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Why Study Supervision? This book presents two compelling reasons to
study supervision and supervisory leadership: Influential Position:
Supervisors exert considerable influence on organizational
settings. Supervisors have been schooled, developed, and trained
for their responsibilities. They can function more effectively than
if they learn through informal, sometimes haphazard means. It thus
pays to learn about supervision because supervisors can influence
how efficiently and effectively their organization functions.
Career Path: Many career paths lead to supervision. Supervisors are
everywhere. Supervisors are teachers, doctors, accountants,
lawyers, plumbers, and electricians. If you aspire to advance
within your occupation, you may find that one career path leads to
supervision. Preparing for supervisory responsibilities can prepare
you for advancement. You may thus have a personal stake – your
own future – in learning about what supervisors do and how they
do it. In addition, this book: Provides strategies for building
solid relationships with team members. Uses positivity as a
foundational practice to lead and encourage other employees.
Provides guidelines on how to hold employees accountable and set
high expectations. Presents strategies to engage, coach, and
develop employees by creating a positive environment to influence
attitudes and behaviors. Offers various approaches for managing
time and increasing productivity.
The purpose of this book is to introduce the concept of
Transformational Coaching and to educate professional business
coaches or mangers-as-coaches in their organizations on the
influential and relevant elements of Transformational Coaching for
Effective Leadership designed for coaching individuals, teams,
businesses or applying such elements in any levels of Organization
Development intervention, either toward individuals, teams, groups,
departments, or the organization itself. Given the power and
long-lasting influence of transformational coaching, it also could
be beneficial to professionals in fields of Human Resources
Development (HRD), Workplace Learning and Performance (WLP), Human
Performance Enhancement (HPE) and overall, in the domain of
Workforce Education and Development (WFED). This book will start by
reviewing the background and presence of Transformational Coaching
in businesses and organizations, along with the general concepts,
perceptions, and understanding of coaching. This book will examine
the uses of Transformational Coaching in management and leadership
development, human resources development for talent development and
retention, and for developing managerial coaching skills and
competencies. Additionally, this book will review the presence and
use of Transformational Coaching concepts, theories, and practices,
including transformational learning for HR and HRD professionals to
influence the workforce's attitude, behavior, and productivity.
This book: * Builds individuals' self-awareness, self-realization,
and self-confidence. * Offers personal and professional
development. * Teaches the concept of transformational learning and
its use in transformational coaching. * Teaches rituals, skills,
and strategies for individuals and teams to increase their
productivity. * Offers an approach to building healthy and strong
relationships with oneself and others. * Includes change management
strategies for redirecting poor job performance. * Helps readers
implement effective transformational coaching practices by offering
many tools such as forms, checklists, and worksheets.
Coaching is a necessary skill for managers. It is important as a
fundamental part of an organization's talent efforts-including
talent acquisition, development and retention strategies. For a
coaching program to succeed in an organization, it should be
recognized as a useful approach throughout the organization and
become part of the fabric of the corporate culture. Performance
Coaching for Managers provides an important tool for organizations
to use to train their managers on coaching. This book differs
significantly from other books in the coaching market. Many books
on coaching cast coaches as facilitators who question their clients
(the coachees), helping them to articulate their own problems,
formulate their own solutions, develop their own action plans to
solve problems, and measure the success of efforts to implement
those plans. That is called a nondirective approach. But this book
adopts a directive approach by casting the coach as a manager who
diagnoses the problems with worker job performance and offers
specific advice on how to solve those problems. While there is
nothing wrong with a nondirective approach, it does not always work
well in job performance reviews in which the manager must inform
the worker about gaps between what is needed (the desired) and what
is performed (the actual). The significant difference between what
is currently available in the market and what is offered in this
book is the authors' collective experience of over 70 combined
years of hands-on research and delivery experiences in the Human
Resources Development field. According to the Harvard Business
Review (2015), workers generally expect their immediate supervisors
to give them honest feedback on how well they do their jobs-and
specific advice on what to do if they are not performing in
alignment with organizational expectations. When workers do not
receive advice-but instead are questioned about their own
views-they regard their managers as either incompetent or
disingenuous. Effective managers should be able to offer direction
to their employees. After all, managers are responsible for
ensuring that their organizational units deliver the results needed
by the organization. If they fail to do that, the organization does
not achieve its strategic goals. This book gives managers direction
in how to offer directive coaching to their workers.
