIVE LISTENING
- It’s
about listening and responding and the act of mutually disclosing inner
feelings and thoughts to others. Listening goes beyond attentively waiting
for other people to stop talking. It really means getting inside of their
hearts and minds and experiencing life situations
- Listen
for concepts, key ideas and facts.
- Be able
to distinguish between evidence and argument, idea and example, fact and
principle.
- Analyze
the key points
- Look
for unspoken messages in the speaker’s tone of voice or expressions
- Keep an
open mind.
- Ask
questions that clarify.
- Reserve
judgment until the speaker has finished
- Take
meaningful notes that are brief and to the point
- Avoid
distractions
- Do not
interrupt unnecessarily
- Be
active (show interest)
- Paraphrase
what you’ve heard
- Throw
an echo
BODY LANGUAGE OF AN
ACTIVE LISTENER
- The
Listener keeps looking at the speaker
- The
Listener’s body is in ‘open’ position
- The
listener is smiling with a pleasant &encouraging expression
- Listener
looks relaxed but alert, neither tense nor slouching
- Listener
utters humming sounds
WHILE SPEAKING OVER
PHONE
- Write
down in advance what you want to say and in what order
- Smile
- Speak
slowly
- Always
be polite and friendly
- For
long messages, follow a script
- Monitor
your time
- Be
clear and concise (tone, accent, emphasis, pronunciation)
- Cite
negative opinions honestly, but in a positive manner
- Seek
Feedback
PUBLIC SPEAKING
- Video
on necessity
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cjs7dyzLVco
- Most
important to rise in career
- Leaders
greatest asset
- Shows
confidence and competence
- Convey
information correctly and motivate
- Saves
effort and achieves quick dissemination of information
- Most useful in Motivating and Team Building
- Preparatiion
MENTAL
PREPARATION BEFORE YOU START
· FIRST THING -Stop finding
ways to escape.
· NO HURRY – TAKE TWO
WEEKS !!! Before you start you have to psyche yourself !!! Take
your time for this !!!
· ONCE FOR ALL DECIDE!!!
There is no way you can avoid learning this skill as it will cost your whole
career. Get into a room alone and speak loudly to yourself. Take your time to
force your mind to believe that YOU CAN DO IT.
· You don’t have to be
great at the English language to be a good speaker.
· No one is a born speaker.
All the great speakers have worked hard at this. To some it is easier in the
beginning. But if you decide to work hard – There is no way you can fail.
· IF YOU CAN DO WELL FOR
THE FIRST TWO MINUTES ON STAGE – YOU WILL SURVIVE. Hence NEVER NEVER get on
stage for the first time unless you are fully prepared – Practice, Practice,
Practice!!!
1st Steps
· STEPS BEFORE FIRST TIME
ON STAGE :-
- STEP 1 Best is to
start with a bed time story to your son or any child in your mother tongue
and then the same story in English.
- STEP 2 To
gain confidence and to prove to yourself practice in front of your friends
or family – First in your mother tongue. Second time in English. Do this
till you are confident. The arrangement should be as follows:-
· You and your friends should be sitting on chairs and
you should have script in hand
· Speak casually to one friend at a time.
· Psyche yourself and Pretend to be confident
· Despite all this you will definitely panic and forget
what to say next!!!
· Take a deep breath, smile at your friends.
· To buy time – ask a Question or an opinion or tell
someone to “Summarize what you have grasped so far.
· Look at the script in style and continue.
STEP
3 Write the whole script again in your own words. Use
only short sentences and only words you are very familiar with. Include a
story or an experience if possible
STEP
4 Highlight the Key words in YELLOW – Make a separate
list of these KEY WORDS in a small card and pin it to your script.
STEP
5 You should have memorized the first 20 lines.
STEP
6 Rehearsed at least 7 times before a
Mirror.
STEP 7 On the day of the
presentation go at least 30 minutes before the event and mentally get used to
the environment. Have a spare copy of your Script and the Card with the Key
Words in your pocket.
Start or Opening
- A
question
- A
newsworthy incident
- A
startling statement
- A
quote
- A
human interest story
- Elevator
Pitch
- Clear
- Catchy
- Creating
impact
- Tell
them what you are going to tell and how long
- Use facts/analogies
/ statistics / opinions (provide reasons for the same).
HOW TO START YOUR PRESENTATION.
· Walk up to the rostrum
briskly (watching your steps) and place your script on it. Keep the Key Words’
Card in your shirt pocket.
· Wait for the Audience to
settle down before you start speaking.
· Speak your first 3
sentence and then take a deep breath.
· THREE THINGS WILL
DEFINITELY HAPPEN!!
1. FIRST THING – You will
forget your script
2. SECOND THING Your heart
will start pounding
3. THIRD THING You will
panic.
· THIS IS THE MOMENT YOU
NEED TO COLLECT YOURSELF –
1. Take
a deep breath. DO NOT LOOK UP
2. Take
the Key Word Card. Look at in style. DO NOT HIDE IT.
3. Have
a glass of water while looking at the Key Word Card.
4. If
you feel confident – Then restart. No harm mixing languages
5. If
you don’t feel confident JUST TAKE OUT THE SCRIPT AND START READING.
6. Keep
reading and you will feel confident in about 30 seconds.
7. If
still not confident continue reading till you feel confident.
8. Once
you come back do it alone again and again till you feel confident.
DOs & DON’Ts
DOs
· Have direct eye contact with an individual at a time.
· Speak to one individual at a time
· Shift to another individual somewhere else randomly
& NEVER LOOK at the Floor, OR at the ceiling NOT in thin air
· USE SHORT SENTANCES AND WORDS YOU USE IN CONVERSATION
· Speak deliberately
· Talk loudly. Do not scream
· Face the Audience and then speak & not while
looking at slides or while writing on Black Board
· Use your natural accent and never try to copy someone
else
DON’Ts
- Never
insult someone. Never corner, joke about or embarrass a person.
- Never
beat your own drums
- Never
speak to fast – be slightly slower than your natural speed
- Never
jump to answer a Question from the audience — Throw it back – ask 2 –
compile
- Never
speak with your back to audience – pointing or writing.
- Never
read. Note important points – Highlight – likely to forget
- Never
apologize – Keep going -Don’t call attention to worst
- After
you have finished your speech pause briefly, take a couple of steps back
and then return to your seat slowly
- Never
wink and show the relief as if you have escaped.
- Never
run after you finish – After you have finished your speech pause briefly,
take a couple of steps back and then return to your seat slowly
- Never
try to impress using big words. – try to simplify and make it
understandable
- Never
try manipulating the thought process of the Audience
- Avoid
Mumbling, Reading, Filler Words, Looking Down, Panning, Looking at the
roof.
- Avoid
Overshooting Time Allotment
- Avoid
Shouting but it is better than being too soft
BEST WAYS TO OPEN A SPEECH
OPENING 60 seconds is most
critical. Your opening should be Clear, Catchy & Creating
an impact. It can be any of the following :-
- A
question
- A
newsworthy incident
- A
startling statement
- A
quote
- A
human interest story
- Elevator Pitch
Survival Kit for Public
Speaking (On Stage)
SURVIVAL KIT WHEN MIND
GOES BLANK (Must practice before hand)
- Take a deep
breath – smile – don’t show panic
- Look at
your notes boldly (Don’t hide the fact that you have forgotten your
script)
- Buy
time by asking the audience for comments / questions
- Giving
your experience
- Tell a story
Exercises in Public
Speaking
EXERCISES TO IMPROVE
PUBLIC SPEAKING SKILLS
- Exercise
1 Call
out to a person 200m away
- Exercise
2 Announce
(Shout) on Shop Floor ” Factory closed due to heavy rains”
- Exercise
3 Read
out to your partner who will write facing away from each other
- Exercise
4 Give
a Dictation to your partner standing 15 feet away
- Exercise
5 Dictation
to whole class
- Exercise
6 Read
out your essay to the class
- Exercise
7 Prepare
a lecture and deliver to one
- Exercise
8 Prepare
lecture and deliver to class
- Exercise
9 Extempore
Lecture to class
- Exercise
10 Motivational
Lecture
- Exercise
11 Organizing
Lecture
- Exercise
12 Speak
to Trade Union Leaders to pacify them
- Exercise
13 Speak
to Boss and convince him that we need to start a new business
- Exercise
14 Conference
call with 3 Departmental Heads
- Exercise
15 Introduce
and Present a topic for discussion to the class
- Exercise
15 Introduce
and Present a topic for discussion to the class
- Exercise
16 Extempore
Speech on unknown topic -Survival on stage (Tricks) Ask Qs, Summarize with
e.g.
- Exercise
17 Debate
Prepared
- Exercise
18 Debate
Unprepared
- Exercise
19 Group
Discussions
- Exercise
20 Conduct
Brain Storming Sessions
- Exercise
21 Panel
Interview
- Exercise
22 Negotiation
Skills
- Exercise
23 Bullying
a subordinate
- Exercise
24 Happy
Leader
- Exercise
25 Suddenly
Losing Temper
- Exercise
26 Cornering
a subordinate
- Exercise
27 Threatening
with job or termination
- Exercise
28 Organizing
a seminar
- Exercise
29 Introducing
a Speaker
- Exercise
30 Giving
a farewell speech
- Exercise
31 Addressing
your Department for the first time
|
PUBLIC-SPEAKING |
Preparation |
1st Steps |
Start |
Dos & Donts |
Survival Kit |
Exercises |
Conferences |
Questions |
Closing |
|
CAREER & LIFE |
Courses |
Family |
Children |
Finances |
Home Loan |
Cars |
Tax |
Investments |
Self Study |
|
GET JOB |
Get a Call |
Interview |
GP Discussn |
Tests (W) |
Salary |
Settling |
Boss |
Reputation |
Politics |
|
SOFTSKILLS |
Communications |
Leadership |
Social Skills |
Negotiations |
Networking |
Etiquette |
Teaching |
Team Building |
Motivating |
Conferances
1. CHOOSE NOT MORE THAN 5
POINTS
2. Make sure you are
clear about the key points that you want to make and repeat and emphasize them
in the course of your presentation.
3. Transition from one
point to another should be seamless.
4. Use facts/analogies /
statistics / opinions (provide reasons for the same)
5. Talk, instead to
reading
6. Stand up & Move
around. Make eye contact with your audience & Don’t only look at one side
of the room
VISUAL AIDS
1. Do not use complete sentences. Only bullet
points.
2. Follow the 6 x 6 rule: not more than 6 lines (max) per
slide, not more than 6 words per line.
3. Points should appear one at a time, using animation –
helps to elaborate.
4. Do not use more than three colour’s on your
slides. If you have to, then keep the shades the same.
5. Ensure clear visibility of content through good
contrast and big fonts. Dark background, light font.
6. Use effective titles/headings
7. Lucid/self explanatory content on slide. If not,
elaborate.
8. Talk to audience and not to the visual. Draw
attention whenever you want them to see.
9. Don’t do the death by power point act. Use flip
charts and the white board too.
10. Have a great last slid and NEVER use Thank You on a
slide. Say it.
DRESSING UP
1. Dress to suit
occasion, weather, your personality
2. Err on the
conservative side when uncertain!
3. Avoid too much
jewellery
4. Hair- neat, combed,
gelled
5. Shave!
6. Ladies: Pin those
dupattas & palloos
GESTURES
1. Natural
2. Use gestures to
complement your speech
3. Avoid putting your
hands in your pocket
4. Do not use exaggerated
gestures that come up to the level of your face.
5. Avoid clasping, fig leaf position etc.
After or during a presentation the
presenter encourages the audience to ask questions. This greatly improves the
quality of the assimilation of the subject matter. Most of these are genuine but some of them may be mischievous or tricky.
It is a skill the differentiate these. However it is wise to buy maximum time
before you actually answer the question. You should also try first get other
members of the audience involved in the effort. However the presenter should be
always be in control of the situation. Hence the steps to be followed are as
follows:-
1. Encourage the person
to come out with the question and mike.
2. Let the person ask the
question without interruptions. (Never say anything sarcastic or
discouraging)
3. Rephrase the question
in your own words and ask the person if that is exactly what he /she meant
4. After getting the
confirmation repeat the question deliberately for the whole audience. EXAMPLE –
“Rohit’s question is – What are the other factors which we should consider to
ensure that there are no injuries”- Friends now “Who would like this question?”
5. Encourage the 2 or 3
members of the audience to give their opinions.
6. Then consolidate those
answers and give your own opinion and bring out the contradictions that have
emerged. If the case is not resolved completely then let the person that you
will get back to him.
7. Ask the person if he
is satisfied with the answer before you proceed.
8. THUMB RULES
–
- Encourage & take the
question from one individual, but answer for all in the audience
- Address
the questioner directly only at the start and end of your response
Closing the Speech
- Indicate
to the audience that you are at the end of the presentation.
- Ask for
doubts and questions
- Show
actions to be taken
- Summarize
main points at the end.
- Never
walk of the stage in a hurry
- End on
a friendly note and thank the audience
CAREER & LIFE PLAN
|
|
Life Planner |
|
||||||
|
Year |
Age |
Loc/Event |
Education |
Professional |
Financial |
Family |
Others |
|
|
1965 |
10 |
|
|
|
|
|
Learn cycling & Swimming |
|
|
1966 |
11 |
|
|
Apply
for Science Tallent |
|
|
Individual Sport Tennis, Golf, Badminton.
Billiards |
|
|
1967 |
12 |
|
|
Join
NCC |
|
|
Team
Sport |
|
|
1968 |
13 |
|
|
|
Open
Bank Savings Account |
|
Debate
& Essay Competition |
|
|
1969 |
14 |
|
SSC |
Do
Part time Job |
Learn
Banking, FD, Draft |
|
Do
Social Work |
|
|
1970 |
15 |
|
|
Apply
for NDA |
|
|
Run
10 Miles Marathon |
|
|
1971 |
16 |
|
HSC |
NCC
Republic Day Parade |
|
|
Run
Full Marathon |
|
|
1972 |
17 |
|
|
|
Learn
Stock Market |
|
Rock
Climbing |
|
|
1973 |
18 |
|
|
|
|
|
Do
5 Launches in Glider |
|
|
1974 |
19 |
NDA |
B
Sc |
NCC
C Certificate |
|
|
Learn
how to book Air Tickets and |
|
|
1975 |
20 |
|
BE |
|
|
|
|
|
|
1976 |
21 |
NDA
Pass |
MBA1 |
|
|
|
Do
Power Flying |
|
|
1977 |
22 |
IMA
Pass |
MBA2 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
1978 |
23 |
Jhansi,
Cmdo Belgaum |
|
JOB
1 |
Start
Tithe |
|
|
|
|
1979 |
24 |
YO,
Deolali, OPTC Pune |
PUBLIC
SPEAKING COURSE |
|
ULIP
STARTS, Term Insurance |
|
|
|
|
1980 |
25 |
|
|
|
BUY
M/CYCLE |
MARRIAGE |
|
|
|
1981 |
26 |
|
IIM(A)
MID LEADERSHIP |
|
Apply
for Housing Loan |
|
Start
Yearly Holiday Scheme |
|
|
1982 |
27 |
|
|
|
BUY
HOUSE 1 |
Train
Wife to be Independent |
|
|
|
1983 |
28 |
|
|
JOB
2 |
|
CHILD
1 |
|
|
|
1984 |
29 |
|
NEGOTIATION
SKILLS COURSE |
|
|
|
Start
support one orphan’s Education |
|
|
1985 |
30 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1986 |
31 |
|
PERSONALITY
DEVELOPMENT COURSE |
|
|
CHILD
2 |
|
|
|
1987 |
32 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1988 |
33 |
|
Do
Entrepreur’s Course |
|
|
|
|
|
|
1989 |
34 |
|
|
GM
LEVEL |
BUY
HOUSE 2 |
|
|
|
|
1990 |
35 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1991 |
36 |
|
|
|
START
COMPANY |
|
|
|
|
1992 |
37 |
|
IIM(A)
Strategy Course |
|
|
Make
Child 1 LIFE PLANNER |
|
|
|
1993 |
38 |
|
|
VP
LEVEL |
|
|
|
|
|
1994 |
39 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1995 |
40 |
|
|
|
|
Make
Child 2 LIFE PLANNER |
|
|
|
1996 |
41 |
|
Start
Ph.D |
|
|
CHILD
1 SSC |
|
|
|
1997 |
42 |
|
|
CEO |
BUY
HOUSE 3 |
|
|
|
|
1998 |
43 |
|
|
|
|
CHILD
1 HSC |
|
|
|
1999 |
44 |
|
|
|
|
CHILD
2 SSC |
|
|
|
2000 |
45 |
|
Finish
Ph.D |
|
|
|
|
|
|
2001 |
46 |
|
|
|
|
CHILD
1 B Sc/CHILD
2 HSC |
|
|
|
2002 |
47 |
|
|
Start
own company |
|
CHILD
1 BE |
|
|
|
2003 |
48 |
|
|
|
|
CHILD
1MBA1 |
|
|
|
2004 |
49 |
|
|
|
|
CHILD
1MBA2/CHILD 2 B Sc |
|
|
|
2005 |
50 |
|
|
|
|
CHILD
2 BE |
|
|
|
2006 |
51 |
|
|
|
|
CHILD
2 MBA1 |
|
|
|
2007 |
52 |
|
|
|
|
CHILD
1 MARRIAGE/CHILD 2 MBA2 |
|
|
|
2008 |
53 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2009 |
54 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2010 |
55 |
|
|
|
|
CHILD
2 MARRIAGE |
|
|
|
2011 |
56 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2012 |
57 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2013 |
58 |
|
|
Take
Company Public |
RETIREMENT |
|
|
|
|
2014 |
59 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2015 |
60 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2016 |
61 |
|
|
|
|
|
Go
on world tour with Family |
|
|
2017 |
62 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2018 |
63 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2019 |
64 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2020 |
65 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2021 |
66 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2022 |
67 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2023 |
68 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2024 |
69 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2025 |
70 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2026 |
71 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2027 |
72 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2028 |
73 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2029 |
74 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2030 |
75 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Must do Courses /
Self Study for Knowledge in
Toasters’ Club (Public Speaking)
Train the Trainer (Teaching Skills)
Microsoft Projects (Project Management)
Law
Compliance
World history
Geography
Physics
Math
- CAT
- GRE
- IAS,
IFS, IRS, IPS
- UPSC
- CDS
(Army, Navy, Air Force,)
- Bank
Officers
OBJECTIVE TYPE
QUESTIONS : – Normally has 4 Answers
to select from
TYPES OF NEGATIVE MARKING
5. Correct Answer +1, Wrong Answer – 1 – ANSWER ONLY IF
YOU ARE SURE
6. Correct Answer +1, Wrong Answer – 0.5 – ANSWER ONLY IF
YOU CAN ELIMINATE 2
7. Correct Answer +1, Wrong Answer -0.25 – ANSWER EVEN IF
YOU CAN ELIMINATE 1
8. NO Negative Marking – MUST ANSWER ALL QUESTIONS
ASSUMPTION –
You are sure about (50 out of 100
Questions)
You can identify 1 wrong answer (34 out
of 100)
You can identify 2 wrong answers (16 out
of 100)
|
Negative
Marking |
+1& -1 |
+1 &-0.5 |
+1 -0.25 |
No Negative |
|
Strategy
– Answer if |
(Only sure) |
(Only if 2 eliminated) |
(if even 1 eliminated) |
Ans ALL |
|
Correct
Known(50) |
+50 |
+50 |
+50 |
+50 |
|
Eliminate
2 answer(16) |
0 |
+ (8*1)–(8*0.5)=4 |
+ (8*1)–(8*.25)=6 |
+8 |
|
Eliminate
1 answer(34) |
0 |
+(11.33*1)-(22.66*.5)=0 |
+(11.33*1)-(22.66*.25)=11.33-5.67=17 |
+17 |
|
Total
Marks |
+50 |
+54 |
+ 73 |
+75 |
ESSAY TYPE
PAPER:-
Divide Time by number of marks to find
number minutes you can spend per mark and multiply by the marks for each
Question. Then spend that much on that particular Question.
