Russian Roulette Android
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Russian Roulette Android
12/26/12 Does formal Management Training produce better managers? Please share your thoughts | LinkedIn Go to LinkedIn Ads » Home Profile Contacts Groups 6 Jobs 2 Add Connections Douglas Reed Inbox Search Companies News Groups More Search... Lead Info Dashboard - See Your Offline & Online Marketing Data On One Dashboard. Check It Out! Harvard Business Review Discussions Members Promotions Jobs Search Discussion | More... Does formal Management Training produce better managers? Please share your thoughts Poll | Group rules Share Discussion http://lnkd.in/kzNraQ In my experience and from what I hear from many, a lot of poor managers actually studied management. 1 month ago Dr. Brian Unfollow Latest Updates Unlike Comment Follow Flag More Paul Weismantel commented in the group on Is an Implementation Plan necessary to a Strategic Plan? What do you/would you include in the Implementation Plan?: Adding to the importance of the elements Ricky has raised, the "plan" is not done until all of these components are sorted out across the... You, Mohamed Benmerikhi, Shailendra Verma and 53 others like this 265 comments • Jump to most recent comments Show previous comments Like Dr. Alvin H Steward III • Formal management training adds value to and supports experience which is how I believe most good managers are made. The thing I believe is most valuable even beyond training, education and experience is the desire to be the best leader or manager that one can possibly be. Follow Dr. Alvin H Follow John John Schultz • Training does make a difference, particularly when it is coupled with coaching, mentoring, and experience. However, there are plenty of programs being marketed based on popular notions about management. These are mostly about mental attitude. Some of the technical fundamentals are missing, which may leave participants feeling bluster and bluff are all that is needed. This does raise the question, “What are the competencies or skills that should typify a capable and effective manager?” “What should a person know in concise and teachable or learnable terms?” Sorting out expectations for managers or leaders might help answer the question about training. Follow Sat Paul 30 seconds ago 150 people have joined the group, including David Peterson, Lisa Tunstall and Hernan Rios 32 seconds ago 23 days ago • Like 22 days ago • Like Comment (9) Michelle Shail, MSOD likes this comment by Carl Byron Rodgers Is Emotional Intelligence important for a manager ? Why and How ?: Why ? Because it facilitates Trust. How ? Integrity. The Lewin's Equation, B=ƒ(P,E), is a psychological equation of behavior developed... Like (1) 2 minutes ago See all updates » 1 Sat Paul Parashar, PhD • Yes it does PROVIDED Intended Learning Outcomes of formal management training include making better managers (better specified whatever way; in terms of knowledge, skills, attitude, personal abilities). One more positive of formal management training is: it is time and cost saving. An accomplished formal trainer is a great time saving machine.She / He hands down year's knowledge and experience in hours and minutes. 'Learning by doing' or 'by observation' always tends to be more costly and time taking. Not to miss, however, "Nobody can educate or train anybody. Education and training is a self-learning process. Educators and Trainers only facilitate. Education and training is largely the commitment and dedication of the learner." 22 days ago • Like Follow Clemence Clemence Moyo • This discussion is getting more interesting. Thanks Brian for the initiation. My understanding of "fromal training" is going through some prescribed management training programme that equips one with the theory of management. The programme can result in a certificate, Diploma or Degree in management. In my initial contribution I referred to management graduates with a first degree in management or an MBA. I don't believe that a one week course in an isolated area of management such as 'Delegation Techniques' would qualify as formal management training. Despite the complexity of management as an area of sudy operatives and some business leaders continue to take a very simplistic view of what management is. Businesses fail or prosper because of the quality of its management/leadership and nothing else. I rose to the position of General Manager before I received formal training in management besides isolated management training programmes. When I went to Graduate School to study management, I could not believe how much I did not know and how organisations survived with untrained managers. I still hold that same view. Experience can only be built on sound theoratical grounding and I seem to see the consfusion between training, www.linkedin.com/groupAnswers?viewQuestionAndAnswers=&discussionID=188765830&gid=3044… Manager's Choice How are you utilizing Big Data in your business? Barbara Didia See all » Top Influencers This Week 1/20 12/26/12 Does formal Management Training produce better managers? Please share your thoughts | LinkedIn experience and competence featuring prominently in this discussion. Competence has nothing to do with training and/or experience. Experience is proficiency that practioners gain from repeated practice and exposure of the right things during the life of one's profession. Trial and error cannot be a substitute for theory and hence experience. Tracy Williams While there are many untrained leaders who have done exceptionally well, there aren't as many untrained managers who are succesful. The difference comes from the simple difference between leaders and managers which is that " leaders decide what to do guided by their influencing ability while managers decide how to do it suported by formal authority". This difference is critical because the how part describes a cause and effect relationship which is theory. Theory is obtained through formal training. I insist that formal training produces well grounded managers who perform much better than their untrained managers once they obtain the necessary experience. This is not to say that there aren't isolated cases of untrained managers who have outperformed trined managers. 