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Corporate Strategy
and Team Building Solutions
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"We
add substance to your quality and help you to improve
your business presentation to the world."
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"With regard to excellence, it
is not enough to know, but we must try to have and
use it."
Aristotle
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On numerous occasions I have hired David to help me with
the companies I have led in the past. His strategic consulting
and team-building work has always been exceptional. David
has not only helped executives & employees to envision
& strategize better business platforms, he has also
given them the immediately useful tools they need to implement
necessary changes. I do not think that anyone in the marketplace
is able to do what he does as well as he does it.
Thomas Livaccari
Merrill Lynch
New York |
* * * * *
If you have gone to this link first, there's
probably a good reason for it--and it's not just because
of the fact that it is the first link on our home page.
As a leader, you know that any good corporate
strategy ultimately involves helping all of your people
to carefully analyze their talents so that they can be the
best that they can be. At the same time, you have to remove
any management obstacles that might erode morale anywhere
in the organization.
Not too long ago, I conducted an intensive management
development session for Reed Exhibition Companies and received
some nice letters about the effectiveness of the session
from many officers of the company and the people who worked
with them.
But one of the most astute and pertinent of
all letters I received did not come from a company officer,
it came from a sales executive, Erich Herbert. He gave me
permission to quote his letter so I will share some of it
here:
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"Dear David,
"I think that in any team environment,
either in the workplace or outside of it, it is
important that people consider and understand
their colleagues. Much like the techniques used
to understand our customers, everyone must understand
themselves and their team members as well as what
each team member brings to the team. This I believe
is the most important part to team building.
"[However] I do not believe that there
is any precise gauge that can accurately reflect
which team will be successful and which team will
not. But what I have noticed is that if every
member of a team shows respect for every other
member, the team will be cohesive. Cohesive teams
have a tendency to pull together and accomplish
their objectives in difficult times. This is not
to say that teams which are not cohesive cannot
accomplish their goals, but this usually occurs
despite the individual efforts [and] not because
of them.
"I guess I have a tendency to look
a little...deep into things; but I feel that with
respect for one another and diversity in the team,
the team can accomplish anything."
Erich Herbert
Sales Executive
Reed Exhibition Companies
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Erich's letter was long (almost three pages)
and in his letter he covered the subject of team-building
exhaustively. Yet, all of his points kept returning to concept
of respect.
Analyzing Erich's letter, I have come to the
conclusion that one of the reasons why Reed Exhibition Companies
is so successful (as the largest trade show company in the
world) is not necessarily just because its leaders talk
about respect (which they do), but because the principles
of respect have permeated the organization through every
layer and are communicated to the customers by people such
as Erich.
The Undeniable Secret of Organizational
Health and Productivity
No company wants to have morale problems, low productivity,
and high turnover. But even some of the best companies face
these issues. Yet, leaders are often confused by the bewildering
inability of many departmental managers to communicate on
even the simplest "team-building" agendas.
What should they do?
Fortunately, some companies out there have paved the way
for others by creating visible and sensible models of organizational
health. Simply put, healthy companies are companies where
people feel at home, and where they gladly show up early
and leave later than they have to simply because they enjoy
their work and the atmosphere where they work.
Here are the basic "rules of reality" that most
of the leading companies who are known for their "best practice"
leadership know to be true:
1. Human beings are capable of unlimited performance when
they are treated with respect.
2. Psychological health is maximized when people strive
to be kind, calm and respectful under all circumstances,
no matter what.
3. Mental clarity and decision making are maximized when
human beings are calm.
4. It is impossible for human beings to remain calm and
mentally clear when work environments allow hostility, superiority,
disrespect or arrogance in any form.
5. The way human beings talk to each other for better or
worse is the single greatest predictor of psychological
health or illness.
(From David Snyder, "How to Stay Competitive
Without Losing Your Soul", in progress.)