NOTE :- BASIC AIM IS NOT TO LEAVE ANY
QUESTION – WRITE SOMETHING (minimum 10 lines)
Try to use the below format where ever
possible:-
CENTER HEADING
Group Heading.
These are Group Headings like Introduction,
Factors to be Considered, Effects of Factors & Conclusion
Introduction
For Group Heading have no full stop in
the end & the writing starts on the 2 nd line. If you have multiple Factors
here also then you list them under Para Headings as follows:-
3. Cause 1. This is described in sentences starting on the same line
4. Cause 2. Para Heading are in Bold. The writing starts on the
next line. When you have multiple Factors to be considered then under each Para
Heading you list them under Sub Para Headings as
follows:-
c. Sub Para Heading.
d. Effect of Cause 2:-
iii. Sub Sub Para Heading
iv. Result 2 is Severe Poverty
NOTE –
ALL LEVELS OF THE
HEADINGS (Group Heading, Para Headings, Sub Para Headings and Sub Para Headings
are in BOLD & are underlined.
FAMILY
Ideal Age to get Married
a. Male 28 to 32
b. Female 24 to 30
Select City & Location to retire and
settledown as early as possible.
a. Need to relocate family & parents , Siblings
b. Affordability based a 10% increase in your earnings
due to Promotions and Increments
Plan for Safety & Insurance
a. Term Insurance
b. Health Insurance
c. Home or Property Insurance (Normally included in Home
Loan Process
d. Over all Tax efficiency under Home Loan 80 C, Pention
Plan
Children & Health
Ideal
Age to get married – Boy 28 to 33, Girl
23 to 3o
First Child – 30 to 34
Second Child – 36 to 40
Must have Company Group Medi Claim
Must have Term Insurance of about Rs 50
Lakhs
Motivating |
Home Loan for 1st Flat , Land
Investment & Tax Planning
Cost of Flat 20 Lakhs
Cash down 15% = 3 Lakhs
Home Loan about 17 Lakhs ( It is low
interest between 8% to 12% and very Tax efficient).
Take max loan ie 85% of cost of flat for
20 to 30 years
Try in a Class a City / Metro
Buy what you can afford as it can
stabilize you.
Example :
Cost of flat – 20 Lakhs
Cash down – 3 Lakhs
Loan Amount – 17 Lakhs
EMI will be about 17000 (Eligible 80C
& 2 Lakhs as deduction from Income tax)
If the cost doubles in 10 years your
profit is 20 lakhs on an investment of 3 Lakhs.(Huge Profit)
2. BUY an Equity based
Systematic Investment Plan
3. Buy some land
& Gold
HEALTH
Good Health in the long run is fully your
responsibility. Whatever your existing ailments or genetic tendencies – 95 % of
the problems can be prevented with disciplined habits in eating, exercise,
Yoga, Rest and Stress mitigation. You are also responsible for the health of
your family who will emulate you.
HEALTH HINTS FOR YOU
Two things to check! as often as you can
- Your
blood pressure
- Your
blood sugar
Three things to reduce to the minimum on
your foods
- Salt
- Sugar
- Starchy
products
Four things to increase in your foods
- Greens/Vegetables
- Beans
- Fruits
- Nuts/Protein
Three things you need to forget
- Your
age
- Your
past
- Your
grievances
Four things you must have, no matter how
weak or how strong you are
- Friends
who truly love you
- Caring
family
- Positive
thoughts
- A warm
home
Five things you need to do to stay
healthy
- Fasting
- Smiling
/ Laughing
- Trek /
Exercise
- Reduce
your weight
- Voluntary
work
Six things you don’t have to do
- Don’t
wait till you are hungry to eat_
- Don’t
wait till you are thirsty to drink_
- Don’t
wait till you are sleepy to sleep_
- Don’t
wait till you feel tired to rest_
- Don’t
wait till you get sick to go for medical check-ups otherwise you will only
regret later in life
- Don’t
wait till you have problem before you pray to your God.
Golf
Watch 6 Videos on You Tube
Oversimplify Golf
GUIDELINES
FOR A NEW GOLFER
INDOOR WITH RUBBER BALLS
ONLY DROP OUTS – For Good Health
AIM – 18 HANDICAP in 5 days
(only 2% score that low)
5 RULES GOLF
- FULL
FOLLOW THROUGH
- NATURAL
SWING(Start with half easy swing with ball in center & minimum divot)
- NEVER
LOOK AT THE BALL – Head should not move & keep looking where the ball
was lying
- PLAY
TO GREEN CENTER – USE ONLY 3 CLUBS (5W/Hy,7 & PITCHING). Correct
CONSTANT ERRORS – Aim 8 Deg LEFT
- WITHIN
30 YARDS ONLY USE PUTTER – UPHILL 18 inches + & DOWN HILL 18 inches
short – use only shoulder
LESSONS
1 – SELECTING YOUR NATURAL
SWING
2 – USING THE SELECTED NATURAL
SWING
3 – USING PLASTIC BALLS &
MAKING CORRECTIONS
4 – CALIBERATING THE PITCHING
WEDGE FOR SHORT GAME (Less than 80 Yards)
5 – PUTTING – THE MOST REWARDING
TALENT
LESSON 1 – SELECTING YOUR
NATURAL SWING
1. Never Copy Tiger Woods
2. Stance – feet 2 ft between heals & almost erect – back
straight
3. Longer route Back Swing.
4. Down Swing – Let it fall initially and then accelerate – no jerk on top
or Head movement
5. Minimum elbow and wrist movement – just around your shoulders
6. Back swing just enough so that the Head does not move
7. Back swing never beyond the VERTICAL
8. Easy – no pain -80 %
9. Just scrape the ground – no divot
10. Full follow through – stop after club hits your back
11. Head should not move – Never look at the ball – either the Tee or where
it was lying
12. No wrist or elbow and Left heal always on the ground
13. Test the back swing where you can hit 9 out of 10.
LESSON 2 – USING THE SELECTED
NATURAL SWING
1. Pendulum using 7 IRON
2. Scrape the ground 200 times with HALF SWING
3. Keep increasing back swing till Head is forced to move
4. Use NATURAL SWING with 4 HYBRID, 7 IRON & PITCHING WEDGE 50 times
each.
5. CHECK if LESSON 1 is being fully followed
6. RETEST – You can hit 9 out of 10.
LESSON 3 – USING PLASTIC BALLS
& MAKING CORRECTIONS
1. EASY NATURAL SWING with 5 HYBRID, 7 IRON & PITCHING WEDGE 25 times each.
2. FOLLOW THROUGH – FULL,
3. HEAD DOES NOT MOVE – Reduce Back Swing to HALF if Head is moving at the
top of the swing
4. NO LOOKING UP- See the ball only when it is about to be hit by you.
NEVER AT ANY OTHER TIME
5. Minimum elbow and Wrist movement.
6. Ball in center
7. Minimum divot
8. Correct direction by Closing Face (80% fade the ball – so Close the
CLUB FACE & AIM 8 Degrees LEFT)
9. Scrape the floor 200 times with HALF SWING
10. Again use 5 HYBRID, 7 IRON & PITCHING WEDGE to hit the ball 25
times each.
11. RETEST – You can hit 9 out of 10. If not again reduce Back Swing till
you achieve that
LESSON 4 – CALIBERATING THE
PITCHING WEDGE FOR SHORT GAME (Less than 80 Yards)
1. ONLY CLUB WHERE YOU USE LESS THAN YOUR NATURAL SWING IS PITCHING WEDGE
2. Use Table given below:-
a. For 80 Yards – NATURAL SWING of PITCHING WEDGE
b. For 70 Yards – Three fourth of NATURAL SWING of PITCHING WEDGE
c. For 50 Yards – Half of NATURAL SWING of PITCHING WEDGE
d. For 30 Yards – One Fourth of NATURAL SWING of PITCHING WEDGE
e. For 20 Yards – One Eighth of NATURAL SWING of PITCHING WEDGE
LESSON 5 – PUTTING – THE MOST
REWARDING TALENT
1. Different Styles Used
2. Choose your own
3. Aim is never to take more than 2 on the GREEN
4. Putting should by the shoulders and not by the arms or hands.
5. While putting down hill try to stop the ball just within 6 inches past
the hole.
6. For uphill putts try to go 2 feet beyond the hole.
7. Uphill puts turn much more with the slope (but chipping a Pitching
wedge turn least)
8. Within 3 ft of the hole putt firm and don’t bother about the slope.
9. For all putts the back swing and forward swing should strictly in line.
10. Control distance by increasing length of Back Swing and not by hitting
it harder
DETAILED NOTES & GOOD HABITS
a. SECRET OF SUCCESS
· Find and consistently use your ‘Natural Swing’ and the most comfortable
Club Head Speed’. Too fast or too slow are both bad.
· Try to achieve the same distance with each club every time you use
it. Hard hitters are usually not as consistent
b. HOW TO BECOME A GOOD PLAYER WITHIN A MONTH
· Golf is a game of Concentration and Full
Follow Through.
· Use only 80 % of your strength with full follow
through and you will achieve the best accuracy with no mis-hits
· Keep looking at the point you hit the ball. It is Caddy’s job to watch the ball NOT yours.
· Keep your Left elbow straight as
far as you can in the slow Back Swing.
· Always hit the ball first and then scrape the ground
· Irons are precision instruments and so your back swing should stop near the vertical position and
start the down swing gradually.(use same for Fairway Woods without a Tee)
c. HOW TO PLACE & HIT THE BALL
· For Tee Shots – hit
the ball on the upward swing almost near your front toe
· For Fairway Woods –
hit the ball near the bottom of the swing at the Centre point
between your feet
· For Irons – hit the
ball first – then scrape the ground on the downward swing
almost at the bottom of the swing around 1 inch before the Centre point between
your feet. For Wedges – Place the ball opposite the rear foot
heel’s inner point. The hands will thus be ahead of the ball. Use only maximum
half the full swing. Hit the ball first and then the grass just after
that on the downward part of the swing. Otherwise the sand will pad the
ball and the distance achieved will be unpredictable
d. HOW TO USE THE PUTTER
· Putting should by the shoulders and not by the arms or hands.
· While putting down hill try to stop the ball just within 6 inches past
the hole.
· For uphill putts try to go 2 feet beyond the hole.
· Uphill puts turn much more with the slope (but chipping a Pitching
wedge turn least)
· Within 3 ft of the hole putt firm and don’t bother about the slope.
· For all putts the back swing should be very slow and deliberate and
keep looking at the spot where the ball was rather than follow the ball.
e. HOW TO HANDLE WIND
· Head winds stop the ball much more than the amount tail winds help the
ball.
· The maximum height reached by all the clubs is quite similar and varies
from 29 to 35 Yards and so is the Time of Flight at about 6 to 7 seconds.
· Wind velocity is higher at higher height above the ground
f. HOW TO QUICKLY BECOME A GOOD PLAYER
· Ensure that you do not mishit even a single ball. Initially to
achieve this, you will have to use a limited swing and use less force. Later
you will develop better co-ordination- you can use a bigger swing and slowly
increase the force. But at no stage should exceed 85% of your full force.
· In a practice round take all the risks but in a tournament don’t take
any risk. After a bad shot forget it and don’t try to recover in one
shot.
· Standardize your swing. Your swing should be exactly the same
irrespective of which Club you are using. This will ensure that each club
will give a specific distance every time you use it. (There is usually a
difference a 10 yards difference between successive clubs).
· Make a table for distances achieved for each club with an easy constant
swing for both headwind and downwind of about 10 Miles per Hour.
· What I achieve with each club in No Wind conditions in yards – SW-60,
PW-80, 9 Iron- 90, 9 Iron- 90, 8 Iron- 100, 7 Iron-110, 6 Iron- 120, 5 Iron-
130, 4 Iron- 140, 3 Iron- 150, Rescue 26 Degrees- 160, 5 W- 170, 3 W-180,
Driver -240 yards.
NOTE
: Try to achieve the same distance every time you use each club.
g. HOW TO MASTER THE SHORT GAME – USE PLEZ 8
· Short game is most important. So concentrate on the 20 feet pitch with a Pitching Wedge (most of
the time) and Sand Wedge (when there is less distance from the Apron to the
Pin) and roll with a 9 Iron or a Putter (if you are on the apron). The swing in
the short game should be shallow and only scraping the ground – NO DIVOT
· The “Pelz” part of Phil Nicholson’s “Pelz-8” refers to the concept of
controlling distance by controlling backswing length and the “8” is code for
8-iron, but the swing can be made with any club. It’s composed of a less than
full backswing and produces slightly less distance and backspin. You stop the
backswing when his left arm gets horizontal to the ground. The forward swing
should be at the normal pace (not faster to make up for a short backswing).
· By this you can develop amazing consistency in the distance your shots
travel. This can be done for any club (wedges, 9-, 8- or 7-irons).
· It’s like having an extra set of distances that he can produce on
command depending on the wind, temperature and humidity.
h. HOW I PLAY GOLF
· Developed most easy swing which is same for all Clubs.
· Close all clubs equally but enough to ensure that there is no Fade or
Draw (Swing to Right or Left which will force me to aim left or Right – I
always want to aim only at the target)
· I use quarter swing only near the greens of different clubs for
distances up to 50 yards and then Full swings as follows:
a. 1 to 30 yards – Pitching wedge (punch the ball or use Sand Wedge to go
over obstacle (quarter for 17, Half for 25 & Full for up to 32 yards)
b. 30 yards – Pitching wedge (quarter swing)
c. 40 yards – 9 Iron (quarter swing)
d. 50 yards – 8 Iron(quarter swing)
e. 60 yards – 7 Iron(quarter swing)
f. 70 yards – Pitching wedge (Full Swing)
g. 80 yards – 9 Iron (Full swing)
h. 90 yards – 8 Iron(Full swing)
i. 100 yards – 7 Iron(Full swing)
j. 110 yards – 6 Iron(Full swing)
k. 120 yards – 5 Iron(Full swing)
l. 130 yards – 4 Iron(Full swing)
m. 140 yards – 3 Iron(Full swing)
n. 150 yards – 26 Degree 7 Hybrid Rescue(Full swing)
o. 160 yards – 19 Degree 4 Wood(Full swing)
p. 170 yards – 15 Degree 3 Hybrid Rescue(Full swing)
q. I90 yards – 14 Degree Lady’s Driver(Full swing)
r. 240 yards – 11 Degree Driver(Full swing)
· Short game is most important. So concentrate on the 20 feet pitch with a Pitching Wedge (most of
the time) and Sand Wedge (when there is less distance from the Apron to the
Pin) and roll with a 9 Iron or a Putter (if you are on the apron). The swing in
the short game should be shallow and only scraping the ground – NO DIVOT
|
Yards |
Steps |
Aim Left Degrees |
BEST Club |
Three fourth Swing |
Half Swing |
One Fourth Swing |
|
20 |
26 |
0 |
P4 |
|
|
S4 |
|
25 |
32.5 |
0 |
P4 |
|
|
S4.5 |
|
30 |
39 |
0 |
P4.5 |
|
|
9(4) |
|
40 |
52 |
0 |
P2- |
|
|
8(4) |
|
50 |
65 |
0 |
SF |
40 |
30 |
7(4) |
|
60 |
78 |
0 |
P2.5 |
|
|
6(4) |
|
70 |
91 |
0 |
P3 |
|
|
5(4) |
|
80 |
104 |
0 |
PF |
70 |
50 |
4(4) |
|
95 |
124 |
0 |
9(3) |
|
|
3(4) |
|
105 |
137 |
0 |
9 |
90 |
80 |
|
|
115 |
150 |
3 |
8 |
95 |
85 |
5h |
|
125 |
163 |
4 |
7 |
100 |
90 |
3h |
|
135 |
176 |
5 |
6 |
105 |
95 |
|
|
145 |
189 |
6 |
5 |
120 |
110 |
R3 |
|
155 |
202 |
8 |
4 |
130 |
120 |
FW3 |
|
165 |
215 |
12 |
3 |
135 |
125 |
|
|
175 |
228 |
0 |
R 26 |
145 |
135 |
|
|
185 |
241 |
0 |
7W,R19 |
|
|
|
|
195 |
254 |
8 |
4W |
|
|
|
|
210 |
273 |
8 |
D |
|
|
|
|
230 |
299 |
14 |
D 10 |
|
|
|
How to reduce yourHandicap rapidly:
1. Hitting shorter with an easy swing and not mishitting a single ball.
2. Always remaining on the fairway. If outside come back and don’t try to
compensate for a bad shot.
3. Always aiming at the Center of the Green and not on the Hole for the
approach shot.
4. Follow through full and never looking at the ball till it has come to rest.
Let your Caddie find the ball.
5. Try for a 2 Putt all the time.
6. Take atleast one Practice Swing. Never take it casual even for one shot.
OTHER GAMES WORTH PICKING UP
Tennis
Swimming+
Billiards
Table Tennis
Bridge (Card Game)
Motivating |
Self Study
Chat GPT is our best knowledgeable
servant!
We
should only know HOW TO ASK (Questioning or Prompt Engineering).
It
is a MUST LEARN for all employees of service companies.
It
is incorporated FREE in Excel, Word, Outlook, Edge, Bing & all Microsoft products.
All you need is to Download BING (Chat)
It
can write emails for you, summarise large essays, make Slides on any subject,
teach any subject, generate sales leads,write software for you and almost
everything else)
Very
very simple to use.
You
can just speak to it in any language and ask questions. It remembers what you
asked earlier and provide follow up corrections.
This
is called Prompt Engineering
Optimising
Prompts
1.
Be specific in requirement
2.
Set Format
3.
Limit length of response eg 1000 words.
Types
of Prompts
1.
Chain of Thought prompts – breaking down complex prompts to a sequence of
smaller prompts.
2.
Role play prompts,
3.
Prompt Priming – provide context or background
4.
Avoiding Biases and Ethics in Prompt Engineering
5.
Use neutral Language and avoid steroids Types.
Eg
1 Create a banner for an online store summer sale featuring a beach background
with the Text – Summer Sale up to 50% off
Eg
2 – As a CRM – Help a customer who is having trouble with logging into a
website.
Eg
3 Write a Python function that takes a list of integers and returns the sum of
all even numbers
DALL-E-2
website, Type in a Descriptive Text Prompt, Select preferred Image, Style &
Parameters , Generate The Image & Download your Creative Video.