22 days ago • Like Jairo Aparecido Martins Dr. Brian Monger Jason Scott 1 Sadi Hamidy Follow Robert Robert Jensen AIMM, MAIPM • I'll agree with many, in short the best Managers and Leaders are likely to have qualifications and practical experience in their field or industry. The world is not an ideal place so we have two ends of the spectrum, and most are somewhere in the middle. If I was setting a manager up to succeed I would ensure they either held qualifications, or I would be prepared to invest in that person's development and give them access to this important foundation. You can teach an old dog new tricks, and clever one's pick them up fast and run like crazy :-) 22 days ago • Like 1 Very true, they provide an environment conducive to learning. 22 days ago • Like CHECK OUT INSIGHTFUL STATISTICS ON THIS GROUP Dr. Brian Monger • Sat ""Nobody can educate or train anybody. Education and training is a self-learning process. Educators and Trainers only facilitate. " Dr. Brian Unfollow Group Statistics Director Manager Entry MEMBERS 3,759 View Group Statistics » 2 Sat Paul Parashar, PhD • Brian, any thoughts on 'time saving machine' perspective of formal training and trainers? 22 days ago • Like Follow Sat Paul Dr. Brian Monger • Sorry Sat. I don't know about that - please tell me 22 days ago • Like Dr. Brian Unfollow Prof P.K.Keshap • Agreed Dr. Brian "Nobody can educate or train anybody. Education and training is a self-learning process. Educators and Trainers only facilitate." That's true. 22 days ago • Like Follow Prof Ankit Khandelwal • Very simple answer: 'Practise makes person better'. So if someone has not practice the basic element of being a good manager, education wont make him better manager. Managing is more about human interaction and less about using the studied tool. Follow Ankit 22 days ago • Like ilyas khan • nt necessary. I have seen some best of manager and some worst of it. wonder it is "Managing is more about human interaction and less about using the studied tool. " 22 days ago • Like Follow ilyas Prof P.K.Keshap • IQ+EQ+SQ=Good Manager 22 days ago • Like Follow Prof www.linkedin.com/groupAnswers?viewQuestionAndAnswers=&discussionID=188765830&gid=3044… 2/20 12/26/12 Does formal Management Training produce better managers? Please share your thoughts | LinkedIn shivkumar yadav • it is by birth charecter it can be improoved by training only 22 days ago • Like Follow shivkumar Dr. Brian Monger • Dr Shivkumar People are not born with management characteristics. Who suggested that to you? Your manager? Dr. Brian Unfollow Not something you learned at Uni I expect? But at whatever stage of management skill, you are right - it can be improved by further training 22 days ago • Like 1 Dr. Brian Monger • Ilyas - even assuming that it was that simple, don't you think working on "your game" would improve it? Even cricketers do that 22 days ago • Like Dr. Brian Unfollow Dr. Brian Monger • Ankit, yes a simple answer, but is it right? Dr. Brian Unfollow - say I am smart - will not study make me smarter? If I am a good mananger - how will further study not help to make me better? Do your thoughts about training also apply to being and engineer? 22 days ago • Like Dr. Brian Monger • PK and an understanding of organisational and personal behaviour? 22 days ago • Like Dr. Brian Unfollow Nouman Zahid • Unfortunately not but it’s not about trainings standards it’s about lack of trainings/leanings follow-ups or lack of tracking systems of trainings 22 days ago • Like 1 Follow Nouman Ankit Khandelwal • Dr. Brian. - What I have written is from the experience of some of the incidents in recent years. Of course, education makes you smarter but we are talking about becoming a good Manager. If there are 100 people getting the same education than what differentiate you from other 99 on whether you are a good manager or not? Follow Ankit Engineering is quiet different from managing humans. It is govern by fundamental laws and new innovations comes out while searching for finding answers. Can you compare machines with humans? or a flow of a chemical with the flow of human emotions? 22 days ago • Like Deepak Bhatt (Management Thinker) • Until and unless managers will not put this training into practice, it is time wasting activity 22 days ago • Like Follow Deepak Prof P.K.Keshap • Attitude makes the difference. Positive creates opportunities while negative destroys the opportunities. 22 days ago • Like Follow Prof Prof P.K.Keshap • Yes Dr. Brian an understanding of organizational and personal behavior. Agreed. www.linkedin.com/groupAnswers?viewQuestionAndAnswers=&discussionID=188765830&gid=3044… 3/20 12/26/12 Does formal Management Training produce better managers? Please share your thoughts | LinkedIn 22 days ago • Like Follow Prof Cay Hasselmann • I think you need formal training as otherwise you cannot create the commodity called managers. The area of the commodity build by training is also very important to create roles that can be sold by PSO into companies. Follow Cay However training is usually often the the area why we suffer on excellence, but most enterprises need a lot more of mediocre managers than the super stars, as the super stars do not usually fit in. 22 days ago • Like Don Phin • I tend to agree with Dr. Deming that to ask this question is a bit of a waste of time. It's like asking if training has an ROI. You either have the belief/philosophy that education is the greatest form of leverage...or you do not. In my experience those you learn more earn more. Nuff said! Follow Don 22 days ago • Like Don Phin • To paraphrase an old light bulb joke... Q How many trainings does it take to make a great manager? Follow Don A: 16.5, but they have to want to be a great manager! PS lot's of great training in this discussion! 