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Casual Articles - Managing People; Take a Leaf out of a Sports Coach's Book
Discover 32 Golden Buying Tips That Could Lead You Into Better Decision Making loyee to enable them to return to an appropriate standard of performance.ForewordWhen friends asked me why not you write the ways of how to shop online safely, I asked him, “Why me?”He said, a lot of people having problem on shopping online without worrying about anything. Why not you write some buying tips and by adding in some advice. It will help them a lot he replies.We had met but a few times and I was able to think readily of many who had more aptitude regarding the subject other than myself.It is true that I have spent many years using the online shopping tool to buy my software and stuff and I do had this weird feeling “not save, and better be careful”. During this In a sporting team, players that break commitments and violate known boundaries are confronted. For example, players who get drunk at nightclubs and get involved in fights have clearly breached known boundaries. Good coaches will confront them. There is no debate, no warning and no threats, just action. Unfortunately, there are a host of examples of sporting personalities who cross the boundaries off the field. The good coaches are swift in their reaction which includes suspension from the team, returning home if they are overseas or, in extreme circumstances, ripping up their contracts. For breaches in safety, financial probity or even reputation, coaches must confront employees and take action. All other employees are watchin Managing Change - Air Cover In my experience coaching in organisations is a failure. The central cause of coaching failure is the lack of real interest in coaching by the leaders of the organisation.Imagine you’re landing on the beach in war and I guess we could say you are like those poor unfortunate souls, the Cuban Freedom Fighters (if you’re old enough to remember that one) who landed down there during the Bay of Pigs and were slaughtered because in the last minute, maybe hours, President Kennedy withdrew his support.In the change wars going in across the land people aren’t killed but careers are, everyday. Let me explain the connection. When you start a change war you have to have a team and you have to give that team support. Every leader of course says they will, but in reality, just as in the Bay of Pigs, it Having only a cursory interest in coaching as a means of improving employee competence and consequently organisation performance consigns organisation's coaching efforts to the dustbin. Coaching requires thought and commitment. My experience has been that many organisations do not think enough about what coaching is and what results they wish to achieve from coaching. By not understanding what coaching means to their organisation, the element of commitment becomes a moot point. Coaching in sport seems to have a structure and a rationale from which organisations could learn. In sports coaching, if one is coaching the under-nine rugby team the concentration is on actually training them to complete tasks. The sequence starts with an explanation of the purpose of the task and the performance standard, for example, to pass the ball to land on a team mate's chest. It follows with a demonstration of how to pass and an instruction of how to pass. When the player practises, the coach guides the player, correcting errors as they occur and validates completed work after the player begins performing independently. When a player reaches an acceptable level of performance, perhaps years later, the coach confirms that the learning is permanent with a random check of results, most likely during game time. In organisations, what tends to happen is an employee receives a brief induction into processes and policies and an introduction to team mates, the workplace layout and the systems they use to complete their jobs. Organisations that throw their employees into the proverbial deep end in this manner, risk delaying the development of people they spent a lot of money recruiting. They also risk employees having no idea of what an acceptable standard of performance is. Some players who have reached adequate levels of performance will volunteer for development. Development is for fun, for trying out new things, to practise the banana kick or the reverse sweep. In organisations this is too often overlooked; allowing individuals to develop along the lines they want to. The role of coach here is to provide a challenge for the employee and not to teach or provide direction. This is the employee's journey. When a random check reveals a decline in performance a coach will focus the player by initially giving feedback of what they have observed. The coach will then challenge the player to think about what they can do to change things to make a difference to their performance. Good coaches will press the player for more than one alternative and force the player to think about what the consequences are for each option and make a decision. The coach will focus the player on what they can control and draw suggestions for improvement from the player. In organisations, people who have previously performed well may drift in performance for many reasons, including personal reasons, changes in technology and changes in organisational culture. A coach must recognise the drift, get acknowledgement of the drift and focus the employee to enable them to return to an appropriate standard of performance. In a sporting team, players that break commitments and violate known boundaries are confronted. For example, players who get drunk at nightclubs and get involved in fights have clearly breached known boundaries. Good coaches will confront them. There is no debate, no warning and no threats, just action. Unfortunately, there are a host of examples of sporting personalities who cross the boundaries off the field. The good