Use
Deep Art,Photoshop neutral
Try
using FREE ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE TOOLS to improve our
PRODUCTIVITY like:-
(a)
12 Ft .com – for summarizing large White Papers and long Articles
(b)
YODDILLI.ai – for improving Communication Skills
(c)
Signalhire.com for LEAD GENERATION and finding Emails and Mobile numbers
from LinkedIn, Twitter and other social media BEST (for Salesman)
(d)
GPT SLIDES.com to get any Presentations on any subject within seconds
(e) Formula.dog.com – to get formulas in EXCEL /
GOOGLE SHEET etc (it writes code SQL, VBA, Python etc)
(f)
Solves anything -Chat GPT
(g)
Writes anything-Writesonic
(h)
Generates Art -Midjourney
(I)
Generates Code -Replit
(j)
Generates Video -Synthesia
(k)Generates
Music -Soundraw
(l)
Generates TikToks – Fliki
(j)Generates
Avatars -Starrytars
(k)
Generates PPTs -Slides AI
(l)
Edit Pictures – Remini
(m)
Edit Videos – Pictory
(n)
Summarises Notes – Wordtune
SALES TRAINING
Watch the following Videos
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ar_lpoZi-cI&list=PLvoqzZu9FF7dflcpzt-SMF1xLMncTPi79&index=3
Also see the following links on my Dunn
& Bradstreet Seminar presentation and some videos on sales.
• https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XmYA5a_w3yE
• https://youtu.be/Ar_lpoZi-cI
• https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLvoqzZu9FF7dflcpzt-SMF1xLMncTPi79
• https://youtu.be/7EVeze5sP-k
•
Oversimply Golf 6 https://youtu.be/OA2UGpTgOQE
PUBLIC SPEAKING VIDEO LINK https://photos.app.goo.gl/3Uuj6AVm93epUd9W6
Exam Shortcuts
Read Syllabus
Highlight When Reading
Speech notes into word to get Notes
2 to 5 Practice Papers
Time Management
Never leave any Question Blank except in
Objective Tests where Negative marking is more HALF OR ABOVE
Studying for Retention
- Highlight
or underline as you are reading.
- Write
important points / new words in the margin
- Read
Preface, Executive Summary and about the Author before you start the book.
- First
run through the index.
- After
you finish each chapter dictate the main points into a voice dictation
software like Speech Notes (Android Play Store)
- Carry
out an exercise or project to use that knowledge practically within 1
week.
Man Management
TRAINING CARRIED FOR
MBA BATCHES
1. Introduction and importance of
communication
2. Emergency announcements on shop
floor(for rains/blast)
3. Talk to late comers (genuine and
naughty late comers)
4. Stance and what to do with ones arms
while speaking
5. How to give a motivation
lecture
6. Talk about yourself
7. Listening skills
8. Eye to eye contact in public
speaking
9. Gestures, mannerism and being
yourself
10. Leadership skills – Leadership
is the process of interpersonal influence over the activities of team members
towards the achievement of organisational goals in a given situation. In
contemporary organisational life, managers must need to work effectively with
peers, supervisors and subordinates. Understanding self and influencing others
forms an integral part of this endeavor.
11. How loud one should speak
12. Formal dressing
13. Reading and writing in pairs (back
to back)
14. Reading aloud to class
15. Short write up on subject of ones
choice and presenting it
16. Introduction to group
discussion
17. How to prepare a c.v.
18. What is assessor looking for
19. What are the opportunities in
GD.
20. How to introduce a topic
21 How to butt in
22 How to manage conflict
23 How to conclude and sum up
24. What is an interview and how to
prepare for it
25. Emotional preparation for an
interview
21. How to dress and how to move
22. How to collect information about a target
company
23. How to follow up on an employment
call
24. How to control body language
25. How to participate in a conference
26. How to behave in a social party
/hosting skills
27. Table efficiency
28. How to interview workers
29. How to negotiate with trade union
30. Written communication (types
of letter)
31. Making off light conversation
and what topic to avoid
32. How to talk with senior management
33. Telephone ettiqute
34. Official spokesperson and P.R.O
35. How to avoid being misquoted
36. Conflict resolution
37. How to make friends
38. Maintaining a contact list
39. Debate
40. Talent Exhibition
41. How to get an appointment with
senior official
42. How to built and assess the culture
of an organisation
43. On the spot speaking / how to cover
up on hault while speaking
44. Presence of mind
45. extempore agility
SKILLS YOU MUST
PRACTICE
- –
Induction Speech
- –
Speak on my family
- –
Speak any thing for 2 minutes in any language
- Make
announcement on shop floor.
-
Call out to a worker far away.
- Drill
Square Command
- –
Read to the wall while partner writes on board.
- – Write
a speech and deliver it.
- – Convey
message by action/body language
- – Convey
moods by action.
- – Group
discussions.
- – Interview.
- – Multiple
Choice Questions answering strategy
- – Making
a CV
- – Teaching
Techniques
- – Debate
Competition
- – Brainstorming
sessions – Organization
- – Conducting
a meeting.
- – Conducting
a game.
- – Motivation
lectures by Manager
– Addressing your team to pull up their socks and start performing failing which each will be terminated
– Thank you
– Condolence speech on some ones death
– Appreciation on a job well done
– Conflict Management and how to avoid conflict with other departments
– Proposal
– Visioning
– Apology - –
Company Profile / History
- – Conducting
a Quiz Competition.
- – Speaking
a trade union leaders.
- – Organizing
a party game.
- – Delivering
joke
- – Singing
a song to an audience
- – Party
Etiquette
- – Attending
Calls
- – Soft
skills
- – Call
Centro Training
- – Dressing
up
- – Tennis
- – Golf
- – Bridge
(card game)
- – Rummy
(card game)
- – Cricket
- – Important
Personalities in Indian and World History
- – National
& International by Cultures
- – Communication
Theory
- – Leadership
Capsule
- – Formal-Informal
Communications
- – Job
Search techniques
- – Formation
of Clubs
- – Organizing
an event with checklist
- – Students
to make presentations in team and video taped.
- – Organizing
a Picnic
- – Talent
Exhibition
- – Speaking
only in English
- – Reading
Economic Times every day
- – What
I learned this week to be given
- – My
favorite subject
- – Self
Assessment Essay
- – My
Strength
- – My
Weakness
- – My
Ambition
- – My
Dreams
- – Basic
Computer knowledge
- – Using
the Internet
- – Using
Outlook and PowerPoint
- – Making
Graphs
- – Writing
a Biz Plan will help of a template
- – Using
templates for everything
- – Using
MS Project 2003
- – Basics
of Project Management
- – Evolving
a Sales talk
- –
Introducing Speech
- – Value
System of your Company
- –
Leadership
- –
Empathy
- – Team
Building
- – Biz
games
- –
Basics of Project Marketing
- –
Organizing a Project Team
- –
Dealing with Foreign Delegation
- –
Dealing with Politicians and Ministers
- –
Tendering Process
- –
Basics of Stock _
- – My
experience in Industry
- – HR
Subjects
- –
Bribing and Biz Development
- –
Insurance
- –
Housing & Loans
- – How
to find information
- –
Attitudes of a winner
- – Planning
your career
- –
Planning your investments
- –
Indian Culture
- –
Building Organization Culture
-
50 WEEK MANAGEMENT
DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM
|
WEEK 1 |
THE GROW MODEL FOR COACHING |
|
WEEK 2 |
DEVELOPING INFLUENCE AND ASSERTIVE LEADERSHIP |
|
WEEK 3 |
VISIONING |
|
WEEK 4 |
THE CHANGE CURVE |
|
WEEK 5 |
THE LEADERSHIP PIPELINE |
|
WEEK 6 |
EMPLOYEE ENGAGEMENT AND THE THREE-FACTOR THEORY |
|
WEEK 7 |
THE NINE PRINCIPLES OF MOTIVATION |
|
WEEK 8 |
SITUATIONAL LEADERSHIP (LEADERSHIP STYLES) |
|
WEEK 9 |
THE JOHN WHITMORE MODEL |
|
WEEK 10 |
ACTION-CENTRED LEADERSHIP |
|
WEEK 11 |
THE SIX STEPS OF DELEGATION |
|
WEEK 12 |
KOTTER’S EIGHT–STAGE PROCESS FOR LEADING CHANGE |
|
WEEK 13 |
SIX PRINCIPLES FOR GAINING COMMITMENT |
|
WEEK 14 |
BELBIN’S TEAM RULES |
|
WEEK 15 |
DRIVERS OF TRUST AND THE TRUST CYCLE |
|
WEEK 16 |
THE TRUTHS OF STRATEGY |
|
WEEK 17 |
SWOT ANALYSIS |
|
WEEK 18 |
SCENARIO THINKING |
|
WEEK 19 |
THE BALANCED SCORECARD |
|
WEEK 20 |
THE 7S MODEL |
|
WEEK 21 |
THE RULE OF 150 |
|
WEEK 22 |
THE SERVICE PROFIT CHAIN |
|
WEEK 23 |
UNDERSTANDING AND AVOIDING INERTIA |
|
WEEK 24 |
THE SIX RS OF BUSINESS |
|
WEEK 25 |
THE BOSTON CONSULTING GROUP MODEL |
|
WEEK 26 |
THE PARETO PRINCIPLE |
|
WEEK 27 |
BLUE OCEAN STRATEGY |
|
WEEK 28 |
BENCHMARKING |
|
WEEK 29 |
THE PRODUCT LIFE CYCLE |
|
WEEK 30 |
SYSTEMS THINKING |
|
WEEK 31 |
MARKET BARRIERS |
|
WEEK 32 |
THE SIX PS OF STRATEGIC THINKING |
|
WEEK 33 |
PORTER’S GENERIC COMPETITIVE STRATEGIES |
|
WEEK 34 |
PESTLIED ANALYSIS |
|
WEEK 35 |
THE DYNAMICS OF PARADIGM CHANGE |
|
WEEK 36 |
ANSOFF’S PRODUCT MATRIX |
|
WEEK 37 |
RESOURCES AND THE CRITICAL PATH |
|
WEEK 38 |
DEVELOPING INTANGIBLE RESOURCES |
|
WEEK 39 |
MARKET POSITIONING AND VALUE CURVES |
|
WEEK 40 |
COMPETITIVE ANALYSIS: PORTER’S FIVE FORCES |
|
WEEK 41 |
INNOVATION HOTSPOTS |
|
WEEK 42 |
DEEP DIVE PROTOTYPING |
|
WEEK 43 |
DEVELOPING CREATIVE THINKING |
|
WEEK 44 |
THE DISCOVERY CYCLE (ORCA) |
|
WEEK 45 |
THE FORTUNE AT THE BOTTOM OF THE PYRAMID (BOP) |
|
WEEK 46 |
THE SIX THINKING HATS |
|
WEEK 47 |
INNOVATION CULTURE |
|
WEEK 48 |
DISNEY’S CREATIVITY STRATEGY |
|
WEEK 49 |
THE MATE MODEL FOR STRATEGIC SELLING |
|
WEEK 50 |
THE TEN CS OF SELLING ONLINE |
WEEK 1
THE GROW MODEL FOR COACHING
The single most important technique for executive
coaching
The
GROW model, developed by Sir John Whitmore, provides a frame-work for coaching.
GROW has four stages: Goals, Reality, Options and Way forward. Responsibility
for setting goals rests with the coachee. The coach works in a non-directive
way, supporting and challenging.
GOALS
This
focuses on the coachee’s aims and priorities. It sets the agenda for the
coaching conversation. The coach should be flexible and prepared to explore,
question and challenge. This is achieved with questioning and empathy. The
outcome is a clear set of goals for the session and the overall coaching
relationship.
|
Questions
include:
|
REALITY
Explore
the learner’s current position: the reality of their circumstances and their
concerns relating to their goals. The coach needs to help the coachee analyze
and understand the significant issues relating to their goal through
intelligent questioning. The coach can also provide information and summarize
the situation to clarify the reality.
|
Questions
include:
|
OPTIONS
The
coach helps the coachee to generate options, strategies and action plans for
achieving goals. This can uncover new aspects of the individual’s current
position with the result that discussion reverts back to the coachee’s reality.
This is fine if it is productive or enlightening – the aim is to help the
individual, not rigidly follow a process.
|
Questions include:
|
WAY FORWARD
Do
not rush the final stage. The aim is to agree what needs to be done. It can
help for the coachee to develop a practical plan to implement their option. The
coach should be a sounding board, highlighting strengths and weaknesses,
testing the approach and offering additional perspectives.
|
Questions
include
|
Finally,
the most effective plans incorporate a review and feedback process to check
progress and provide motivation.
WEEK 2
DEVELOPING INFLUENCE AND ASSERTIVE
LEADERSHIP
Providing
support and challenge while strengthening results and relationships.
Whether
you are giving feedback or selling a product or an idea, influencing requires
an understanding of how your behaviour affects others.
Overview
All
individuals have their own personality – the result both of nature and nurture
– and this remains largely unchanging. However, behaviour is different: it is
flexible and capable of being developed and enhanced. It’s useful to consider
behaviour (yours and others) in terms of warmth or coldness, dominance or
submissiveness.
- Warm means being supportive, open, positive,
empathetic, constructive and engaging – not simply ‘friendly’.
- Cold means being suspicious, detached, not
focused on people or relationships.
- Dominant means being challenging, in control,
confident, strong, authoritative and direct.
- Submissive means subduing your own thoughts or
actions for something or someone else.
The
diagram below (the assertiveness model) highlights different types of behaviour
(based on the Thomas-Kilmann Conflict Mode Instrument).
Dominant
Aggressive
behaviour Assertive behaviour
· Argues •
Professional
· Needs to win •
Inquiring
‘Sort yourself out.’ ‘Tell me what’s on your
mind.’
Cold
Warm
Avoiding
behaviour Appeasing behaviour
· Uninvolved
• Over-friendly
· Indifferent
• Talkative (rambling)
‘I’ll deal with it
later.’ • Highly positive
•
Too agreeable
Submissive
Aggressive: dominant and cold behaviour
When
dealing with aggressive behaviour, the best approach is to:
- increase your dominance to match their high
dominance levels
- ensure that you are demonstrating behaviour that
is assertive and warm rather than aggressive
- use open questions to generate
understanding
- use body language and tone of voice to increase
your dominance levels.
Avoiding: cold and submissive behaviour
When
dealing with avoiding behaviour, the first priority is to get people engaged.
Useful techniques include displaying lower dominance and higher warmth, using
open questions aimed at making them feel secure and softening body language and
intonation while continuing to smile.
Appeasing: warm and submissive behaviour
When
dealing with appeasing individuals, it can help to:
- stay focused to keep them on track
- use open questions that appeal to their social
needs but temper these with closed questions when they waffle
- ask summary questions to maintain clarity and
focus
- use their name if you are interrupting
them.
Assertive: warm and dominant behaviour
When
dealing with conflict, it can help to be assertive and encourage others to be
assertive as well. Consider how easy it is to warm up behaviour: why and when
is it not easy? Why do we, as individuals, not behave in an assertive manner?
What is it that hinders supportive and challenging behaviour? Finally, what are
the most important questions for you to ask?
WEEK 3
VISIONING
Creating your future
By
imagining the future you want and then translating those ideas into practical
and actionable plans, you will make it happen.
Orienting
thinking towards the future is particularly important for middle and senior
managers and leaders because it provides focus, determines the company’s
culture, builds resilience and adaptability and engages employees.
The need
A
powerful vision motivates and guides everyone at all levels in a company.
People manage what is in front of them, as daily and short-term tasks
understandably dominate our routine and thinking. This certainly keeps things
running smoothly in the stable present but is ill suited to coping with change
or taking advantage of (or creating) opportunities. Visioning liberates us from
simply managing the present, achieving more of the same or being unprepared for
new developments, and thus enables us to build a more successful future.
The process
Visioning
involves assessing and challenging current thinking and methods, developing new
ideas and deciding on the future you would like. It is also necessary to look
outside your company – noticing and understanding trends, identifying threats
and opportunities.
It
can be helpful to involve others in a visioning exercise by asking their views
on various issues. These questions will prompt thinking and encourage each
person to consider and challenge the company’s aims and activities and to
suggest new options (giving reasons for their choices).
Using
these answers, you identify the most common issues and ideas, reduce these
options to the ones that are most significant and then draft a provisional
vision statement – this can be done by a smaller group of people, with the
final vision being reviewed and approved by everyone involved. As well as
generating ideas and opening up discussions, a major advantage of involving
others in the visioning process is that you will gain their commitment to the
final vision.
Once
you have developed your vision, determine how it can be achieved:
- Deal with any barriers that may stand in the way
and consider how future events may affect it.
- Develop a practical plan and communicate the
vision and plan to every-one – show people why it is important, what it
will achieve and how it will work and gain their commitment.
- To bring others with you, your vision needs to be
clear, convincing, credible, easy to grasp, actionable, inspiring and
focused – but not overly prescriptive, to provide flexibility and
adaptability.
What’s next?
A
vision is for nothing if it is not acted upon. You should ensure that all
strategy and decisions are guided by the vision and that everyone remains
committed to the vision. A vision also needs to be reviewed and adapted to
changing circumstances to ensure that it remains relevant and useful.
WEEK 4
THE CHANGE CURVE
Understanding how people respond to change
The
human reaction to change is now well understood. The change process is commonly
understood by reference to the research on people’s reaction to bereavement.
Elisabeth Kubler-Ross has been a great contributor to our understanding of the
experience of loss and bereavement, as well as how we react to changes more
generally. The stages of loss that people typically go through are now commonly
known as the Change Curve.
Overview
Organizations
often refer to the Change Curve in the context of job loss and redundancy. Dr.
Kubler-Ross undertook her research on dying by interviewing terminally ill
patients. Although this is one of the most extreme and disturbing changes that
anyone can face, the reactions to it are the same as for many different types
of change. There are several key stages that people go through, as shown in the
graph below:
2.
Denial 6. Acceptance and
integration
1. Shock 3.
Frustration
and anger
5.
Experiment
and decision
4.
Depression
1. Shock. The first
reaction can often be shock – and all the emotion that results from this.
2. Denial. This is a
typical reaction and it is important and necessary. It helps cushion the impact
of the inevitability of change.
3. Frustration and anger.
The person resents the change that they must face while others are less
affected.
4. Depression. First, the
person feels deep disappointment, perhaps a sense of personal failing, things
not done, wrongs committed. Around this time they may also engage in
bargaining: beginning to accept the change but striking bargains -for more
time, for example,
5. Experiment and decision.
Initial engagement with the new situation and learning how to work in the new
situation, as well as making choices and decisions, and regaining
control.
6. Acceptance and
integration. Dr. Kubler-Ross describes this stage as neither happy nor unhappy.
While it is devoid of feelings, it is not resignation – it is really a
victory.
People
who are made redundant can go through a similar process. Just as with other
types of change, people often go through a first stage before denial – that of
shock or disbelief. We have witnessed people in shock following news of their
redundancy. It can take a long time for people to reach the acceptance stage
and often people oscillate between the different stages.
WEEK 5
THE LEADERSHIP PIPELINE
Developing a leader-powered business
Performance
is inseparable from a company’s approach to leadership development. Developed
by Ram Charan, Stephen Drotter and James Noel, the Leadership Pipeline is a
company-wide framework for developing future managers and leaders.
Overview
The
Leadership Pipeline is a continual process that ensures a throughput of
talented leaders. It is a practical, easily understood system that clearly
explains what is required to work successfully at each leadership level,
helping:
· individuals and
companies to understand what is required for excellence at each level
· individuals to develop
their skills, optimize potential and progress their careers
· organizations to manage
and develop talent, and to build strategic an organizational capabilities.
How it works
The
Leadership Pipeline represents the flow of internal talent into
business-critical roles. As such, organizational structures, processes and
reward mechanisms are geared towards encouraging preferred behaviours. For the
individual, the Pipeline clarifies the development path that will build the
leadership capabilities required to operate successfully at higher levels. At
each stage:
- people need to be clear about the capabilities
needed for each level
- managers and leaders should use the skills and
values that are expected at each level so that others can operate
effectively.