So, those are the principles that many leading companies
know to be true. But why is it so hard to enforce these
principles, even if they seem to be common sense, and why
is it so hard to train people to apply them in the workplace?
The answer seems to be twofold.
1. Few of us feel we have time to manage work, personal
lives, or team relationships.
Everyone from the CEO on down is doing the work of 1.5
people at least. "Efficiency tools" such as sales force
automation programs or even email technology have made most
of us "addicted" to the concept of efficiency. Often times
high speed "junk thought" or "junk decisions" have replaced
meaningful, well-placed business moves. Customers receive
customized spam in the form of "personal" mailings and anyone
from a mile away can tell they've been mass marketed. For
many workers, the joy is gone and there's nothing to look
up to but a computer.
2. Standardized testing hysteria in most public schools
has gradually eroded classrooms to the point that critical
thinking and problem-solving and technical writing skills
no longer exist. Employers notice that these skills
are missing from team members but don't know what to do
about it. Many falsely assume that their new recruits are
lazy. They're not. They've been conditioned to be dependent
and not independent thinkers. It's difficult for dependent
thinkers to think out of the box or shown decision-making
initiative.
(For more information on what you can do about this infuriating
national phenomenon see link G
- Critical Thinking, Quality of Instruction and Leadership
Training for Educators )
Although everyone knows the two problems cited above are
paramount they are seldom effectively addressed in the workplace.
Here are two primary reasons for that problem:
1. Many consultants and companies are feverishly peddling
"one size fits all" programs for team building, "performance
assessment" and leadership training.
Many of these programs are not effective because they make
the assumption that any two companies are alike, which they
are not. ALL COMPANIES ARE DIFFERENT AND THEIR PROBLEMS
ARE USUALLY COMPLEX AND NEED SPECIFIC SOLUTIONS BASED UPON
RESEARCH AND NON-BIASED EMPLOYEE INTERVIEWS.
(Incidentally, you should beware of "performance evaluation"
peddlers to some extent. Use of these instruments for promotion
or hiring purposes can get you sued. For more information
see link D. Employee Assessment and Performance
Training Tools Reality Check)
2. Some consultants positioning themselves as "strategists"
don't know very much about training or feel they're too
good to do it. Many trainers have never given the first
thought to strategy. But businesses need staff development
programs that address both training and strategy at the
same time. That's the whole point.
For information on how this concept applies to real business,
please read the letter from Tom Livaccari, former
Director of Business Development and Account Management
at Dennis Interactive (the internet division of Dennis
Maxim, the largest publisher in the U.K.) The letter is
reproduced on the following link:
N. Sample Letter
of Recommendation from a Global Client
Solution:
OUR MISSION AND METHODOLOGY
Because of intellectual property theft on the Internet,
we only provide full text training and strategic intervention
proposals to legitimate clients or potential customers who
have contacted us first.
However, we can briefly say that our strategy for helping
companies with team-building, morale, productivity, or competitive
positioning issues is as follows:
1. We research all company training issues in-depth
before we propose interventions. When we do use interventions
we only use pre-developed team building programs and assessment
tools as general guides for improving quality of work and
quality of relationships. For the most part our programs
are built from scratch.
2. All of our programs incorporate high level strategic
planning with down-to-earth nuts and bolts training on specific
skills employees need to be more productive, including:
1. Time Management and Prioritization Skills
2. Planning and Organizing Skills
3. Customer Service Skills
4. Critical Thinking and Presentation Skills
5. Business and Technical/Scientific Writing Skills
6. Verbal Communication and Persuasion Skills
7. Visioning and Future-Planning Skills
8. Relationship Building and Interpersonal Skills
9. Diplomacy
10. Negotiation
3. We do not use jargon, buzzwords, buzz concepts, or
cookie cutter programs. We still believe that the human
mind is capable of analysis, meaningful thought and unlimited
creativity--so we use it freely.
For more information email us at dsnyder@mindread.net, or call 919.510.5443.
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