coaches are swift in their reaction which includes suspension from the team, returning home if they are overseas or, in extreme circumstances, ripping up their contracts. For breaches in safety, financial probity or even reputation, coaches must confront employees and take action. All other employees are watching Why Don't More People Claim Compensation? er-nine rugby team the concentration is on actually training them to complete tasks.Why don’t more people injured at work claim compensation?It is estimated by the Health and Safety Executive that UK workers sustain 850,000 injuries at work every year, but 9/10 of these people do not get any compensation.There are a number of possible reasons why this is so.1. Eligibility for compensationTo make a claim following an accident at work it needs to be proved that the employer failed in their duty of care to provide a safe environment for the employee (this is known as negligence) and that an injury occurred as a result.A duty of care is the legal responsibility that an employer h The sequence starts with an explanation of the purpose of the task and the performance standard, for example, to pass the ball to land on a team mate's chest. It follows with a demonstration of how to pass and an instruction of how to pass. When the player practises, the coach guides the player, correcting errors as they occur and validates completed work after the player begins performing independently. When a player reaches an acceptable level of performance, perhaps years later, the coach confirms that the learning is permanent with a random check of results, most likely during game time. In organisations, what tends to happen is an employee receives a brief induction into processes and policies and an introduction to team mates, the workplace layout and the systems they use to complete their jobs. Organisations that throw their employees into the proverbial deep end in this manner, risk delaying the development of people they spent a lot of money recruiting. They also risk employees having no idea of what an acceptable standard of performance is. Some players who have reached adequate levels of performance will volunteer for development. Development is for fun, for trying out new things, to practise the banana kick or the reverse sweep. In organisations this is too often overlooked; allowing individuals to develop along the lines they want to. The role of coach here is to provide a challenge for the employee and not to teach or provide direction. This is the employee's journey. When a random check reveals a decline in performance a coach will focus the player by initially giving feedback of what they have observed. The coach will then challenge the player to think about what they can do to change things to make a difference to their performance. Good coaches will press the player for more than one alternative and force the player to think about what the consequences are for each option and make a decision. The coach will focus the player on what they can control and draw suggestions for improvement from the player. In organisations, people who have previously performed well may drift in performance for many reasons, including personal reasons, changes in technology and changes in organisational culture. A coach must recognise the drift, get acknowledgement of the drift and focus the employee to enable them to return to an appropriate standard of performance. In a sporting team, players that break commitments and violate known boundaries are confronted. For example, players who get drunk at nightclubs and get involved in fights have clearly breached known boundaries. Good coaches will confront them. There is no debate, no warning and no threats, just action. Unfortunately, there are a host of examples of sporting personalities who cross the boundaries off the field. The good coaches are swift in their reaction which includes suspension from the team, returning home if they are overseas or, in extreme circumstances, ripping up their contracts. For breaches in safety, financial probity or even reputation, coaches must confront employees and take action. All other employees are watchin Finding a Job in a Changing Market duction to team mates, the workplace layout and the systems they use to complete their jobs.The way in which we work has changed dramatically over the last 50 years or so, with some authorities going as far as to say that the job is dead, while others are predicting that anyone over the age of 40 and out of work will never work again.Are these gloomy predictions true? The situation is not quite as grim as many would suggest, but nonetheless points to a growing trend in job insecurity. How can older workers and indeed, those just starting out, hope to deal with the changing job market?With so many people facing redundancy, the prevalence of short-term contracts and the trend in businesses to outsource not Organisations that throw their employees into the proverbial deep end in this manner, risk delaying the development of people they spent a lot of money recruiting. They also risk employees having no idea of what an acceptable standard of performance is. Some players who have reached adequate levels of performance will volunteer for development. Development is for fun, for trying out new things, to practise the banana kick or the reverse sweep. In organisations this is too often overlooked; allowing individuals to develop along the lines they want to. The role of coach here is to provide a challenge for the employee and not to teach or provide direction. This is the employee's journey. When a random check reveals a decline in performance a coach will focus the player by initially giving feedback of what they have observed. The coach will then challenge the player to think about what they can do to change things to make a difference to their performance. Good coaches will press the player for more than one alternative and force the player to