Traditional
approaches to leadership development tend to simply strengthen existing skills,
and inadequate attention is paid to learning new ones. The Leadership Pipeline
formally recognizes that change and improved performance occur best when the
skills that are needed for the next level are built on a solid foundation at
previous levels and when individuals are given the time and correct support and
training to learn the skills, time management and values required for the new
role.
This
clear framework makes it easy for people to see what capabilities and values
are needed for successful career progression and it focuses people on the
skills the organization needs – thus improving both current and future
performance.
Working
towards successful transitions
Typically,
career progression involves making successful transitions at six key
stages:
1. From managing yourself
to managing others
2. From managing others to
managing managers
3. From managing managers
to functional director
4. From functional director
to business director
5. From business director
to group business director
6. From group business
director to company director.
In
reality, people often make these transitions with little support and
inad-equate preparation, commonly modelling themselves on their predecessors
and learning what works through trial and error. The Leadership Pipeline makes
explicit what is required for success at each level. In particular, it
clarifies the requirements in three key areas:
1. Developing new
skills
2. Improving time
management
3. Adopting the values the
organization is looking for.
Acquiring
these capabilities at each level builds the foundation for success at the next
level. Consequently, this focus on skills, time management and values
prioritizes improved performance for advancement – benefiting both the
individual and the company.
WEEK 6
EMPLOYEE ENGAGEMENT AND THE THREE-FACTOR
THEORY
The three things that matter most to people at
work
The
factors that influence employee engagement combine in different ways and at
different times for each person. Obviously, pay and leadership are important –
with a direct relationship between pay and effort and the quality of leadership
being critical to employee engagement. In addition, people like to do work that
has meaning and purpose.
Following
international research, Sirota Consulting developed the Three-Factor Theory,
addressing employee engagement by addressing three basic needs: equity,
achievement and camaraderie.
Leaders
need to engage, inspire and energize their people. Gaining commitment and
getting people to acquire new skills and achieve their full potential leads to
ongoing improvements in performance, benefiting all concerned – individuals,
teams and companies. The Three Factor Theory establishes a self-sustaining
cycle of effective employee engagement by ensuring that practices and policies
focus on equity, achievement and camaraderie.
Equity
People
need to feel they are being treated fairly – especially in relation to others
both inside and outside the company. This includes:
- physical aspects – for example, working in a safe
environment and being physically able to do a job
- economic factors – people need to feel that their
pay, benefits and job security are fair
- psychological issues – including being treated
with respect and consideration.
Achievement
People
work better and achieve more if they believe in what they are doing and have
confidence in the direction they are going. In short, they work best when they
feel they are achieving something. Six issues influence this:
1. Having challenging work
and being able to use their skills
2. Having the opportunity
to develop their capabilities and to take risks
3. Having the resources,
authority, information and support to work effectively
4. Knowing that the work is
important and has value and purpose
5. Receiving recognition –
both financial and non-financial
6. Having pride in the
company’s aims, ethics, products and brand values.
Camaraderie
It
is important for individuals to have good relations with co-workers. This
requires congenial, co-operative, interesting and supportive relationships at
all levels, with the most immediate ones being the most significant. This
involves relationships:
- with co-workers
- within the business unit
- across on-site departments
- across the whole company.
WEEK 7
THE NINE PRINCIPLES OF MOTIVATION
Creating the right environment
So
much in business depends on motivating others. There is only so much any one
person can do, so getting the most out of others is crucial to success. This
all begins with winning trust – everything else follows.
Motivating
others is an essential part of leadership. Your ability to motivate others
relies on what they think of you and how they think you view them. This
requires planning and vigilance and knowing that different people are motivated
by different things. To motivate effectively, you need to know what motivates
each person, the pressures they face, what influences their decisions and
thinking, and how you can make a difference. These nine principles of
motivation will help you to help your colleagues.
1. Be motivated yourself
Self-motivation rallies others. People
will ‘step up to the plate’ if you do so yourself. Knowing what motivates you
will help you to motivate others.
2. Recruit people who are
highly motivated and assign them to the right position
Match people’s motivation to their job.
Some are motivated by making sales while others are motivated by following
processes, building teams or pursuing new ideas.
3. Treat people as
individuals
We all have different values and
personalities. What works for one may not motivate another. So, tap into what
motivates each individual to improve performance.
4. Set challenging but
realistic targets
Nothing is more demotivating than
unachievable targets. Nothing is more motivating than achievable,
we-can-beat-the-competition targets – they tap into our competitiveness and
desire to produce something to be proud of.
5. Focus on progress – it
motivates
Everyone responds to a pat on the back –
they’ve earned it and deserve it, so make it happen. The result: an upward
spiral of people wanting to achieve more.
6. Develop an environment
that motivates people
Eliminate or minimize anything that blocks
motivation – from bureaucracy and unnecessary procedures to lack of resources.
Provide training and coaching to develop skills and to make people feel valued.
7. Ensure that people
receive fair rewards
Promotion, pay rises, sales commission,
profit share, work benefits, additional responsibilities: these motivate
people. They give people a reason to stay and to help your company excel.
8. Recognize people’s
work
We all want our efforts to be
acknowledged. Recognition is needed to maintain commitment.
9. Be honest about your
intent
Honesty lies at the heart of motivation.
Be clear about what your intentions are. People will be motivated only by those
they can trust.
WEEK 8
SITUATIONAL LEADERSHIP (LEADERSHIP STYLES)
Adapting your approach
Situational
leadership improves your ability to lead others and to respond effectively to
situations.
Different leadership styles
By
adjusting your style to match each challenge, you are more likely to achieve
your desired outcome. To decide which approach is best, you need to consider
the issues, what needs to happen and the people involved. To develop your
situational leadership, you must be self-aware and understand your own style
and how it impacts others.
The
model of situational leadership developed by Ken Blanchard and Spencer Johnson
identifies and details the different leadership styles.
|
Leadership style |
Characteristics |
|
Directing ………..telling |
Centres on structure,
control and supervision and one-way communication
Effective for teams
that are new, temporary or forming
A hands-on, decisive
and involved approach that directs and emphasizes tasks and deadlines |
|
Coaching ……….engaging |
Focuses on directing
and supporting – using teaching and guiding skills
Works well with teams
that have worked together for a period of time
Promotes a balance
between short-term and long-term needs – such as monitoring target
achievement while developing longer-term priorities |
|
Supporting ……….developing |
Involves praising,
listening and facilitating development
Appropriate for teams
that continue to function well
Leaders are no longer
involved in short-term performance and operational measures
Long-term aspects are
more important, with a focus on individual and team development, planning and
innovation |
|
Delegating …….hands-off …….facilitating |
Responsibility for
routine decisions is handed over
Works best with a
highly experienced, successful team when little involvement is needed
The focus is on
working externally for the team by developing networks, securing resources
and sharing best practice
Intervention is
usually at the request of the team wanting support and advice with defining
problems, devising solutions or handling problems |
Using the right style
Each
situation should use the most appropriate style. For example, directing is
useful in exceptional circumstances such as a crisis requiring people to follow
a particular course of action or when handling difficult personnel
issues.
To
decide which style is appropriate, assess the competence, ability, confidence
and motivation of those involved. For example:
· Low confidence may
indicate reduced commitment, so a supportive and encouraging style is
appropriate.
· Low motivation requires
a listening approach, to identify the causes and change the situation.
WEEK 9
THE JOHN WHITMORE MODEL
Are you setting the right goals in the right
way?
Sir
John Whitmore gave us the GROW model for coaching and he also highlighted a
model for goal-setting that is SMART, PURE and CLEAR, ensuring that you and
your colleagues have goals that are appropriate, achievable and
successful.
Goal-setting
is vital whenever you need to focus someone (including yourself) on a specific
objective or series of objectives – for example, at an annual appraisal, when
someone starts a new role, or simply at the start of a new project.
When
developing people, it is important to provide a focus for action and to ensure
a sense of purpose. This is the value of the John Whitmore model: it provides a
checklist for goal-setting. So, when you are goal-setting, keep it simple and
check that each goal meets the 14 criteria in Whitmore’s model.
|
Specific |
The right goal |
Challenging |
|
Measurable |
Positively stated |
Legal |
|
Attainable |
Understood |
Environmentally
sound |
|
Realistic/Realistic |
Relevant |
Agreed |
|
Time- constrained |
Ethical |
Recorded |
When
goal-setting, distinguish between end goals and performance goals:
· End goals are the
ultimate objective. They could typically be to gain promotion or additional
responsibility or to complete a major project (e.g. I need to achieve sales of
£300,000 this year’).
· Performance goals
establish the level of performance that will help an individual to achieve
their end goal. Performance goals include such elements as quality standards,
time management and production targets (e.g. ‘I need to develop my negotiating
skills’).
Think
about a current goal you have or one you want to address in the future. Answer
the following questions to assess the robustness of your how approach to goal
setting, monitoring and achievement. Also comment on how you could improve your
approach.
|
· What is your
goal? · Is it specific? What,
exactly, will success look like? Is it an end goal or a performance
goal? · Is it measurable? How
will progress be measured and monitored? · Is it attainable? Do
you have the skills and resources needed? · How will you succeed
and what will you do? What could go wrong? What are the risks? · Is it realistic? How
does it relate to other people and activities? Are these links understood and
could this goal benefit from other activities or expertise elsewhere in the
organization? · What is the timescale?
Are there milestones or dependencies in the plan? · Is the goal stated as
positively as possible, in a way that will engage and encourage people? · Is it understood – is
there a clear vision and view of what success will look like? · Is it relevant – how
well does it relate to other issues and priorities? · Is it ethical? · Will it provide the
right level of challenge? · Is it legal and are
there legal (or regulatory) issues to consider? · Is it environmentally
sound? · Is everyone agreed or
is more agreement needed? · Has the goal been
recorded and is it being monitored, with progress assessed and lessons
learned? |
WEEK 10
ACTION-CENTRED LEADERSHIP
Managing the task, team and individual
John
Adair’s Action-Centred Leadership model views the role of leaders as
integrating three areas: ensuring that the task, the team and the individual
are working effectively and that their needs are met. Success relies on
ensuring that all three responsibilities are mutually reinforcing.
Overview
As
a leader, people look to you to set the direction, to support them, to help
them achieve their goals, to ensure that team members work well together .and
to make sure that the structures and procedures are in place (and working
effectively). It is not enough to have a great idea; you are responsible for
making it happen. In short, leadership is a total activity. If individuals
aren’t motivated, teams will not function well; if teams don’t work well, tasks
will fail and individual satisfaction falls, and so on. Whether you are leading
one team, a business unit or an entire company, you need to provide for:
- the needs of the task – provide the appropriate
systems, procedures and structures
- the needs of the team – promote team cohesiveness
so that team members work well together
- the needs of the individual – engage each person
(by considering pay, their sense of purpose, their need to have
achievements and contributions recognized, and their need for status and
to be part of something that matters).
A functional approach to leadership
To
provide for the needs of the task, team and individuals, John Adair out-lines
eight leadership functions:
1. Define the task.
Everyone needs to understand what is expected, so be clear about the task at
hand – make it SMART (Specific, Measurable, Attainable, Realistic and
Time-constrained).
2. Plan. Identify options,
look for alternatives, make contingency plans and test your ideas. Working with
others in a positive, open-minded, constructive and creative way will help you
to develop the best plan.
3. Brief others. To create
the right conditions and bring people with you, you have to keep people
informed. Both teams and individuals will work well only if they have access to
information and your thinking – without open communication, confusion or even
distrust can seriously hamper business strategy.
4. Control effectively. You
need self-control and you need to positively control others. Put the right
procedures and monitoring in place, delegate tasks and trust others to both
take responsibility and deliver results.
5. Evaluate. Assess likely
consequences, measure and judge the performance of both teams and individuals
and provide necessary feedback and training.
6. Motivate. Motivate
yourself – if you are not motivated, it will be difficult to motivate others.
Recruit people who are highly motivated. Set realistic and achievable targets –
people respond to doable goal Focus on progress, reward success and recognize
achievements.
7. Be organized. Be
organized yourself and ensure that teams and individuals have the necessary
skills, procedures, structures and resources in place for them to do their jobs
efficiently.
8. Set the right example.
The example you set to others influences their behaviour, motivation and
willingness to follow you.
WEEK 11
THE SIX STEPS OF DELEGATION
Developmental, productive – the cornerstone of
leadership
Without
delegation, leaders cannot lead and managers cannot manage. Delegation develops
skills, challenges and retains great people, and in-creases productivity. Yet
many people have difficulty delegating. These six steps will help you to
delegate effectively.
Delegation
requires empowerment and trust. You need to empower people give them the skills
and confidence to act and take risks. You need to trust them and accept that
mistakes will happen – mistakes that can be rectified and learned from and that
are more than made up for by the progress that is achieved. Delegation is
essential precisely because it goes directly to the bottom line – it has a huge
impact on productivity, innovation and employee engagement and retention.
Delegation
can be learned but, to be successful, it rests entirely on having the right
mindset. It is about bringing people with you. While experience helps, what is
more important is attitude, good communication skills and confidence in
yourself. These six stages provide a framework to help you delegate
successfully:
1. Prepare to
delegate
Know
what you want to achieve. Be clear about goals and priorities and decide how
these can be achieved. Plan what needs to happen, and when, and bring people
along with you. Winning hearts and minds and making sure people know the
reasons for your plan and what is expected of them are essential.
2. Match the person to the
task
Know
your people. Understand what they can do, their potential, what would challenge
and stimulate them. It also helps to understand their future career plans. Make
the most of each person’s abilities. Look for potential and take risks. With
encouragement, training and trust, you will get more from each person.
3. Discuss and agree
objectives
Engage
people with the task that needs to be completed. Everyone needs to understand
your thinking, agree with the plan and be clear about what needs to be done and
when. Consider constructive criticisms because it can improve your plan and
gain the buy-in of others.
4. Put resources and power
in place
Provide
the necessary resources and authority. In this way, your people can make
decisions and act. Support your people whenever this is needed – they need to
know you are behind them.
5. Monitor progress
Ensure
that people are accountable for delivering what is expected of them. Having
overall goals and interim targets will help people to stay focused, to meet
deadlines and to ensure that standards and results additional art met. The goal
is to keep people motivated and on track and to provide support where
needed.
6. Review progress
Learn
from experience and feedback. Compare and discuss results and objectives with
those involved. Look at what worked well and what could have been done better.
Use this to improve future plans.
WEEK 12
KOTTER’S EIGHT–STAGE PROCESS FOR LEADING CHANGE
Achieving progress and getting the right things done
in the best way possible
The
eight-stage process of creating major change was first outlined by John Kotter
in his bestselling book Leading Change; it describes what the
leader needs to do to ensure that beneficial change is achieved.
1. Establish a sense of
urgency
As
a leader, you should initiate or take control of the process by emphasizing the
need for change. The more urgent and pressing the need, the more likely people
will be focused. Usually, the leader’s role is to stay positive and build on
success. However, it can also help to emphasize failure – what might go wrong
and how, when and what the consequences could be. You can also emphasize
positive elements such as windows of opportunity that require swift and
effective change.
2. Create the guiding
coalition
The
guiding coalition needs to understand the purpose of the change process.
Members should be united, coordinated and carry significant authority. The
coalition needs to have the power to make things happen, to change systems and
procedures, and to win people over.
3. Develop a vision and
strategy
The
guiding coalition needs to create a simple, powerful vision that will direct
and guide change and achieve goals. You need to develop a detailed strategy for
achieving that vision. The strategy needs to be practical, work-able,
understandable, simple and consistent.
4. Communicate the change
vision
Use
every means possible to constantly communicate the new vision and strategies.
This will build pressure, momentum and understanding, sustaining a sense of
urgency. The guiding coalition should lead by example and act as role models
for the behaviour expected of employees.
5. Empower broad-based
action
The
leader and the guiding coalition cannot achieve change in isolation – it needs
the commitment and effort of others. Provide a blame-free and supportive
environment and empower your people by removing obstacles, changing systems or
structures that undermine the vision and encouraging risk-taking and
non-traditional ideas
6. Generate short-term wins
These
produce momentum and provide an opportunity to build on success. To do this,
plan for visible improvements in performance – or ‘wins’, create those wins and
recognize and reward people who make wins possible.
7. Consolidate gains and
produce more change
Once
the excitement of the start-up phase has passed, the successes have been built
and people know what is needed, people can tire and problems can arise. The key
is to move steadily: maintain momentum without moving too fast. You need to
continue by using increased credibility and understanding of what is still
needed, hiring, promoting and developing people who can implement the changes
and reinvigorating the process with new projects, themes and change
agents.
8. Anchor new approaches in
the organization’s culture
A
key danger in managing change is to finish too early. The best situation is
often where change, development and continuous improvements become the norm.
What matters is making changes that are firmly grounded in the organization.
This requires you to explain the connections between the new behaviours or
actions and success.
WEEK 13
SIX PRINCIPLES FOR GAINING COMMITMENT
Achieving employee engagement during times of
transition
What
is the goal of employee engagement? Quite simply: to maximize performance and
profit. These will not happen if leaders don’t have their people’s commitment.
Gone are the times when leaders simply informed others; nowadays a dialogue
needs to take place. People need to feel valued and listened to, and leaders
need to inspire, win hearts and minds, and harness talent and potential.
Successful
transitions depend on gaining commitment. Without it, companies underperform
and strategy is harder to achieve. John Smythe developed six principles to
engage employees – releasing creativity, raising productivity and promoting
commitment and loyalty. They give people a compelling reason to work for you,
to excel, and to implement plans successfully. By listening, engaging,
empowering and encouraging people to share ideas, you will build confidence,
loyalty and camaraderie.
1. Develop the right
plan and make sure that everyone agrees
Ensure
that the senior team has explored all options and developed the best strategy.
While teams often agree on a plan, some people may have held back ideas or not
been on board. Making sure that everyone at the senior level is on board is
critical.
2. Plan the transition
process and prepare a timeline
When
planning the timeline for implementation, consider the timing of all demands
that will be placed on people, including emotional and motivational aspects.
3. Decide who is to be
involved – and how
Make
sure that everyone is clear about who is involved and how and why they are
involved – or affected. When people know what their role is and understand your
strategy, they are more engaged, adaptable and committed.
4. Set standards (including
role modeling and measuring progress)
Putting
standards and timed goals in place enables people to measure progress. The key
is to win and maintain people’s commitment: measures need to work with people;
they should not demotivate. When setting goals, consider the people involved –
ask yourself how they would respond.
5. Connect with each person
as an individual
Include
opportunities for people to reflect, learn and enjoy working for your company.
Implementing a new strategy should be enjoyable – emphasize the excitement, the
potential and the opportunities. Include opportunities to celebrate past
achievements – moving to the future without a nod to the past is discouraging.
6. Tell and sell the new
strategy
Tap
into people’s desire to be part of something and interpret situations from
their perspective. Empathy is an invaluable tool for generating enthusiasm and
commitment. Remember: the version of change you are giving is not the only one
people hear. Be honest, keep people informed, and offer a better, more
inspirational and convincing explanation of events and strategy.
WEEK 14
BELBIN’S TEAM RULES
Building, managing and understanding teams and
teamworking
R.
Meredith Belbin identified nine ways people work together in teams.
Understanding these types will help you build and lead better teams.
Leading a team
While
people can have characteristics from different categories, one style tends to
dominate. To manage teams effectively, you need to identify and understand the
style each person uses. Knowing the type of person each team member is will
help you to build the right team, get the most out of people, delegate
effectively and manage situations successfully. The information can be used to
motivate, secure commitment, encourage the behaviours and actions you are
looking for, and help you understand when to challenge and when to hold back.
