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Site Home –› Business & Services –› Business Administration
 

How to Manage Your People Well: Tips for Managers of Training

 

As a training manager, there are two important aspects to managing your people well: hiring, supervising, and motivating (managing with your people) and building up corporate support for your department (managing for your people). Unfortunately, training is not well understood by some executives, and its benefits can be hard to assess. Even a good training managers department risks cuts by cost-conscious administrators convinced that training is an unnecessary expense. In The Secret of My Success, a cinematic fairy tale about life in corporate America, Michael J. Fox gets scolded his first day on the job for speaking to a senior executive: Never consort with a suit unless the suit consorts with you first. As a training manager, however, you had better be prepared to consort with the suits from Day One. Managing for your people is a pro-active strategy that constantly demands selling your departments services and widening the base of organizational support for the training function.

All of our experts agree that the actions of the manager of training are critical to the departments survival, and important for the long-term health and continuity of the organization itself. In an era of cost cutting and corporate mergers/takeovers, a training manager must make sure his or her department is 1) visible, 2) credible and 3) perceived to be as integral to the organizations growth as it really is. This can be accomplished by means of two different approaches that boil down to either response or outreach. Some managers find it effective to combine some of each into a very personal brew. For example, Mary Belle GrosJacques, Trainer Coordinator at CH2M HILL, characterizes her departments approach as essentially reactive .[We] satisfy needs brought to us .Yet she also notes that [we] try to think of needs they didnt bring to us, indicating that it is possible to respond creatively by anticipating future needs, and using the feedback from existing programs to extrapolate new directions. Susan Warshauer, Manager of Training and Development Programs, at M.I.T., acts on the premise that building up organizational support ...takes a conscious strategy. Cultivate relationships with senior people, find out what they perceive as needs, and have a yearly process of needs assessment. Keep in touch with your community and be responsive to them.

Author: Andrew E. Schwartz
 
Author Bio:
Andrew E. Schwartz is a specialist in this area. Andrew has written several articles in the past on this topic.
 
 
 

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