think about what the consequences are for each option and make a decision. The coach will focus the player on what they can control and draw suggestions for improvement from the player. In organisations, people who have previously performed well may drift in performance for many reasons, including personal reasons, changes in technology and changes in organisational culture. A coach must recognise the drift, get acknowledgement of the drift and focus the employee to enable them to return to an appropriate standard of performance. In a sporting team, players that break commitments and violate known boundaries are confronted. For example, players who get drunk at nightclubs and get involved in fights have clearly breached known boundaries. Good coaches will confront them. There is no debate, no warning and no threats, just action. Unfortunately, there are a host of examples of sporting personalities who cross the boundaries off the field. The good coaches are swift in their reaction which includes suspension from the team, returning home if they are overseas or, in extreme circumstances, ripping up their contracts. For breaches in safety, financial probity or even reputation, coaches must confront employees and take action. All other employees are watchin Charity Campaigns - Making Them An Online Success reveals a decline in performance a coach will focus the player by initially giving feedback of what they have observed. The coach will then challenge the player to think about what they can do to change things to make a difference to their performance.A charity’s annual awareness day, awareness week or awareness month is a big event. Run well it can raise huge amounts of money and create a greater public understanding of your cause. Hundreds of campaigns take place through the year – who hasn’t heard of World Aids Day, Breast Cancer Awareness Month and World Book Day? Brilliantly run events - you can probably name the months they fall in but sadly many campaigns fail to make such an impact.I edit www.countmeincalendar.info that profiles of campaigns from across the world and I research hundreds of campaigns every month. Like everyone else on the internet I search for i Good coaches will press the player for more than one alternative and force the player to think about what the consequences are for each option and make a decision. The coach will focus the player on what they can control and draw suggestions for improvement from the player. In organisations, people who have previously performed well may drift in performance for many reasons, including personal reasons, changes in technology and changes in organisational culture. A coach must recognise the drift, get acknowledgement of the drift and focus the employee to enable them to return to an appropriate standard of performance. In a sporting team, players that break commitments and violate known boundaries are confronted. For example, players who get drunk at nightclubs and get involved in fights have clearly breached known boundaries. Good coaches will confront them. There is no debate, no warning and no threats, just action. Unfortunately, there are a host of examples of sporting personalities who cross the boundaries off the field. The good coaches are swift in their reaction which includes suspension from the team, returning home if they are overseas or, in extreme circumstances, ripping up their contracts. For breaches in safety, financial probity or even reputation, coaches must confront employees and take action. All other employees are watchin Why Techies Get Laid Off and How to Avoid It loyee to enable them to return to an appropriate standard of performance.I was a freshly graduated Accounting degree holder when I saw Monty Python's great comedy skit:Man to career counselor: "I'm an accountant, but I want to change jobs."Career counselor: "Why?"Man: "Accountancy is boring, boring, BORing, BORING!, boring, bor . . . ING!"Career counselor to the man: "But, sir, our tests show you're a very boring person."You're not a boring person, so you don't need to know anything about accounting. It's just for bean counters. Nothing to do with you, right?Wrong. To understand how to prevent yourself from being laid off during the next business slowdown, yo In a sporting team, players that break commitments and violate known boundaries are confronted. For example, players who get drunk at nightclubs and get involved in fights have clearly breached known boundaries. Good coaches will confront them. There is no debate, no warning and no threats, just action. Unfortunately, there are a host of examples of sporting personalities who cross the boundaries off the field. The good coaches are swift in their reaction which includes suspension from the team, returning home if they are overseas or, in extreme circumstances, ripping up their contracts. For breaches in safety, financial probity or even reputation, coaches must confront employees and take action. All other employees are watching and learning what the values and policies of the organisation really mean. For exceptional performers the coach no longer needs to train or even focus. The role of the coach is to mentor. Mentoring players is challenging. It requires the coach to get inside the personal thoughts and feelings of the player, offering counsel, usually from experience, on how to tap their inner strength or confront inner weaknesses to provide opportunities for the player to improve their performance themselves. Mentoring adds value to the life of the player who does not need training, developing, focusing or confronting. For cricket lovers this has clearly been the approach of the Australian cricket coach, John Buchanan. Coaching is a profession. It has a structure and adds great value to organisations by developing people to do more than they thought they could. It is not a title. It is a skill and needs to be treated seriously.
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