This insight enables you to know what type of support to offer, as well as
knowing how to avoid conflict or manage it effectively should it arise.
Belbin’s nine team roles
|
Team role |
Strengths –
contribution to team-working |
Weaknesses – problems
for team-working |
|
Plant |
Plants are creative
and imaginative individuals. Their approach can be unorthodox, unusual or
freethinking. As a result, they are particularly effective at solving
difficult problems. |
A propensity to ignore
details and become too preoccupied or-focused on one issue, hindering
communication and collaboration. |
|
Resource
investigator |
Typically resource
investigators are outgoing, extrovert, enthusiastic and communicative. Skills
include the ability to explore opportunities and develop contacts. |
Over-optimistic and
positive, rather than realistic or resilient. This can mean that they lose
interest after their initial enthusiasm. |
|
Coordinator |
Coordinators are
mature and confident, able to connect big-picture thinking with detailed
implementation, good planning and organizational skills. |
Too much delegation
and co-ordination of others can be seen as manipulative, and they can
sometimes be perceived as offloading work. |
|
Shaper |
Shapers are
challenging, action-oriented and dynamic. Within teams they enjoy
decision-making and problem-solving, and bring the drive and courage needed
to overcome obstacles. |
Prone to provocation,
and may risk offending team-members’ feelings with their focus on action and
results (rather than people). |
|
Monitor Evaluator |
Monitor evaluators’
strength is their sober, strategic and discerning approach. They contribute
to team effectiveness by viewing all options and displaying sound, accurate
judgement |
An ability to monitor,
evaluate and assess is not always dynamic, and their weaknesses can include a
lack of drive and ability to inspire others. |
|
Teamworker |
Teamworkers are
especially co-operative, perceptive and diplomatic. They complement a team
with their ability to listen, build on ideas, promote collaboration and
mutual support and avoid friction. |
A key weakness is
indecision in crunch situations, including those scenarios where there is no
‘right’ way forward. |
|
Team role |
Strengths –
contribution to team-working |
Weaknesses – problems
for team-working |
|
Implementer |
Implementers
contribute to teams by being disciplined, reliable and efficient. They are
especially skilled at turning ideas into practical actions and results |
Can slow down
teamworking by being inflexible or slow to respond to new options. |
|
Completer finisher |
Completer finishers
deliver on time and succeed by providing the team with a conscientious,
anxious approach that looks for errors and omissions. |
Completer finishers
can worry unnecessarily or excessively and sometimes be reluctant to
delegate. |
|
Specialist |
Specialists are
single-minded, dedicated self-starters. who contribute to team effectiveness
by providing valuable knowledge and skills. |
The specialist’s
weakness is their tendency to concentrate on technicalities and they may only
contribute in a single narrow area. |
The
diagnostic questionnaire for BeIbin’s team role analysis is available at Belbin
Associates’ website (www.belbin.com).
WEEK 15
DRIVERS OF TRUST AND THE TRUST CYCLE
What we look for when choosing to trust someone
The
drivers of trust are the attributes that lead to effective relationships.
The
cycle of trust is the process through which trust can be developed and
maintained.
Overview
Trust
matters because success can be achieved only by working through others. By
inspiring trust, you will encourage those around you to be flexible and
collaborative. Developing the drivers of trust and maintaining the trust of
others will lead to productive business relationships.
The drivers of trust
The
main drivers of trust are:
|
|
By
promoting these qualities, relationships with colleagues, customers and
stakeholders are more beneficial to everyone involved.
The reality of trust
In
reality, the attributes we are more likely to encounter (the reality of trust)
are:
|
|
The trust deficit
People
look for the drivers of trust when deciding when, and how much, to trust
someone. When people’s expectations are not met, trust and indeed the entire
relationship are seriously undermined. It would seem that without a concerted
effort to develop and demonstrate these qualities we are unlikely to develop
the rapport we need for good working relationships. Avoiding a trust deficit
becomes all-important if we are to get the most out of business relationships.
By understanding the drivers of trust, along with the cycle of trust, we can
better shape the way we relate to others and build successful, reliable and
productive relationships.
The Trust Cycle
|
Explore – understand
the issues and priorities |
|
Commit — agree what
you will deliver, how and when
|
|
Confirm — check that
delivery has met the person’s expectations |
|
Deliver — take action
and achieve what you have
promised |
By
continually following these stages, you will build and maintain the trust that
is essential for effective, productive relationships. As trust is such a
fragile commodity, failing to achieve any one of these stages will damage the
relationship and require you to go back and rebuild it. For this reason,
ensuring that trust is maintained – by continually developing the drivers of
trust and following the cycle of trust – is less disruptive, less
time-consuming and less stressful. It creates the positive and productive
relationships that are necessary for success.
WEEK 16
THE TRUTHS OF STRATEGY
Who, what, how: succeeding with business
strategy
Developing
a distinctive, successful business strategy is often over-elaborate and
over-complicated. Strategy is simply about understanding where you are now,
where you are heading and – crucially – how you will get there.
The idea
Strategy
has three essential elements: development, implementation and selling (meaning,
obtaining commitment and buy-in). Underpinning all three is choice, in
particular the need to choose a distinctive strategic position on three
dimensions:
1. Who to target as
customers (and who to avoid targeting)
2. What products to
offer
3. How to undertake related
activities efficiently
In practice
Strategy
is all about making tough choices in these three dimensions: who, what and how.
It means deciding on the customers you will target and, just as importantly,
the customers you will not target. This issue requires a focus
on customer segmentation and geography.
Delivering
a successful strategy also means choosing the products or services you will
offer and what product features or benefits to emphasize. Finally, strategy
means choosing the activities you will use to sell your selected product to
your selected customer.
This
approach sounds simple but there are several key points to note to ensure a
successful strategy:
- Ensure that your strategy creates a unique
strategic position. This is achieved by focusing on who your customers
are, the value proposition offered to these customers and how you can do
this efficiently.
- Make distinctive, tough choices. To be
distinctive and meaningful, strategy must make difficult choices and
combine these choices in a self-reinforcing system of activities that fit.
Common mistakes include: keeping options open; permitting incentives in
the system that enable people to ignore choices; searching for growth in a
way that forces people to ignore the firm’s strategy, and analysis
paralysis.
- Understand the importance of values and
incentives. In particular, the underlying environment of your organization
creates the behaviours of that organization. The organization’s culture
and values, measurement and incentives, people, structure and processes
all determine the underlying environment.
- Gain people’s emotional commitment to the
strategy. Any strategy, however brilliant, will fail unless people are
emotionally committed to its success.
- Remember, understanding is not the same as
communicating. Explain why the strategy is important to the organization
and the individual.
- Do not overlook the knowledge-doing gap.
Individuals tend to do the urgent things and not the important ones. There
is a gap between what they know and what they do. Remember, what gets
measured gets done.
- Do not believe that ‘strategic’ means important.
Closely linked is the mistaken view that only ‘top’ people can develop
strategic ideas. Ideas can come from anybody, anytime, anywhere.
- Keep your strategy flexible. All ideas are good
for a limited time – not forever. Keep checking the answers to the ‘who –
what – how’ questions. Strategy does not need to be changed too often but
it will occasionally require adjusting to suit external circumstances. So,
give your people freedom and autonomy to respond and to adjust, without
waiting for permission or instructions.
WEEK 17
SWOT ANALYSIS
A valuable decision-making technique
SWOT analysis can work
at many different levels: from the overall operation of the organization as a
whole to the separate and independent issues affecting a department or a single
product.
|
|
Internal sources of strength and weakness
These
are typically found within an organization, whereas opportunities and threats
are most often external. Some factors can be sources both of strength and
weakness: for example the age of employees. Older employees may denote a stable
organization, able to retain employees and maintain a wealth of experience, or
it may simply mean that the organization is too conservative. Many factors can
be either strengths or weaknesses and they can change from one to the other
surprisingly quickly.
External sources of opportunity and threat
These
are more difficult to assess than internal ones. Examples of sources of
opportunities and threats are detailed below.
|
Sources of opportunity
include:
|
|
Sources of threats
include:
|
WEEK 18
SCENARIO THINKING
Walking the battlefield before battle commences
Scenario
thinking is a tool for exploring possible futures. It is used to stimulate
debate, develop resilient strategies and test business plans against possible
futures. It enables us to think innovatively and to develop strategy that is
not constrained by the past. It provides the insight needed to manage
uncertainty and risk, set strategy, handle complexity, improve decision-making,
reveal current potential, promote responsiveness and control our future.
Overview
Scenarios
inform and guide our understanding of possible futures that lie ahead and the
forces contributing to those events. The outcomes of different responses to
potential developments can be tested, without risk, through exploring various
scenarios. The aim is not to predict the future accurately but to experience
events before they happen.
Scenario
thinking allows us to:
- reveal new perspectives and identify gaps in
organizational knowledge
- challenge assumptions, overcoming
business-as-usual thinking
- understand the present and identify potential e
promote awareness of external events
- encourage people to share information and
ideas
- improve our responses to events
- promote a shift in attitude and develop greater
certainty
- promote a shared purpose and direction.
The
Strategic Conversation is an ongoing process of assessing the present, creating
and testing scenarios, developing and analyzing options, and then selecting,
refining and implementing the chosen options. Scenarios should:
- Involve people at all levels
- be relevant and valued
- avoid existing biases
- be rooted in a thorough analysis of the
present.
Initial planning
Create
a separate team to plan the process – preferably external people known for
innovative, challenging thinking. They should:
- identify gaps in knowledge, given the business
challenges to be faced
- agree the project’s duration
- interview members of the scenario workshop –
asking each person for a ‘history of the future’ (what could happen and
how it happened)
- collate and analyze their responses in a report,
identifying the main issues, ideas and uncertainties. (This will set the
agenda for the first workshop.)
Developing the scenarios
The
aim is to understand the forces shaping the future. The workshop should develop
scenarios that create and assess possible events and their consequences.
Participants should:
- identify the forces that could impact a
situation
- agree two possible opposite outcomes (and the
forces involved)
- identify how these forces are linked
- decide whether each force has a low or high
impact and a low or high probability
- develop likely ‘histories’ that led to each
outcome, detailing the factors involved.
Analyzing and using the scenarios
Identify
the priorities and concerns of people responsible for key decisions in the
scenario who are outside the organization – including their likely reactions at
different stages in the scenario. Then develop an action plan by working
backwards from the scenario’s future to the present in order to identify the
early signs of change. These can be recognized and acted upon swiftly and
effectively, thereby influencing the strategic direction of the company.
WEEK 19
THE BALANCED SCORECARD
Developed
by Robert Kaplan and David Norton, the Balanced Scorecard is a valuable adjunct
to traditional business measures that are limited by their focus on past
performance. The Balanced Scorecard overcomes this limitation by providing a
means of assessing future performance to better inform and guide strategic
development.
Overview
The
reason for its success is its ability to integrate measures of performance to
present a balanced view of a company’s overall performance and to pinpoint areas
that need completion or further development. The process generates objectives
in four areas – financial data, customers’ perceptions, essential internal
processes, and innovation and learning – and puts in place action plans and
continuous assessment. It has been criticized for being too prescriptive and
quantitative, but its use can be broadened to include qualitative
aspects.
How to use the Balanced Scorecard approach
The
approach taken will depend on the company’s type, size and structure. However,
there are five broad stages:
1. Prepare, define and
communicate the strategy – people need to understand the objectives and how to
achieve them
2. Decide what to measure –
typical measures are shown in this table:
|
Area |
Aim |
What to measure |
|
Financial |
To increase
performance
|
|
|
Customers |
To improve:
|
|
|
Internal processes |
To improve:
|
|
|
Innovation and
learning |
To promote:
|
|
3. Finalize and implement
the plan – this stage ensures that measures are workable, tailored and adopted.
Essentially, this is managing by setting objectives.
4. Publicize and use the
results – being seen to act is important. Also, while ensuring that everyone
understands overall objectives, decide who should receive specific information,
why and how frequently.
5. Review and amend the
system – to solve any problems and to set new challenges.
WEEK 20
THE 7S MODEL
Assessing business performance
The
7S model is a framework for assessing the performance of a company. It views
all seven elements as equally important because they impact on each other –
with failure in one area undermining the others. By appreciating how they are
related, and assessing performance from this perspective, companies and teams
can better align activities to achieve goals.
Overview
First
developed in the 1970s by McKinsey and refined by Tom Peters, Robert Waterman
and Richard Pascale, the 75 model works from the principle that success relies
on simultaneously pursuing a combination of seven hard and soft aspects of
running a business. Known for changing people’s thinking at the time, it still
provides a useful framework for assessing and improving a company or how a team
is working – identifying gaps and enabling adjustments to be made to ensure
that all seven aspects are aligned, working together, and supporting and
reinforcing one another. By knowing how things are interrelated, the framework
raises awareness of the full impact of any changes.
1. Strategy
These are plans that determine, define and
outline how to fulfill the company’s goals and purpose and to achieve
competitive advantage.
2. Structure
This is how the company is organized and
how each part relates to the others.
3. Systems
This is about how both formal and informal
business processes function.
4. Shared values
(superordirlate goals)
These are the company’s beliefs, values
and guiding mission that draw people together and that directly influence their
approach, thinking and actions.
5. Skills
These are the capabilities of both the
people and the organization.
6. Staff
This concerns the nature, type and general
abilities of the people employed.
7. Style
This is the organization’s culture and
style of leadership that, along with having an internal impact, determine how
people outside the organization view the company.
The main point is that all seven elements
are interrelated, with each affecting the others. In this, it can be viewed as
an early proponent of holistic business. Significantly – and this is of
particular relevance to leaders today – it reveals how underperformance can be
attributed to neglect in any one of the seven aspects, regardless of strong
focus and capabilities in one or more of the others. Richard Pascale
subsequently argued that, while it is generally important to view all seven as
equally significant to achieving success, having shared values (superordinate
goals) is the element that binds all the others together.
WEEK 21
THE RULE OF 150
A bold way to create the right working conditions.
This
rule is about limiting the number of people at any one location to 150.
Overview
The
rule is based on the idea that 150 is the largest group size that people can
deal with – beyond that number, it is increasingly difficult to form bonds with
others. If groups are larger, hierarchies, regulations and formal measures are
required. However, with fewer than 150, goals can be achieved informally and
people work better and are happier, more motivated and more productive.
Why it works
Co-workers
find socializing, teamworking, innovating, collaborating and sharing knowledge
easier to achieve in groups of fewer than 150 people. By organizing operations
into smaller groups, large companies can gain the benefit of smaller groups –
being closer, driven, entrepreneurial, supportive and productive.
The rule in practice
Gore
Associates, a high-tech firm, uses this rule. It has 15 plants all within 20
kilometres (12 miles) of one another, and each with fewer than 150 employees.
It has resisted the option of merging its separate sites – despite potential
cost savings – because the small size of each unit ensures that everyone knows
everyone else and works well together.
By
organizing itself in this way, Gore, despite being a large company with
thousands of employees, is still able to enjoy the entrepreneurial approach of
a small start-up. Each unit enjoys the benefits of collective management, which
are
- improved communication
- greater initiative
- flexibility.
It
is notable that employee turnover is significantly less than the industry
average and the company has enjoyed sustained profitability and growth for over
35 years.
This
does not mean that Gore has no control or input. It has put a strong managerial
system in place to oversee each unit, to ensure that activities are coordinated
and efficient. The company also encourages a sense of community and teamwork
within these groups – after all, the rule only means that it is possible for
workers to form positive bonds with each other, so efforts must still be made
to ensure that this happens. In addition, Gore makes sure that it develops a
sense of community across the company by encouraging people to communicate and
collaborate with workers from other groups.
WEEK 22
THE SERVICE PROFIT CHAIN
Managing the vital link between people and
profit
The
service profit chain highlights how employee engagement drives improvements in
company performance. When employees are able to see the impact of their
actions, it changes their approach and improves results.
The idea
The
service profit chain is based on the premise that market leadership requires an
emphasis on managing value drivers those factors that have the greatest impact
on success and provide the most benefit to customers. This concept is then
focused on the value drivers that are the most important determinants of
success: employee retention, employee satisfaction and employee productivity –
it is these that strongly influence customer loyalty, revenue growth and
profitability.
How the service profit chain works
In practice: Sears
In
the 1990s US-based retailer Sears reversed significant losses by focusing on
employee issues in order to turn around the company’s fortunes. They
examined:
- how employees felt about working at the
company
- how employee behaviour affected customers
- how customers’ experience affected profits.
Sears
asked employees to estimate how much profit was made for each dollar sold. The
average answer was 46 cents while the real answer was 1 cent –
demonstrating that profitability was poorly understood. The company introduced
changes in order to engage with employees and to get them to understand what
influences profitability – in particular, to make clear the link between
employee behaviour, customer satisfaction and company success. By understanding
the implications of their actions, it changed their approach, resulting in
sustained improvements in profitability.
In practice: B&Q
At
UK retailer B&Q, each percentage increase in staff turnover was costing the
company £1 million. By reducing staff turnover from 35 to 28 per cent through its
Employee Engagement Programme, the company reduced costs and increased turnover
per employee by 20 per cent.
WEEK 23
UNDERSTANDING AND AVOIDING INERTIA
When success traps us in the past
It
might seem counterintuitive to warn people about the dangers of success but
that is exactly what Donald Sull did when he developed the concept of ‘active
inertia’ – where people repeat the strategies and activities that have worked
well in the past.
A
reliance on previous thinking and approaches – the formula of success – can
cause a company to fail to respond properly to new developments. By applying
past approaches to new conditions, the end result can be a downward spiral –
leaving an organization vulnerable to more dynamic companies with approaches better
suited to the new environment.
How active inertia works
A
firm correctly discerns gradual shifts and developments in the external
environment, but fails to respond effectively.
Managers
get trapped by success, often responding to the most disruptive changes by
accelerating activities that succeeded in the past.
The
source of active inertia is a company’s success formula, the unique set of
strategic frames, resources, processes, relationships and values that
collectively influence managers’ actions.
With
time and repetition, people stop considering alternatives to their formula. The
individual components of the success formula grow less flexible.
How active inertia happens
Active
inertia occurs because people come to rely on a past formula of success, where
accepted approaches become entrenched and people stop considering alternatives.
Consequently, people continue to respond to external changes by pursuing fixes
and activities that worked in the past. However, these responses are likely to be
ineffectual because they are based on past success and not current and future
needs.
Why a past success formula does not guarantee a
successful future
Essentially,
like it or not, our brains are lazy – subconsciously preferring the easy route
to solving problems and then, equally subconsciously, superimposing a solid
layer of reasons to justify our decisions. So it is hardly surprising that our
brains fool us into being happy to rely on approaches that have proven
successful in the past: it is easy and we have a ready-made wall of rock-solid
excuses to hand.
As
individuals, our thinking, strategies, Methods, use of resources, relationships
and values all become firmly entrenched. The consequence for companies is that
this formula becomes so deeply embedded that they are left vulnerable when
faced with changing conditions.
It
is understandable that past approaches should be so revered and relied upon –
they are, after all, the reason for the company’s current success. However, we
should keep in mind that this formula is exactly that: suited to the current,
stable situation – not the future. Companies can suddenly find themselves
commercially stranded.
The
bottom line is that, when faced with new developments, your approach needs to
change accordingly – essentially, the survival of the fittest depends on
adaptation.