Why Study Supervision? This book presents two compelling reasons to
study supervision and supervisory leadership: Influential Position:
Supervisors exert considerable influence on organizational
settings. Supervisors have been schooled, developed, and trained
for their responsibilities. They can function more effectively than
if they learn through informal, sometimes haphazard means. It thus
pays to learn about supervision because supervisors can influence
how efficiently and effectively their organization functions.
Career Path: Many career paths lead to supervision. Supervisors are
everywhere. Supervisors are teachers, doctors, accountants,
lawyers, plumbers, and electricians. If you aspire to advance
within your occupation, you may find that one career path leads to
supervision. Preparing for supervisory responsibilities can prepare
you for advancement. You may thus have a personal stake – your
own future – in learning about what supervisors do and how they
do it. In addition, this book: Provides strategies for building
solid relationships with team members. Uses positivity as a
foundational practice to lead and encourage other employees.
Provides guidelines on how to hold employees accountable and set
high expectations. Presents strategies to engage, coach, and
develop employees by creating a positive environment to influence
attitudes and behaviors. Offers various approaches for managing
time and increasing productivity.
The purpose of this book is to introduce the concept of
Transformational Coaching and to educate professional business
coaches or mangers-as-coaches in their organizations on the
influential and relevant elements of Transformational Coaching for
Effective Leadership designed for coaching individuals, teams,
businesses or applying such elements in any levels of Organization
Development intervention, either toward individuals, teams, groups,
departments, or the organization itself. Given the power and
long-lasting influence of transformational coaching, it also could
be beneficial to professionals in fields of Human Resources
Development (HRD), Workplace Learning and Performance (WLP), Human
Performance Enhancement (HPE) and overall, in the domain of
Workforce Education and Development (WFED). This book will start by
reviewing the background and presence of Transformational Coaching
in businesses and organizations, along with the general concepts,
perceptions, and understanding of coaching. This book will examine
the uses of Transformational Coaching in management and leadership
development, human resources development for talent development and
retention, and for developing managerial coaching skills and
competencies. Additionally, this book will review the presence and
use of Transformational Coaching concepts, theories, and practices,
including transformational learning for HR and HRD professionals to
influence the workforce's attitude, behavior, and productivity.
This book: * Builds individuals' self-awareness, self-realization,
and self-confidence. * Offers personal and professional
development. * Teaches the concept of transformational learning and
its use in transformational coaching. * Teaches rituals, skills,
and strategies for individuals and teams to increase their
productivity. * Offers an approach to building healthy and strong
relationships with oneself and others. * Includes change management
strategies for redirecting poor job performance. * Helps readers
implement effective transformational coaching practices by offering
many tools such as forms, checklists, and worksheets.
To effectively adapt and thrive in today's business world,
organizations need to implement effective organizational
development (OD) interventions to improve performance and
effectiveness at the individual, group, and organizational levels.
OD interventions involve people, trust, support, shared power,
conflict resolution, and stakeholders' participation, just to name
a few. OD interventions usually have broader scope and can affect
the whole organization. OD practitioners or change agents must have
a solid understanding of different OD interventions to select the
most appropriate one to fulfill the client's needs. There is
limited precise information or research about how to design OD
interventions or how they can be expected to interact with
organizational conditions to achieve specific results. This book
offers OD practitioners and change agents a step-by-step approach
to implementing OD interventions and includes example cases,
practical tools, and guidelines for different OD interventions. It
is noteworthy that roughly 65% of organizational change projects
fail. One reason for the failure is that the changes are not
effectively implemented, and this book focuses on how to
successfully implement organizational changes. Designed for use by
OD practitioners, management, and human resources professionals,
this book provides readers with OD basic principles, practices, and
skills by featuring illustrative case studies and useful tools.
This book shows how OD professionals can actually get work done and
what the step-by-step OD effort should be. This book looks at how
to choose and implement a range of interventions at different
levels. Unlike other books currently available on the market, this
book goes beyond individual, group, and organizational levels of OD
interventions, and addresses broader OD intervention efforts at
industry and community levels, too. Essentially, this book provides
a practical guide for OD interventions. Each chapter provides
practical information about general OD interventions, supplies best
practice examples and case studies, summarizes the results of best
practices, provides at least one case scenario, and offers at least
one relevant tool for practitioners.
