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:: training & development BITES
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Train the Leader
By Conni Billé |
Why your training resources should be focused on
creating everyday "champions"?
A typical
company-wide service training initiative begins with
a rollout to inspire the organization en route to a
new focus on behavior. After the corporate trainers
(perhaps supplemented by distance learning tools)
circulate throughout the company, reinforcing the
gospel of the new frontline behavior, service
behavior may change for a while.
What happens,
however, when the blast of inspiration or the
evangelical zeal of the trainer goes away? Too often
behavior reverts to "the way it was."
The problem with
this dynamic is that it ignores the influencers who
have the most direct and lasting effect on the
frontline—their direct managers. If instead, you
choose a "Train the Leader" approach, equipping the
supervisor/manager with the skills and tools to
train, coach, and model the desired behaviors on an
everyday (and every interaction) basis with their
direct reports, you will create a dynamic for more
sustainable change. Identifying the managers and
supervisors best equipped to become advocates or
"champions" and focusing training resources on those
individuals is the straightest path to ingraining
the program in the culture beyond the "rollout"
period.
Trainers and OD
practitioners constantly seek out change agents
within an organization, and quite often, they are
right in front of our faces. These leaders are
perfectly positioned to become our organization's
most powerful champions of change.
How Do You Find Champions?
Of course, not
every supervisor and manager has the same amount of
influence. Because of their classroom experience,
training and development professionals have a unique
opportunity to identify champions who will be
effective advocates for new programs. How? In a
classroom or group discussion, use your observation
skills to identify the "champions of change" to
recruit for a training program design team or beta
class. You will need two types: "inspirers"
and "doers."
Inspirers
are brave. They are willing to speak up and
give an opinion without looking around to see what
the group thinks. They have energy, passion, and a
sense of humor. People like to be around them. Watch
the body language of others in regard to these
people; you will see empathy and relationship, and
the emotion of the speaker reflected in the
listener's expression.
Doers may
not be the first aboard, but when they sign on, they
will see the program through. How do you
spot them? They are not the first to speak, but when
they do offer their opinion, it is well thought out,
clearly stated, and the people around the room
subtly nod and concur. You recognize that this
person has integrity and influence. They attribute
part of their effectiveness to keeping a low
profile; grandstanding, strident crusading, and
self-promotion are viewed as sure ways to undermine
their credibility and acceptance as change leaders.
Beware the person
who claims to be a champion of change but is
secretly ambivalent. Such people may present
themselves as advocates because it is politically
expedient to do so. Again, use your facilitator’s
observation to pick up "dissonance" in the person's
behavior and body language. When the change program
encounters the expected resistance, the ambivalent
advocate will be the first to jump ship.
The champion is
the enthusiastic manager who "buys in" and signs up
his staff, follows up with them to see how they
apply what they learn, and notes and rewards the new
skills in performance reviews.
How do you get champions on board?
Show them the
vision of the organization you want to create.
Appeal to their values—if their values are aligned
with the program. Let them contribute. Finally,
further engage these champions by making them privy
to the overall business and organizational strategy
that will make everyone a winner—personally and
professionally.
There are
champions in every organization. It is up to YOU as
a designer of an organizational initiative to
identify them, cultivate them, and provide them with
the skills and tools to let their natural
predisposition to lead carry the day.
Conni Billé is the
director of organizational development and training
for LRA Worldwide, Inc., a consulting company that
specializes in customer experience management. At
LRA, she has worked on a range of change management
and training initiatives with clients such as the
National Basketball Association, Starwood Hotels &
Resorts, Quest Diagnostics, and VIA Rail Canada. She
can be contacted at
conni.bille@lraworldwide.com.
Bites: Training
October 2007
“It is not
enough to have great qualities, we should also have
the management of them.” Francois, Duc de La
Rochefoucauld
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