WEEK 24
THE SIX Rs OF BUSINESS
Business is a total activity
Luis
Gallardo’s Six Rs is a total approach to business — where all activities work
together, moving the whole company forward in the same direction.
Having
all company activities support one other enables us to develop the right
mindset, strategy and approach for growing a successful business. This holistic
approach ensures that no part of a company undermines overall goals or the
activities of another part of the business. The Six Rs are:
- Reason
- Revenue
- Rousers
- Reputation
- Relationships
- Resilience.
Why the Six Rs matter
The
Six Rs should work together, supporting one other and never undermining other
business activities or goals. As companies can discover to their cost (witness
the damage to sales when legal tax avoidance is revealed), any aspect of
running a business can have serious consequences. Conversely, when the various
corporate activities support one other, they will strengthen the brand and
promote success. Essentially, everyone and all activities should pull together.
To have parts, even unwittingly, pulling in different directions will derail
strategy and cause a company to veer off course.
Reason
The
starting point, and ongoing requirement, for setting and directing all
activities is to know the reason why you are in business – your vision, values
and purpose. This sets the tone and gains commitment and, consequently, has an
enormous impact on customers and achieving goals. Your purpose should be
communicated to everyone in the organization. Also, by fitting your products
and services to your reason and values, customers and employees will understand
what your company means.
Revenue
Managing
and maximizing revenues is essential for enacting strategies and building
resilience. An often overlooked but critical aspect is the portfolio of clients
– it reveals strengths and gaps elsewhere in the company. The important thing
is to manage revenues through the prism of the rest of the 6Rs – and to manage
the others through the lens of revenue.
Rousers
Engaging
your people and aligning their thinking and behaviours to the rest of the
company’s activities depend on being able to inspire them. This has an enormous
impact on all areas of a business – especially customers – and sets the right
conditions for people to be innovative and to adapt successfully to
change.
Reputation
Reputation
is critical to success. It affects employees as well as current and potential
customers and all stakeholders. The important point is that reputation can be
affected by any aspect of the business – emphasizing the need to ensure that
other activities do not undermine reputation.
Relationships
All
business – internal and external – is about handling relationships. Everything
is affected, with a direct bearing on profitability, so all relationships
should be managed carefully, keeping in mind the importance of the Six Rs
approach.
Resilience
Developing
resilience enables companies to continue achieving goals, to survive difficult
circumstances and to take advantage of opportunities. It enables swift and
appropriate responses to any developments and the flexibility to adapt to
change. Resilience involves being proactive, prepared and having the right
mindset to deal with any events, threats or opportunities.
WEEK 25
THE BOSTON CONSULTING GROUP MODEL
How to manage your product portfolio
Identifying
which products and investments should be continued (and at what level of
investment) is a complicated task. Cutting through this confusion, the Boston
Consulting Group model (developed by Bruce Henderson) provides a
straightforward means of managing your port-folio of products.
How it works
The
model uses a matrix, each box representing a type of product: Star, Cash cow,
Question mark and Dog. Products are located in a quadrant according to market
growth and market share. The category a product falls into enables you to see
whether it is worth pursuing. By Looking at the matrix, it is easy to see why
each category has certain characteristics and prospects.
Star
Given
the high market growth, this product is obviously a rising star and should be
pursued. Coupled with high market share, the risks are minimal and the return
will be high. A note of caution, though, is that a growing market will
inevitably cost a lot to keep up with so it is advisable to consider your
ability to fund this – especially if there are large set-up costs or if you
expect a delay in the product generating revenue.
Cash cow
Clearly,
given the large market share, there is still a lot of potential for generating
revenue. However, given the low market growth, there may be some limiting
factors (such as time or changing technology) that suggest you should milk
these products as much as you can before the opportunity for high returns
dwindles in a declining market. It would be wise to monitor market conditions
closely to prevent losses should the market decline rapidly.
Question mark
If
a product falls into this category, there are issues that need to be addressed
before a decision can be made. Although there is high market growth, you have
to ask yourself whether the low market share will generate enough revenue to
justify the investment – especially given the likely high costs of keeping pace
with a growing market. A key factor in making a decision is having deep-enough
pockets either to wait for higher returns as the market grows or to turn it
into a Star by securing a stronger market share.
Dog
With
low market share and low market growth, this product is going nowhere fast.
Clearly, it is not worth pursuing. Sometimes, you may wish to continue with
this type of product if it provides other benefits – such as maintaining
customer loyalty for your overall brand.
WEEK 26
THE PARETO PRINCIPLE
Finding the right locus and answer using the 80:20
rule
Pareto
analysis arose from Vilfredo Pareto’s observation that many activities break
down into an 80:20 ratio, where 80 per cent of output is due to 20 per cent of
the contributory factors. This observation is now used to focus business
strategy, problem-solving and operations on the key inputs that are responsible
for 80 per cent of the outcome.
How it works
The
80:20 ratio applies both to positive and negative situations, providing a
useful means of dealing quickly with problems or opportunities. In other words,
by identifying the small number of key factors that are contributing most to a
situation, we can better focus efforts to achieve the desired result.
Pareto
analysis is only as good as the data that is used, so we need to ensure that
all contributory factors are identified and that appropriate and revealing
parameters and measures are established and interpreted correctly. Although not
everything falls neatly into an 80:20 rule, Pareto analysis is still useful for
identifying the main causal factors.
This
simple example shows how the process works.
1. Research and discuss the
issue, identifying all contributory factors.
2. Decide an appropriate
time period and method of measurement.
3. Measure how frequently
each factor occurs (or another measure, such as cost).
4. Rank the factors in
descending order, with the largest one first.
5. Calculate the frequency of
each factor as a percentage of the total occurrences (or cost).
6. Calculate the cumulative
percentage (current percentage plus all previous percentages).
7. Depict this information
on a graph – with ‘frequency as a percentage of total’ as a bar chart and
‘cumulative percentage’ as a line, adding a third line showing the 80 per cent
cut-off point.
All
factors that appear to the left of the intersection of the two lines are the
ones contributing to 80 per cent of the result – these are the factors to focus
on.
Example
of how the Pareto Principle can be displayed
WEEK 27
BLUE OCEAN STRATEGY
Creating unique market opportunities
A
Blue Ocean Strategy is one where the key to success Lies not in competing
directly with rivals within a market, but in creating an entirely new
market where there are currently no competitors and where the
potential for high returns is vast.
Developed
by W. Chan Kim and Renee Mauborgne, Blue Ocean Strategy involves a change in
strategic thinking towards a mindset that challenges existing market
boundaries, rewrites the rules of competition, and creates a new, as yet
uncontested, market space. The theory outlines two attitudes to competition:
Red Oceans and Blue Oceans.
The
current marketplace for all products and services is made up of Red Oceans
(bloody battlegrounds), where boundaries are clearly defined and companies
operate within the boundaries of their accepted Red Ocean markets. Here, the
entrenched battleground is one where companies compete to gain extra market
share within the current market boundary.
A
very different attitude pervades the Blue Oceans. These are areas of deep,
uncharted, almost limitless potential where the aim is not to compete on
traditional grounds but to develop products and services that create entirely
new markets. In essence, it is creating customers that do not yet exist.
At
its core, Blue Ocean Strategy believes that it is better to create tomorrow’s
customers through developing a new market rather than scrabbling around trying
to capture existing customers in the current marketplace. There may be many
justifications for this approach but, quite simply, the reason seems
straightforward: to create a monopoly situation and reap the high rewards
before competitors enter the new market.
Value creation
Value
is achieved by integrating the utility of the product with its cost and price.
It is not a case of choosing between competing through managing costs or
product differentiation: it is about pursuing both. It is this that creates the
value that appeals across customer groups, drawing them into a new market.
Think of this as maximizing the gap between the utility of the product and its
price (facilitated by lower costs) – the larger this gap, the higher the value
and the more it attracts customers.
Blue
Ocean Strategy relies on four main principles:
1. Challenging existing
market boundaries. Reconstruct the marketplace, identifying and creating new
markets and customers. The Blue Ocean is a vast place where demand is
unrealized – it doesn’t yet exist. The aim is to bring this demand into
existence.
2. Keeping focused on the
overall picture. Be clear about your goals: what matters and needs to be
achieved.
3. Minimizing risk. Assess
current industry standards and decide what can be:
a. eliminated – things that
are not necessary
b. reduced – things that do
not need to be done to a high standard
c. raised – things that
should be done better
d. created – things that
have never been offered before.
4. Planning careful
implementation. You will need to overcome barriers and secure the resources and
the support of your people (especially key influencers).
WEEK 28
BENCHMARKING
Measuring performance
Benchmarking
establishes standards against which performance can be measured. It is used to
assess performance and to set targets across a range of business
activities.
Overview
The
purpose of benchmarking is to improve efficiency and quality, to determine and
promote best practice, to maintain competitiveness and to focus people on the
need for change and improvement. Carol McNair and Kathleen Leibfried divide
benchmarking into four categories as shown in this table:
|
Category |
Aim |
|
Internal |
Using internal
measures to match or surpass current performance, ensure consistent standards
throughout the company, eliminate waste and improve operations |
|
Competitive |
Using competitors’
standards to set targets that match or improve upon their performance |
|
Industry |
Setting benchmarks
that are industry standards |
|
Best-in-class |
To match or surpass
the standards of the best companies in any industry or country |
Setting benchmarks
The
data should be free from bias or vested interests. Using an external company to
gather evidence and measure standards will help to maintain impartiality.
Successful
benchmarking needs everyone to be ‘on the same page’ and to understand the
process. People need to be clear about what is being measured and what, and it
is important to give people the time and resources they need.
While
targets need to be realistic and achievable, they also need to ensure that
standards are maintained and consistent throughout a company and they should
seek to continually improve upon performance. To do this, it is necessary to look
at both internal and external evidence.
Benchmarking
is a continual process that needs to adapt quickly to changes – it is no use
measuring activities that are no longer relevant or failing to measure
activities that are now more significant. To do this effectively, as well as
assessing internal operations, you need a keen awareness of your customers,
competitors and companies in other sectors. This ensures that benchmarking is
focused on the issues that matter now rather than reflecting the past, and is
not blinkered by a narrow, internal focus that risks delivering more of the
same.
By
enabling you to know what competitors are doing and what the most innovative,
high-performing companies in other industries are achieving, benchmarking will
help to maintain your company’s competitiveness.
WEEK 29
THE PRODUCT LIFE CYCLE
Managing your product portfolio
From
development and launch, through its peak to eventual decline, a product’s life
cycle determines the strategy needed to optimize its return at each stage and
to develop further products to ensure ongoing profit-ability and
competitiveness.
Although
not an exact science, the duration of each stage varies according to the
product and the markets involved. Some life cycles are obviously shorter than
others – such as technology products. With very short life cycles, it is
essential to maximize returns as quickly as possible and to be continually
developing the next products. A long-lasting branded product, despite
undergoing many life cycles, enjoys continuity from its brand name. Companies,
however, still have to manage the life cycles of such branded products –
planning the next improvement and managing the replacement of the current
version.
There
are five stages in the product life cycle:
1. Development – this
includes entirely new products and changes or improvements to existing
products
2. Introduction – at this
stage, costs can be high relative to revenue
3. Growth – revenue rises
and offsets costs
4. Maturity – growth slows
and competition rises
5. Decline – sales decline
due to increased competition or changing customer preferences
The
following describes tactics appropriate to each stage:
Development
Development
can be very costly, with unexpected delays, so cash-flow issues are paramount.
Researching what customers are looking for and testing prototypes with
potential customers will help you develop the right products with fewer
glitches – as well as promoting a ready-made pool of customers. Importantly, product
development is an ongoing process, ensuring that new products or improvements
to existing products are ready to replace current products.
Introduction
Getting
the launch right is essential. Raising product awareness quickly requires
promotional and advertising investment – depending on the nature of the
product, targeting early adopters can be useful at this stage. An aggressive
pricing strategy can achieve fast market penetration – although this will
depend on the brand’s attributes. You could also consider minimizing
distribution costs by limiting the availability of the product.
Growth
In
the face of more competition, but still with considerable potential revenue and
falling unit costs, strategy needs to focus on outcompeting rivals, delivering extra
value to customers and increasing market share. Further promotional offers,
marketing and advertising campaigns, attractive prices and promoting the
product’s brand will strengthen your position.
Maturity
Given
the influx of competitors, a company is faced with several strategic options to
strengthen its market share, including: product differentiation, entering new
markets, attracting rivals’ customers, a price war, and reducing costs to
maintain competitive pricing and profitability. It is important at this stage
to monitor the financial situation and the viability of the different
options.
Decline
With
falling sales and reduced margins, any plans and further investment should be
considered carefully. Reducing the available options for the product and
reducing the number of markets the product is offered in will re-duce costs.
Catering to your core customers to cement their loyalty can also boost profits
at this stage. Other tactics to extend the life of a product include product
extensions and entering previously untapped markets.
WEEK 30
SYSTEMS THINKING
Building better companies
A
company is a collection of systems, and systems within systems. These all need
to operate individually and collectively, to drive the business forward. A company’s
systems need to work with strategy, and they need to be open, adaptive and
understood.
Traditional
approaches to strategy have emphasized the mechanics of how things work. This
can result in too much complexity and ‘over-engineering’, with processes and
systems being overly focused on the present, unable to adapt and failing to win
people over. The fundamental flaw is setting a predetermined solution at the
start of any redesign, which then influences subsequent thinking, narrowing
views and ambitions, and misses better options. Often, the result of
re-engineering is an expensive disappointment.
In The
Fifth Discipline, Peter Senge revolutionized business re-engineering by
arguing that solutions should be considered only after fully understanding the
relationships within and between systems (including the behaviours involved)
and examining all related problems and issues. Essentially: go back to basics,
look deeper and search further, before you start thinking about solutions. Such
open systems thinking builds teams, promotes creativity and develops new
approaches. It works with the company’s long-term strategy, enabling
adaptability and continual improvement. It is not the easiest approach: it is
time-consuming and mentally demanding and generates an overwhelming number of
questions. It works best when the right culture and mindset exist.
There
are seven steps to successful systems thinking:
1. Explore the
situation
Gather
the information you need without making judgments or looking for causes and
effects. At this stage, do two things:
- Cast your net wide, collating as much information
as possible.
- Be objective and detached (see things as they
are, without an agenda).
2. Describe the system
To
understand what you are dealing with, list and describe the things that have
happened – including the culture, people and atmosphere. Identify, date and
examine trends and patterns. Position each factor on a diagram to show the
relationships that exist between them. This highlights how aspects work
together and reveals negative and positive feedback loops to enable you to
analyze the systems in more depth later.
3. Build models
Mathematical
and IT tools are useful but they will take you only so far because systems need
to be considered as they really function if they are to be understood and
improved.
4. Compare your model to
what is actually happening
Check
your model against reality to see whether it fits and whether you have
understood it correctly or have missed something.
5. Identify potential
improvements
Once
you have confirmed that your model is an accurate representation of what is
happening, explore ways in which the system can be improved.
6. Implement your
improvements
Monitor
changes and identify any further improvements that could be made. It is
essential to win people over – successful change depends on people’s
willingness to work positively with the new systems.
7. Repeat the process
Systems
thinking is a continuous activity; companies need to adapt to change and to
take advantage of new opportunities.
WEEK 31
MARKET BARRIERS
Protecting your profits
Market
exit and entry barriers have both positive and negative effects on profit,
depending on your company’s position and on the impact the barriers have on
your competitors. A key aspect of awareness of market barriers is that they
increase our focus on external issues. In short, it forces us to look up and
see the business horizon in much greater detail.
Overview
The
word ‘barrier’ is slightly misleading. While barriers will certainly make you
do your sums, consider the ramifications and prepare contingency plans, they
also deter your competitors. And that is the point: use barriers to your advantage.
Your strategy must include careful calculations about the costs involved and
you must balance these against the revenue and market dominance potential, but
it should also look for how to exploit barriers to your advantage.
The
matrix below summarizes the impact of barriers to entry and exit on
profitability.
|
Low entry
barriers |
Returns:
stable Profit:
low |
Returns:
at risk Profit:
low |
|
High entry
barriers |
Returns:
stable Profit:
high |
Returns:
at risk Profit:
high |
|
|
Low exit barriers |
High exit barriers |
Entry barriers
There
are many barriers to entry, including:
- the high cost of capital
- other companies owning patents and proprietary
technology
- high research and development costs of developing
necessary products
- expensive technology
- existing companies enjoying economies of scale
that you can’t afford to match
- a restricted number of government licences
- the expense of (or lack of access to) effective
distribution channels
- Your product not being different enough from
market leaders.
Exit barriers
There
are many exit barriers, including:
- high fixed costs
- few buyers for your expensive, specialized
equipment
- contractual salary, redundancy and pension
commitments
- legal regulations
- outstanding contractual obligations
- being tied to other companies
- risk to brand image.
Not
only do you need to understand all the costs, legalities and brand issues, you
need to understand how barriers work: how they affect you and, importantly, how
they will affect your current and potential competitors. Do this and you will
determine the business strategy that is right for your company.
For
example, the ideal scenario for an established company is to have high entry
barriers and low exit barriers. The reasons are self-evident: high entry
barriers deter others from entering the market you are already operating in;
low exit barriers will not cause you a problem should you decide to change
course.
A
much less favourable scenario is having low entry barriers but high exit
barriers. Obviously, with low entry barriers, competitors can flood into the
market. Unfortunately, the high exit barriers will make it difficult and
ex-pensive to leave the market, restricting your strategic options in the
future.
WEEK 32
THE SIX PS OF STRATEGIC THINKING
Following the right path
Strategy
is an overused word, but it simply means moving from where you are now to where
you want to be. The Six Ps framework helps to guide thinking when developing,
implementing, monitoring and reviewing strategy,
Overview
Business
strategy is a total activity, with every part of the organization connected and
working together successfully. Because of this, some of the best-laid plans can
go awry or fail to achieve their potential because of simple oversights or by a
failure to properly explore an issue. The Six Ps highlight how all aspects of a
business must work together, and how shortcomings in one part will affect other
aspects of your strategy.
Using
the Six Ps framework will help to keep the strategy focused on the most
important issues as well as enabling you to understand exactly what is
happening, to look at issues creatively, to develop solutions, to monitor
progress and to think strategically.
The
Six Ps of strategic thinking are Plan, Ploy, Pattern, Position, Perspective and
Process, explained in the following flow chart.
|
PLAN – Know where you
are headed, and design the plan that will get you there. |
|
|
|
PLOY – Determine the
tactics that will deal effectively with competitors or others in your own company. |
|
|
|
PATTERN – Assess the
patterns of behaviour that are apparent in order, for example, to improve
processes or to identify potential customers and markets. |
|
|
|
POSITION – Know where
your company fits in the market relative to the competition. |
|
|
|
PERSPECTIVE – Assess
the current character of the company and consider how this could be improved
to better match strategic aims. |
|
|
|
PROCESS (programme of
activities) -, Develop, monitor and improve a programme of activities to
achieve your strategy. |
WEEK 33
PORTER’S GENERIC COMPETITIVE STRATEGIES
Choosing the road ahead
Porter’s
Generic Competitive Strategies describe how a company develops competitive
advantage across its chosen market. There are three generic strategies: cost leadership,
differentiation and focus.
Overview
A
company chooses to pursue one of two types of competitive advantage: either
with lower costs than its competitors, or by differentiating itself along
dimensions valued by customers so it can command a higher price. A company also
chooses one of two types of scope: either focus (offering its products to
selected segments of the market) or industry-wide, offering its product across
many market segments. The generic strategy reflects choices made about both the
type of competitive advantage and the scope. The concept was first described by
Michael Porter in 1980.