Coaching is a necessary skill for managers. It is important as a
fundamental part of an organization's talent efforts-including
talent acquisition, development and retention strategies. For a
coaching program to succeed in an organization, it should be
recognized as a useful approach throughout the organization and
become part of the fabric of the corporate culture. Performance
Coaching for Managers provides an important tool for organizations
to use to train their managers on coaching. This book differs
significantly from other books in the coaching market. Many books
on coaching cast coaches as facilitators who question their clients
(the coachees), helping them to articulate their own problems,
formulate their own solutions, develop their own action plans to
solve problems, and measure the success of efforts to implement
those plans. That is called a nondirective approach. But this book
adopts a directive approach by casting the coach as a manager who
diagnoses the problems with worker job performance and offers
specific advice on how to solve those problems. While there is
nothing wrong with a nondirective approach, it does not always work
well in job performance reviews in which the manager must inform
the worker about gaps between what is needed (the desired) and what
is performed (the actual). The significant difference between what
is currently available in the market and what is offered in this
book is the authors' collective experience of over 70 combined
years of hands-on research and delivery experiences in the Human
Resources Development field. According to the Harvard Business
Review (2015), workers generally expect their immediate supervisors
to give them honest feedback on how well they do their jobs-and
specific advice on what to do if they are not performing in
alignment with organizational expectations. When workers do not
receive advice-but instead are questioned about their own
views-they regard their managers as either incompetent or
disingenuous. Effective managers should be able to offer direction
to their employees. After all, managers are responsible for
ensuring that their organizational units deliver the results needed
by the organization. If they fail to do that, the organization does
not achieve its strategic goals. This book gives managers direction
in how to offer directive coaching to their workers.
To effectively adapt and thrive in today's business world,
organizations need to implement effective organizational
development (OD) interventions to improve performance and
effectiveness at the individual, group, and organizational levels.
OD interventions involve people, trust, support, shared power,
conflict resolution, and stakeholders' participation, just to name
a few. OD interventions usually have broader scope and can affect
the whole organization. OD practitioners or change agents must have
a solid understanding of different OD interventions to select the
most appropriate one to fulfill the client's needs. There is
limited precise information or research about how to design OD
interventions or how they can be expected to interact with
organizational conditions to achieve specific results. This book
offers OD practitioners and change agents a step-by-step approach
to implementing OD interventions and includes example cases,
practical tools, and guidelines for different OD interventions. It
is noteworthy that roughly 65% of organizational change projects
fail. One reason for the failure is that the changes are not
effectively implemented, and this book focuses on how to
successfully implement organizational changes. Designed for use by
OD practitioners, management, and human resources professionals,
this book provides readers with OD basic principles, practices, and
skills by featuring illustrative case studies and useful tools.
This book shows how OD professionals can actually get work done and
what the step-by-step OD effort should be. This book looks at how
to choose and implement a range of interventions at different
levels. Unlike other books currently available on the market, this
book goes beyond individual, group, and organizational levels of OD
interventions, and addresses broader OD intervention efforts at
industry and community levels, too. Essentially, this book provides
a practical guide for OD interventions. Each chapter provides
practical information about general OD interventions, supplies best
practice examples and case studies, summarizes the results of best
practices, provides at least one case scenario, and offers at least
one relevant tool for practitioners.
In the Conspiracy for Greatness ] Mastery of Love Within! we
examine different areas of our lives, areas that we have impacted
with our conspiracies for smallness, and our gatherings of evidence
and arguments of our limitations. We look at some of the most
important aspects of our lives, and we will become present to the
impact of our decisions and choices in our lives. We also learn to
take responsibility of how can we turn this life around, and design
our own future by inventing a vision for our life worth living and
worth working to achieve. As individuals, we have deeply ingrained
images and beliefs about whom and what others are and we are, and
how the world works. These beliefs highly influence our daily
perceptions and decisions, how we think and how we behave. We only
begin to take responsibility for the behaviors that run our lives
as we gain clarity about our beliefs and they affect our lives. We
can then more easily dissolve any limiting barriers and allow the
essential qualities, such as being responsible for our actions and
accountable for our decisions in regard to our lives and the lives
of those around us that produce fulfillment, self-expression and
success. What is this amazing phenomenon that some people have
created mastery around, and for many others it is still a mystery?
They had vision! Those who succeed in their visions clearly saw a
future and started planned for it. They designed their actions to
correlate to the future they saw. This mystery is the topic of
Conspiracy for Greatness ] Mastery of Love Within! Because what we
are not aware of, but what controls us is the absolute opposite of
mastery, which really is a conspiracy for smallness, for weakness
and a conspiracy to oppose limits on our own and others limitations
and abilities.
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