Cost leadership
The
strategic aim is to offer competitive prices by reducing costs and to also use
lower costs to raise profit margins, fund discount campaigns, or launch an
aggressive price war to gain market share and eliminate the competition.
Reducing costs can also open up new markets that were less able to sustain
higher prices. Another advantage of lowering costs is providing flexibility
should suppliers raise prices unexpectedly and suddenly, without you also
having to raise prices.
The
risks, however, are that other companies can copy your methods, eroding any
advantage you have, and the lack of investment in research and development will
leave your products looking dated and inefficient compared to those of
competitors with better equipment and methods.
Differentiation
Developing
distinctive products for different segments separates you from the competition.
It creates product desirability, strengthens your brand, promotes customer
loyalty, provides competitive advantage, enables higher prices and delivers
higher returns. Your products can be differentiated from those of your
competitors but you can also differentiate your own products from one another
to target different customer groups and markets.
The
risks are higher costs and waste and the potential for more complex
operations.
Focus
While
focus incorporates aspects of cost leadership and differentiation, it is
concerned with targeting products and services at one market segment, gaining
increased share in that segment. The risk is that this will produce a narrow
view that is overly focused on the short term, on too few factors, and on a
less lucrative or unstable market and thus fails to see potential
elsewhere.
WEEK 34
PESTLIED ANALYSIS
Looking outwards for opportunities
Using
PESTLIED analysis improves awareness of the impact of external factors. Given
the huge number of influences – both opportunities and threats – it is
essential to constantly scan the environment for changes and adjust strategy
and operations accordingly.
Overview
When
running a business it is always advisable to keep a wide range of external
matters in view. PESTLIED provides a format to check that strategy and plans
have adequately accounted for external factors and to conduct an overall review
of how the company is performing and how it could be improved. Significantly,
by valuing and using this format, it encourages people to always look beyond
the company to notice opportunities and threats. It therefore works well with
the technique of SWOT analysis.
The
broad areas to consider that form part of PESTLIED analysis are outlined
below.
Political
Consider
the governmental actions that could affect your company – from local councils
and national governments to larger, supranational bodies.
Economic
Understand
all current and potential financial aspects (in different countries) that are
either detrimental or offer opportunities – such as taxation, financial
regulations, interest rates and currency markets.
Social
Knowing
about developing trends, the general mood of a country, and people’s beliefs,
changes in tastes and fashions and their expectations has always been
important, but never more so than today, with the rise and power of social
media.
Technical
We
are living in an age where knowledge and use of the latest technologies are
everything. These can reduce costs and enable us to offer better products and
services. It is an inescapable fact: the company that doesn’t move with new
technology rapidly becomes outdated and out-competed.
Legal
Not
conducting due diligence and not knowing exactly what legalities and
regulations are involved is irresponsible and risky. While this should be
normal in terms of your current places of operation, you should also look to
possible future developments and to what is happening (and likely to happen) in
other countries. Are there better places to base your operations and will
future changes make somewhere else advantageous? When entering new markets, it
is important to know all legal aspects so that you set the right strategy and
ensure that all legal obligations are met.
International
This
is a broad area covering everything from what is happening in international
politics and economics to exchange rates and stock markets. The point is: cast
your net wide and be aware of changes on the international stage.
Environmental
Your
brand is affected by everything your company does, including its environmental
policy. You also need to consider current and likely environmental regulations
when setting and implementing strategy.
Demographic
Demographic
changes have a huge impact on companies and yet they are often poorly
understood. This is a serious oversight. Demographics should inform business
decisions: not only will it affect the availability of workers and pension
obligations, but it will also determine current and future market
opportunities.
WEEK 35
THE DYNAMICS OF PARADIGM CHANGE
Creating better futures
Introducing
changes in an organization is difficult. Changing your entire business model is
even harder – not least because the need for such a fundamental shift often
doesn’t occur to us or is full of the fear of uncertainty. Even so, competition
doesn’t stand still and companies need to adapt; sometimes the answer may
require a shift in the basic paradigm.
Overview
When
things need to change, people often prefer manageable adjustments because they
are cautious and dislike uncertainty. While some issues can be solved with
smaller improvements, sometimes a larger shift in thinking is needed. Having
the courage and creativity to change a company’s fundamental business model
radically isn’t easy but may be the only real answer to a problem or even point
the way to a better future. After all, your current situation is ultimately
resting on the paradigm that has got you to this point. So, tweaking this and
that further up the line may help to a degree but may not be tackling the root
cause of the problem: a flawed or outdated business model. You are not likely
to make significant changes to your situation without questioning the basic
paradigm of your company and considering whether it is time to overhaul the
entire business model.
One
of the main hurdles in dealing with a failing or underperforming company is
overcoming people’s mental blocks that seriously limit the scope of strategic
thinking. Such strategic inertia is a recipe for long-term decline because,
when a company doesn’t keep pace with external developments, its strategy
drifts. It is essential to break out of the business-as-usual mindset and to
open your thinking to possibilities. Competition doesn’t stand still and
neither should your business model.
The process of paradigm change
The
following diagram outlines three stages of improving business performance. The
first step involves tightening controls. The second step involves developing
new strategies that are still aligned with the current paradigm. The third step
involves changing the paradigm itself.
Crucially,
this model is designed to improve business performance. It therefore starts
with an existing model or paradigm, translated into a strategy which is then
implemented. The opportunity and impetus to improve the business model becomes
compelling only after the strategy has been implemented and the effects on
performance are assessed. At that point the process of reinvention can gain
pace starting with step 1 – the need for tighter controls – before moving to
steps 2 and 3.
WEEK 36
ANSOFF’S PRODUCT MATRIX
Getting from A to B
Ansoff’s
Product Matrix provides a useful means of clarifying your thinking through
generating a snapshot of where you are and where you would like to be and
enabling you to identify strategic priorities.
By
helping you to see the gap between the current situation and your goals, the
Product Matrix serves to illuminate your situation, your goals, your thinking
and the route you need to take. Knowing your goal isn’t enough: you need to
know what needs to be done to get there. Strategy consists of two elements:
portfolio strategy and competitive strategy. Portfolio strategy sets the goals
for each product and market, while competitive strategy determines how to
achieve those goals.
The grid
The grid has four areas
that point to different options, depending on your current situation and
goals.
|
|
Current product |
New product |
|
Current market |
Market
penetration Increase market share |
Product
development Develop new products for
existing markets |
|
New market |
Market
development Take existing products
into new markets |
Diversification Develop entirely new
products for new markets |
The
portfolio strategy explores each product and market combination as geographical
growth vectors. These vectors have three aspects – market needs, market
location and product needs (such as required technology). The three-dimensional
nature of Ansoff’s grid highlights the many points of intersection of current
and potential products, market locations and market needs. By seeing how these
aspects intersect, it will clarify the strategic options that are open to your
company.
Ansoff’s
Product Matrix provides a clear snapshot to help you set and achieve strategic
goals. There are four aspects to using the matrix that are all connected – the
priorities you set in one will inevitably affect the others. The four aspects
are:
1. The geographical growth
vector. Know where you are and where you want to be. Assess your current
product and market combinations and decide what and where you would like those
combinations to be in the future.
2. Competitive advantage.
Determine your core strengths and what gives you a competitive edge. Then
identify the resources and capabilities needed to achieve goals – know what
your company does well and not so well and the skills, resources and technology
it will need to acquire.
3. Synergies. Identify
synergies between activities, cut costs and bolster competitiveness.
4. Flexibility. Ensure that
your company is prepared for the unexpected and is able to respond quickly and
effectively to change. Make sure that one part of the company can incorporate
change without harming other parts.
WEEK 37
RESOURCES AND THE CRITICAL PATH
The drivers of business performance
‘Resources’
is an overused term in business but any factor providing value or benefit, from
whatever origin, is a resource that can be used to benefit the business.
Increasing and strengthening resources over time can be seen as the critical
path to business success.
Managing resources
Assessing
which resources are important involves taking a view across the whole of the
business and identifying those factors, direct or indirect, tangible or
intangible, that can be expanded and used for competitive advantage.
Understanding which resources are most important and how they should be managed
requires a clear understanding of the nature of each resource, in terms of the
following:
- The interaction between resources. Resources can
combine in a cycle to accelerate their growth. For example, rising sales
volumes may lead to more cash and more internal capacity, both of which
can be used to generate increasing sales, perhaps by entering new markets,
in a self-sustaining cycle. Similarly, product quality (an intangible
resource) may lead to increased sales, and this in turn can generate
sufficient cash to continue improving product quality (and continue
increasing sales). In the same way that resources can interact to
reinforce one another, they can also interact by limiting one
another.
- The fragility of the resource. Cash, quality,
customers, staff, reputation and most other resources can all disappear
with remarkable speed and ease. It is, therefore, important to control the
main factors likely to damage or undermine resources. For example: cash
needs to be monitored and controlled; quality can be eroded by suppliers;
service can be undermined by the attitudes of personnel; and brand
reputation may be damaged by the actions of distributors.
- The quality of resources. It is worth considering
how the quality of re-sources can be developed. For example, a customer
base is a valuable re-source, but its quality might be improved by
increasing customer loyalty to your brand – for instance, by using customer
loyalty schemes.
How resources affect performance
Resources
have a special characteristic: they fill and drain over time. Since a firm’s
performance at any time directly reflects the resources available, it is
essential that we understand how those resources develop over time and how we
can control that process. To build strong business performance, we need to
know:
- how many resources are available
- how fast these numbers are changing
- how strongly these factors are being influenced
by things under our control and by other forces
- how resources interrelate with one another.
In
a system where resources are integrated and working together, what matters is
not the uniqueness of individual resources but how they combine and work
together to deliver value for customers. To manage resources and ensure that
they drive performance in the desired direction, start by understanding how
resources work together.
WEEK 38
DEVELOPING INTANGIBLE RESOURCES
Intangibles:
what they are, why they matter, and what they can do for you
Soft
‘intangible’ factors can play a crucial role in developing a business’s
competitive performance. For example, a charity with strong commitment from its
donors will achieve its goals more easily, and a business with a culture that
encourages coaching, risk-taking, new ideas and avoids blame is more likely to
make improvements and achieve progress.
Unfortunately,
intangibles can be tough to manage. You may easily borrow cash, buy production
capacity or hire staff, but it is slow and difficult to build staff morale, a
strong reputation, support from a charity’s donors or to generate new
ideas.
Overview
Resources
can typically be classified into two of four categories: either direct or
indirect and tangible or intangible.
- Direct resources are those factors such as staff
expertise, cash or intellectual property that can be developed and
nurtured by the business. Customers are, perhaps, the biggest single
direct resource. (Viewing customers as a resource focuses thinking on how
to accumulate and retain them.)
- Indirect resources are those factors that have a
bearing on the quality, strength and value of resources. For example,
effective training and development policies are an indirect resource, as
they build the effectiveness of staff expertise.
- Tangible resources are those that can be
physically seen, such as cash, inventory, sales volumes and customers;
typically, these have the highest profile within the organization, as they
are the most apparent.
- Intangible resources such as service quality,
brand reputation or staff expertise are also vitally important to
success.
Of
these, intangible resources can be the hardest to manage (and the easiest to
ignore). Several techniques will help ensure that intangible resources are
working well with the rest of the business:
- Identify the most important intangibles. Since
your performance relies on concrete resources, assess whether an
intangible factor is likely to influence your ability to win or lose the
resources. It is not advisable to waste time examining too many factors,
as it is more likely that only one or two factors will have a significant
impact.
- Be clear which of these factors genuinely
‘accumulate’ through time and which are simply current features of the
business. ‘Quality’ and ‘service’ reflect the balance between what has to
be done and what is available to do it, in which case they do not
accumulate. Reputation, motivation, commitment and relationships, on the
other hand, are built up and drain away over time in response to events.
- Assess intangibles carefully, identif9 the best
measure and also the events causing each intangible to rise or fall. Look
for ways to strengthen intangibles.
- Build intangible measures into your performance
tracking system. Reporting systems now commonly incorporate soft measures
(as distinct from hard data, such as financial measures) from various
parts of the organization, recognizing that soft measures such as
engagement or reputation are crucial to a well-performing system.
- If you don’t know, don’t ignore the issue. Soft
factors are influencing your organization, continually and powerfully.
Remember, if you choose to ignore them, you are not, in fact, really
leaving them out. Instead, you are assuming that they are satisfactory and
unchanging. This is unlikely to remain correct, so make your best estimate
and start tracking and understanding them.
WEEK 39
MARKET POSITIONING AND VALUE CURVES
Choosing the best position in the market for your
business or product
A
value curve is a way of highlighting customers’ needs and preferences. This can
be used to understand a firm’s competitive position, as well as potential
trade-offs, opportunities and areas for further development.
Competing
firms emphasize and trade off different things that customers value. For
example:
- The UK retailer The Body Shop traded the slick
packaging, clinical approach and glamorous image traditionally favored by
the cosmetics industry in return for a lower price and a more sustainable
identity (see diagram).
- In the USA South-West Airlines pioneered low-cost
aviation by trading the features of traditional air travel in return for
the benefits of cheap, point-to-point travel.
- Multiplex cinemas traded the conventional
convenience and centrality of town centre locations in return for the
benefits of space and a different experience for customers.
- Home Depot expanded into out-of-town locations on
freeways and employed ex-contractors as a way of providing a new level of
service and value for customers who did not typically visit home building
stores.
The
concept of value curves highlights several points about market
positioning:
- Competing firms emphasize and trade off different
values (e.g. luxury may be traded for a lower price).
- Customers value specific features (e.g. price,
packaging) differently at different times.
- Different values enable firms to target new,
different – and possibly un-fulfilled – market segments, potentially
increasing the size of the market.
- Initially, strategic innovators (e.g. South-West Airlines)
create new ‘market space’, gradually redefining the market.
- It can be extremely difficult, if not impossible,
for incumbents to successfully copy new arrivals. This is because internal
cultural and resource issues keep firms anchored in their conventional way
of working.
- When reviewing a value curve, consider the trend:
how are things changing?
WEEK 40
COMPETITIVE ANALYSIS: PORTER’S FIVE FORCES
How competitive is your company?
Porter’s
Five Forces model provides a deeper understanding of a firm’s current
competitiveness and highlights options to improve competitiveness.
Michael
Porter outlines five forces for competitive analysis:
1. New entrants
2. Substitute
products
3. Buyers
4. Suppliers
5. Existing
competitors.
1. New entrants
Ask
yourself how easy it is for new companies to enter the market. There are many
factors to consider, including barriers to entry (such as patents and high
set-up costs), attractiveness of profit margins and the strength of your brand.
2. Substitutes
Assess
how easy it is for your products to be substituted by other products. This
includes all alternatives – not just similar products. For example, airlines
compete with train and coach companies, not just other airlines.
3. Buyers
Review
how strong your buyers are. Is it a buyers’ market? Can buyers switch to
competitors easily? Are some of your customers in such a strong position that
this leaves you vulnerable? If your business-to-business buyers are operating
at low profit margins, what impact will this have on your company?
4. Suppliers
Assess
the strength of your suppliers. Are you dependent on a particular supplier –
and how can this be mitigated? Does the supplier rely on your custom or could
it easily take its operating capacity to other companies or sell directly to
your customers? Could you use alternative products or methods to reduce your
vulnerability?
5. Existing
competitors
Understand
your competitors and how you compare to them.
- What threat do they pose?
- What are their strengths and weaknesses?
- Could there be a price war or other aggressive
strategies – and would you be able to survive such tactics?
- Are they innovative?
- Are customers able to move to other companies
easily?
- Now many competitors are there?
- Which companies are the strongest?
- Are there any newcomers ready to take the market
by storm or render your products redundant?
Assessing
competitiveness through all five forces will help you to determine how the
company is performing, its strengths and weaknesses and the direction it is
heading in. Because a weakness of Porter’s approach is the focus on external
issues, it is often used alongside complementary models that are better at
revealing the internal issues that impact on a company’s competitiveness.
WEEK 41
INNOVATION HOTSPOTS
How to build a culture of innovation
Developed
by Professor Lynda Gratton, Innovation Hotspots occur where conditions are
right and there is encouragement – they cannot be formally imposed.
Encouragement is needed in four areas, which are:
1. a co-operative
mindset
2. boundary spanning
3. developing a sense of
purpose
4. productive
capacity.
1. A co-operative
mindset
A
co-operative mindset results from a company’s practices, processes, behaviours
and norms – the behaviour of top management is significant. People have to want
to share both explicit and tacit knowledge. Several elements are vital:
- Consider relationships when selecting
staff.
- Emphasize relationships in inductions.
- Provide mentoring.
- Emphasize collective rewards over individual
ones.
- Establish structures that facilitate peer-to-peer
working.
- Develop social responsibility.
2. Boundary spanning
This
involves thinking beyond your immediate boundaries – seeing the larger picture.
This involves:
- being undeterred by physical distance
- welcoming a diverse range of ideas, insights,
experience and people
- being willing and able to explore issues
together
- networking and building bridges for others to
cross
- using different levels of co-operation (e.g. use
strong ties where developing trust quickly is important; use weak ties to
generate a lot of ideas)
- listening and reflecting in conversations rather
than just pushing a point of view.
3. Developing a sense of
purpose
Pose
challenging (or ‘igniting’) questions. These don’t have a ‘right’ answer; they
invite exploration of options. They inspire and engage people and lead to a new
vision that provides purpose and energy.
4. Productive
capacity
Ensuring
that a hotspot realizes its full potential relies on building productive
capacity by:
- understanding and appreciating the talents of
others
- obtaining practical, public and explicit
commitment from participants
- harnessing the creative energy which results from
problem-solving and decision-making
- synchronizing time, especially where different
time zones have to be accommodated or where there are different attitudes
to time
- ensuring that pressure is neither too high, where
people burn out, or too low, where they lose interest.
Innovation
relies on teamwork, agility and the ability to lead change. Crucially, it is
about mindset: you need to think like an innovator and you need to encourage
this in others. Innovation isn’t only about products – it’s about understanding
customers and building a brand, improving efficiency, reducing costs, improving
the quality and quantity of people’s work and removing constraints.
WEEK 42
DEEP DIVE PROTOTYPING
Developing creative, practical solutions
Developed
and popularized by the consultancy firm IDEO, Deep Dive Prototyping is a
focused, team-based approach to generating solutions to a particular problem or
challenge. It is a useful way of stimulating creative thinking and to capture
and fine-tune ideas.
The process
A
deep dive combines brainstorming and prototyping (building and exploring a
potential solution) to devise actions that will help move a business forward.
There is no time limit, and the main stages are:
· Build a team that has a
mix of strengths and approaches.
· Define the design
challenge – to do this, understand your market, customers, technology and
constraints and use this information to develop key themes.
· Visit experts, and
gather information on markets, customers – and ideas generally.
· Share ideas.
· Brainstorm and vote –
this involves intensive brainstorming and discussion to imagine new concepts
and ideas based around the main themes.
· Develop a fast
prototype.
· Test and refine the
prototype, streamlining ideas to improve the proto-type and to overcome
obstacles – at this stage, evaluate and prioritize ideas and decide how they
can be implemented.
· Focus on the prototype
and produce a final solution.
· Give credit to those
involved – this promotes motivation and encourages continued innovative
thinking.
WEEK 43
DEVELOPING CREATIVE THINKING
Making creativity the norm
Edward
de Bono sees creativity as a learnable skill, one that is best harnessed
through formal techniques. He proposes that parallel thinking is a more useful
and effective means of putting creative talent to work.
Formal
creativity works because it works with the way everyone’s brains work: both
consciously and subconsciously, we automatically filter, categorize, process
and organize information. Building on this, de Bono argues that parallel
thinking is more effective for generating the results that make a difference to
companies. (Parallel thinking is when each individual puts forward their own
thoughts in parallel with those of others. In this way, each individual is able
to complement, enrich and build on one another’s thinking, rather than
competing or attacking the thoughts of others.)
The
reason why this is more important than ever is because what companies
previously relied on for competitive advantage – competence, information and
technology – are now easy-to-obtain commodities. These are all buyable
commodities, enabling your competitors to rapidly erode any advantage you may
have had. Today, what matters is creating value from these commodities.
Understanding creativity
Creativity
solves problems, challenges existing methods, and provides a better and
constantly improving way forward. Given the reward, companies need to know how
best to harness creativity in a way that is useful. A major flaw in traditional
brainstorming is that it assumes that, if you give people the freedom to
express themselves, they will magically become creative. This is not the case.
For organizations, useful creativity needs to be a formal activity that
requires thinking that provokes and challenges a current situation and then
searches for answers.
Provoke, challenge and search for solutions
Given
the brain’s natural inclination to organize information and think laterally, we
can tackle issues by simply taking a random starting point. Our brains will
automatically process information, make connections and point us in new
directions. Allowing such randomness in selecting a starting point is
important. It suggests new possibilities and takes thinking along new paths.
Significantly, it is likely that our brains have already processed information
and are subconsciously suggesting such opening gambits because they could be
highly relevant. This serves to break us out of the current doldrums and set us
on a new course.
Next,
our new thinking needs to move forward: to challenge the information it is
processing. Just because something has always been done a certain way does not
mean it is carved in stone: methods can always be improved upon. Constantly
questioning and challenging is a mindset that is a huge source of competitive
advantage precisely because it is the way that companies create value from their
resources. An important point to remember is that even when something seems to
be working and is successful it doesn’t mean it is the best that it can be.
Once thinking challenges the norm, we will automatically explore alternative
and potentially better solutions.
Creating
a culture of creativity in a world where competence, knowledge and technology
are no longer enough is now the true source of success.
WEEK 44
THE DISCOVERY CYCLE (ORCA)
Evaluating innovations
Discovery
– making things known or visible – is a vital precursor for innovation. The
Discovery Cycle is a way of choosing new ideas that are profitable and
scalable.
The
Discovery Cycle has four stages, summarized in the acronym ORCA:
1. Observation. Understand
how the world is changing – for example, by looking for anomalies, paradoxes,
peripheral developments and direct experience.
2. Reflection. Techniques
that work best at this stage include zooming in and out, using a muse,
suspending judgement, slowing down, reflecting on what’s missing, restructuring
data to simplify patterns, juxtaposing pieces of different information
(bisociation) and taking time to rest.
3. Conversation. People set
the pace and scope for innovation, so the best techniques to use at this stage
include contrasting views, setting the agenda, framing the issues and
generating hypotheses.
4. Analysis. The final
stage of the Discovery Cycle involves gathering systematic evidence,
classifying and categorizing data, naming, completing data analysis and hypothesizing.
Lessons from great innovators
What
lessons do innovators have for us? Several come to mind:
- Build on the ideas of others / collaborate. That
should be easy for scientists who are, in the words of Isaac Newton,
‘standing on the shoulders of giants
- Take an unorthodox, distinctive approach.
- Embrace diversity.
- Create a diverse, open and creative
culture.
- Develop empathy for the consumer or customer
(understand people).
- Execute and practically take action.
- Be confident and bold.
- Find your motivation; enjoy your work.
This
list also highlights three other vital points:
1. Innovation relies on
teamwork, agility and the ability to lead change, the other elements of this
programme.
2. Innovation is about
mindset: you need to think like an innovator and you need to encourage that in
others.
3. Innovation isn’t only
about products: it is about improving efficiency, reducing costs, improving the
quality and quantity of people’s work, removing constraints – and that’s just
internally; it also means serving and understanding customers, building a brand
– and more.
WEEK 45
THE FORTUNE AT THE BOTTOM OF THE PYRAMID
(BOP)
Developing the innovator’s mindset
If
a company goes to the bottom of the wealth pyramid and builds affordable
products, creates awareness and provides access, then the market is
phenomenal.
The
late Professor C.K. Prahalad argued that there is a ‘poverty penalty’ where the
poorest people pay more for everything because they don’t have a choice: they
are stuck with local monopolies and bad products and services.
Research
recently highlighted by the World Resources Institute shows that the world’s
four billion poorest people represent a US$5 trillion market opportunity. There
are several other issues at the bottom of the pyramid: e
- Pricing is vital. At the BOP, you need to start
with an affordable price, understanding that price minus profit equals the
acceptable level of cost. This different way of thinking leads to a new
range of exciting options.
- Innovation is essential. This can be accelerated
and improved by focusing on BOP markets because minor, incremental changes
won’t be enough: the market requires a fundamental rethink.
- Businesses need to substitute investment for
collaboration. Management time is needed to increase collaboration – and
it is cheaper than simply in-vesting cash.
Companies
that ignore growth markets will be left behind – and will have five years, at
best, before businesses from growth markets start competing with them.
Developing the innovator’s mindset
Where
can you improve your approach to innovation? Ask yourself the following
questions and mark yourself out of 10 for each attribute: this will help
highlight areas for improvement.
|
When innovating, how
effectively do you:
|
The inhibitors of
creative thinking are shown in this table.
|
Personal blocks |
Problem-solving
blocks |
Contextual blocks |
|
Lack of self-
confidence |
Solution
fixedness |
Scientific reasoning
provides a panacea |
|
A tendency to
conform |
Premature
judgement |
Resistance to new
ideas |
|
A need for the
Familiar |
Use of poor approaches |
Isolation |
|
Emotional
‘numbness’ |
Lack of disciplined
effort |
Negativity towards
creative thinking |
|
Saturation |
Experts |
Excessive
enthusiasm |
|
Poor language
skills |
Autocratic decision-
making |
Lack of imaginative
control |
|
Rigidity |
Overemphasis on
competition or co-operation |
Lack of smart goals,
clear vision or timescale |
WEEK 46
THE SIX THINKING HATS
If you want to get ahead, get a hat
Created
by Edward de Bono, the Six Thinking Hats technique details the different styles
of thinking that we use when making decisions.
Overview
People
tend to have a preferred thinking style which, no matter how useful, can
overlook solutions to problems that would only be revealed through other ways
of thinking. The Six Thinking Hats method gives us the flexibility either to
use the style that is appropriate to a situation or the ability to gain a
fuller picture by applying more than one thinking style to a problem.
Each
thinking hat represents a different way of thinking. By seeing situations from
these different perspectives, you are more likely to make and implement the
right decision. For example, seeing a strategy only from a logical and rational
perspective may result in a failure to see a better solution or potential
obstacles to implementation that creative and sensitive thinking could reveal.
The Six Thinking Hats
- White hat. This approach focuses on available
data. It involves looking at the information you have to see what you can
learn from it — identifying gaps in your knowledge and, by analysing past
trends and data, trying either to fill them or take account of them.
- Red Hat. This style looks at problems using
intuition, gut reaction and emotion. Try to think how other people will
react emotionally and try to understand the responses of people who don’t
know, or may not share, your reasoning.
- Black Hat. This looks at all the bad points of an
issue, looking for why it won’t work. It highlights the weak points in a
plan, enabling you to eliminate or change them or to prepare contingency
plans — helping to make plans more resilient. A key strength of this
approach is that problems can be anticipated and countered.
- Yellow Hat. This style involves positive thinking
and optimism, helping you to see the benefits of a decision. Another
advantage is that it enables you to keep going during difficult
situations.
- Green Hat. This involves developing creative
solutions. Thinking is free-wheeling, and there is little criticism of
ideas.
- Blue Hat. This emphasizes control of processes
and is common among those chairing meetings. When ideas are running dry,
it is useful to combine this approach with Green Hat thinking, as its
creative approach will stimulate fresh ideas.
WEEK 47
INNOVATION CULTURE
Peter Drucker’s seven steps for developing a creative
culture
Innovation
is a company-wide activity. Creative, profitable ideas are needed to succeed,
and history has shown us that great ideas come from many different people.
Instead of relying on ad hoc suggestions or the skills of a few talented
individuals, companies need to create an innovative culture.
Where does innovation come from?
While
some people are known for their innovative thinking, successful and profitable
ideas can come from anyone. To tap into this potential, what is needed is a
culture that empowers people to question and think critically and creatively
and then to share their ideas with others.
Innovation
is not a rarefied activity or the domain of specialists. Neither is it solely
about making huge leaps in thinking – smaller, incremental improvements are
also significant sources of advantage. Innovation is not necessarily about
large RECD budgets – important new ideas come from anywhere, at any time. It is
a company-wide activity, reaching every aspect of running a business – from
products and services to operations, decision-making and training. They are all
sources of competitive advantage, and having an innovative culture will lead to
continual improvements.
Creating an innovative organization
What
distinguishes an innovative company from the rest is its dedication to
creativity. Having the right culture and processes will lead to creative
thinking, a challenging mindset and innovation. Innovative companies develop a
creative culture where people challenge, innovate and look for opportunities.
They adapt structures and procedures to enable innovation to flourish. Also,
they often link with external experts to add to internal, innovative
resources,
Peter
Drucker outlines seven steps that promote innovation in a company:
1. Analyse the reasons for
unexpected successes.
2. Examine why events were
different from anticipated results.
3. Challenge the status quo
by examining why underperformance has become an accepted state.
4. Determine how to take
advantage of market changes.
5. Be aware of broader
developments in society, to identify potential opportunities.
6. Consider the impact of
changes in the economy and recognize the business opportunities they may
offer.
7. Think about how new information,
ideas and technology affect customers.
Innovative
organizations also have a general environment and culture that values and
fosters innovation. Research by the Talent Foundation identified five catalysts
for successful innovation:
1. Consciousness. Each
person knows the goals of the organization and believes that they can play a
part in achieving them.
2. Multiplicity. Teams and
groups contain a wide and creative mix of skills, experiences, backgrounds and
ideas.
3. Connectivity. Relationships
are strong and trusting and are actively encouraged and supported within and
across teams and functions.
4. Accessibility. Doors and
minds are open; everyone in the organization has access to resources, time and
decision-makers.
5. Consistency. Commitment
to innovation runs throughout the organization and is built into processes and
leadership style.
If
you are building an innovation culture in your business or team, it can help to
ask yourself which of these catalysts you can improve. How will you do
this?
WEEK 48
DISNEY’S CREATIVITY STRATEGY
When you need more than just the bare
necessities
We
all have a preferred thinking style – some of us are dreamers, while others are
realists or critics. This can prevent us seeing an issue from other angles.
Walt Disney’s method uses all three of these thinking styles to help view a
situation from different perspectives and find the best way forward.
Problem
solving, decision-making and planning suffer when we have too narrow a focus,
yet it can be difficult to change how we naturally approach issues. Using
Disney’s three styles together will improve your decision-making.
- The Dreamer, who is a dreamer, is focused on
potential and possibilities.
- The Realist focuses on practical aspects and
implementation.
- The Critic questions and challenges plans and
assumptions, and notices potential problems or flaws.
Using the Disney method
1. Select an issue you want
to address but put it to one side while you get into the right frame of
mind.
2. Go to three different
places to think about the issue from each perspective (you will associate each
environment with that approach). These can be entirely different places or
simply different parts of one room.
3. For each way of thinking
(starting with dreamer, moving to realistic and then to critic), first remember
a time when you were either creative, realistic or critical. This will help you
access that style and apply it to the current situation.
4. In each frame of mind,
address the issue at hand solely from that perspective. This will let you get
the most out of each perspective, revealing more options and ideas.
· In the dreamer space,
let your ideas flow freely.
· In the realist space,
think about how the ideas you have created can be implemented. How can they be
achieved? What needs to happen?
· In the critic space,
question and challenge your ideas and plan. Identify strengths and weaknesses;
look for flaws; look for gaps or potential problems. Determine what needs to be
done better.
5. Once you have completed
these four stages, go back to the beginning and re-evaluate your original dream
and plan through each thinking stage in turn. You can repeat this process until
you feel the plan works well from each perspective.
Types of questions to
ask at each stage
|
Dreamer |
Realist |
|
· Why am I doing
this? |
· How can I make that
happen? |
|
· Can it be done
better? |
· Who else do I need to
make it work? |
|
· What would I like to
happen? |
· What needs to happen –
and when? |
|
· Wouldn’t it be great
if…..? |
· What resources do I
need? |
|
· What reward or result
would I like? |
· How much will it
cost? |
|
Critic |
|
|
Does the idea really
have potential? |
|
|
Is the objective
achievable? |
|
|
Are there any barriers
or resource issues? |
|
|
Does the plan work?
Consider issues such as timing, cost or market potential. |
|
|
How can the plan be
improved – are there gaps or are some things unnecessary? |
|
WEEK 49
THE MATE MODEL FOR STRATEGIC SELLING
Achieving your sales objectives
Segmenting
and managing your contacts within a client organization in terms of their
support for your sales objectives is a highly effective way of developing
client relationships and selling.
Four steps
- Step 1: define your unique sales objective.
- Be clear about what you are selling and when, and
the value it brings. What makes it an attractive proposition? What is its
value for the organization or client? This sounds simple but it can be
muddled or overlooked, with disastrous consequences.
- Step 2: identify all the players using the MATE
model.
- MATE highlights the need to focus on Money,
Allies, Technical experts and End users. Identify each contact (including
those you don’t know), recording their job title and name.
|
Money
They
have the ultimate veto on sales |
Allies
They
provide useful information, can guide you and influence others to support
your objective |
|
Technical experts/assessors
They
filter out information, can be gatekeepers, can influence ‘Money’ |
End users
They
use, manage or work with your products |
· Money. The budget holder
has authority over the decision to spend. They tend to focus on the bottom line
and have the power of veto. They will ask: ‘What impact will this have and what
return will we get?’
· Allies /Advocates. These
can help guide you during the sales process. They provide valuable information,
can lead you to the right people and may be influential. Allies are both inside
and outside the organization.
· Technical experts. They
are gatekeepers who evaluate technical aspects of the proposal. They do not
have final approval but offer recommendations to the decision-maker. They can
say ‘no’ on account of technical issues. They ask whether the product or
service matches their specifications.
· End users. They judge
the impact of your proposal on their job performance. They will implement or
work with your solution, so their success is linked to your product and they
will want to influence the decision to buy. They ask: Will it work for me or my
department?
- Step 3: consider each individual’s level of
support.
- Having placed each individual on the MATE model,
assess their level of support for your sales objective as high, medium or
low.
- Step 4: consider each individual’s level of
influence.
- Assess each individual’s influence within their
organization — high, medium or low.
Check for warning signs
Ensure
that there are no threats to the sale by asking yourself the following:
- Have I at least one person for each area?
- Am I free from concerns about their
influence?
- Have I made personal contact with them?
- Do I know their response modes and what they are
looking for?
Identify your tactics to further the sale and
eliminate warning signs
Throughout,
be honest and prepared to challenge and develop your thinking. With the information
you have gathered, contact the key people, establish rapport and understand
their needs.
WEEK 50
THE TEN CS OF SELLING ONLINE
Building a successful business online
Centered
round meeting customers’ needs, the Ten Cs are the key drivers of selling and
succeeding with business online. Which factors are most significant for your
company will vary over time, depending on the situation – such as its stage of
development, competitive position, type of market or brand strength.
1. Content
Content
sets the tone and should drive your brand. It should be clear, compelling,
engaging, entertaining, informative, visually appealing and tailored to the
target audience. Enable customers to access information quickly and easily and
to control the flow of information.
2. Communication
Communication
is more than providing information. It is about listening, building trust and
having a one-to-one relationship with customers. Understand what interests and
motivates customers, give them the opportunity to interact, act on feedback and
use clickstream data to monitor behaviour.
3. Customer care
Customers
need to trust you – to have confidence in purchases and to know that personal
data is secure and that after-sales support is available. Provide various
payment methods, enable customers to track orders and respond quickly to
questions. Positive experiences enable up-selling, cross-selling, repeat
business and personal recommendations.
4. Community and
culture
People
look to the Internet to network and socialize. Provide expert information,
allow people to react, ensure that information is accessible, clear and
entertaining, and enable customers to meet and interact.
5. Convenience
Customers
have high expectations, so assess each feature from your customers’ viewpoint.
Online experiences need to be smooth, effective, quick, easy and convenient.
Ensure that navigation is clear and intuitive.
6. Connectivity
Make
the site compelling and ‘sticky’ – so that customers stay longer, return often
and recommend it. Ensure that customers value it by providing high-quality
content and incentives to return. Enable customers to visit other sites that
provide complementary information – such as skiing companies linking to weather
channels.
7. Cost and
profitability
Your
online strategy – objectives, priorities and benefits – needs to be clearly
understood and planned. Focus on cost control and profit maximization to ensure
that the site is profitable.
8. Customization
Plan
customization from the outset rather than grafting it on later. Ensure that
products meet customer’s requirements through dialogue. Make sure that
customers know what they can and cannot choose. Develop and refine
customization to maintain competitiveness.
9. Capability
To
improve capabilities, encourage your people to see the Internet as a tool for
meeting customer needs. Set, implement measure and monitor objectives. Ask
customers what they want and what they think of your plans.
10. Competitiveness
Continually
review and refine your strategy relative to competitors. You need keen market
awareness – you need to know what competitors have done, are doing and may do.
Consider the worst-case scenario to make your online strategy durable and
realistic.
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Self Learn Skills –
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Social Etiquette
• If Pick up is necessary then be there atleast 15 minutes
early
• Speaking to Driver should be polite and business like. Try
using a language known to the guest
• Address the lady as Mrs. ___ or Madam
• When you reach the destination get out first – walk around
and open the Car door for lady.
• Walking abreast is best – leading is also ok
• Avoid touching – it can be misunderstood
• It is good to introduce your guests and offer the first
drink.
• Holding Glass to help is ok. But don’t do it too often
• Avoid winking & staring. It can be misunderstood.
• Laughing too much is not good
• Stopping conversation & guiding out
• Avoid hanging on to Top people
• Must take time to speak to your juniors & the host
• Avoid speaking with food in your mouth or while Proposing
a toast
• Should prepare a Short speech well in advance
• Organizing a party a multi – course dinner
• Leading to table 7 pulling a chair for a lady is good
• Napkin, forks, knifes, wiping hands
• Soup, Water, Finger bowl should be handled carefully
• Salt, pepper should be done carefully without affecting
the person sitting next to you
• Serving & passing bowls should be done promptly
• Thanking the lady of the house, cook waiters after the
meal is a polite thing to do.
• Tips, speaking on behalf all guests.
• Napkin should be used for Wiping hands or face. Do not use
it as a hand kerchief
• Water & Finger bowl should be asked only from the
waiter.
• Soup / Tea sipping without noise
• Serving food for the person sitting to you is ok. Not for
the one sitting opposite you.
Self Learn Skills –
Class Room – to – Board Room – Plan whole life
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Group Discussions
Self Learn Skills –
Class Room – to – Board Room – Plan whole life
About
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Team
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History
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Careers
Privacy
Social
·
Facebook
Designed with WordPress