22 days ago • Like Jason Martin, MBA • I believe education of managers biulds the toolbox of ideas and concepts but the implementation of these tools are more supported by experience and values. If education more directly influrenced the performance of a manager, there would be less poor performing managers. Follow Jason 22 days ago • Like Tracy Letch MBA Saint Mary's College Moraga • I agree~ with statements made here about the "toolbox" that an education provides. However, managers need to use their tool box to maximize the ROI in their education. 22 days ago • Like Follow Tracy James Domingo • Dr. Brian wrote: "In my experience and from what I hear from many, a lot of poor managers actually studied management." Follow James Good observation and I totally agree. That's because poor managers studied management and not leadership. You can teach just about anyone the process of managing things. However it is impossible to manage people. People are not things, they are people and you have to lead them. I find the vast majority of great leaders learned from other great leaders in the context of doing, not in the context of a training room listening to someone who isn't even a real manager give a PowerPoint presentation on how to "manage." If training were the answer the problem would already have been solved. 22 days ago • Like 1 Syed Raza • Training provides tools but a bad carpenter quarrels with his tools. Leadership is not taught but learnt if the learner is open to ideas and correct himself/herself. Follow Syed visit by blog : www.disruptick.com 21 days ago • Like John Reeb, PhD, MBA • Full disclosure: My business is training Leaders & Managers. Formal training as Brian defined it about mid-way down CAN absolutely improve www.linkedin.com/groupAnswers?viewQuestionAndAnswers=&discussionID=188765830&gid=3044… 4/20 12/26/12 Does formal Management Training produce better managers? Please share your thoughts | LinkedIn management & leadership skills. I see it every day! It's what I do. Follow John But what is required? 1. Training that meets all the senses (Auditory, Visual, Kinesthetic) 2. Honest interactions whether it be role playing, case studies, discussions, etc. 3. Accountability for follow up on the skills learned. Included are such things as humor, activity, conflict & challenge. Does that mean everyone will be the best manager around? Of course not, but each person can (if they are willing to participate as above) be better than they were when they came in. For some, it opens a whole new world where they end up being great managers. Others, it's just slight improvement. (And yes, there are those who simply refuse to participate. I fire them as soon as I realize I can't get them involved. But I don't normally have to go there.) 21 days ago • Like 2 Charlotte Weston-Horsmann • What is your definition of "ignorant employees" , Laura? 21 days ago • Like Follow Charlotte Follow Georgi Georgi Paleshnikov • The outstanding managers (call them leaders if you like) do not have much time to provide formal training to other would-be great managers. The only way to learn something about excellent management is to get somehow into their team and see how they manage the company and behave in critical situations. Of course, to get there you need to have something under the hat and someone has noticed it. Or sometimes it's pure luck. There is an old saying: "You cannot study a craft, you have to steal it somehow." 21 days ago • Like Follow Volente 1 Volente Morais • Formal training is a theoretical how to and may deal with how to administratively be a manager. Being a manager is practical application that is learned over time through the experience of the good, the bad and the ugly of management. As a manager knowing enough about yourself and your principles in dealing with people lays a good foundation for how you can establish your own route to effectively managing people. 21 days ago • Like Follow Julie Ann Julie Ann West • I see management and leadership as different things for different puposes that require a different skill set. Leadership invokes thoughts of inspiration, vision, influence, innovation, and motivation. Management is monitoring, controlling, liasion, negotiator, decisional, allocator, and leader with authority. Maybe all leaders can manage, however all managers may not be good leaders. 21 days ago • Like Follow Marcus 2 Marcus Kottinger • Dear Gergi, thanks for your comment I can only underline the whole paragraph. It's not enough to sit in a class room an learn the important issue is that you are able to take also some hints or behavier from others. In respect to the young leaders I guess the best approach in this learning process is the saying: "Stay hungry, stay foolsih". I'm sure that I do not need to tell you who used this approach very often. 21 days ago • Like Follow Dr. Alvin H Dr. Alvin H Steward III • Agreed Julie, I see leadership as the strategy focus process and management as a transactional process dealing more with the day to day operation. Both require different skill sets but a good manager and leader will know when to apply each set of skills. The issue that is most commonly faced is a manager or leader who is not effective at either and yet still trying to do both. So many people who should be leading the organization is too busy with trying to manage the day to day operation (micro management). 21 days ago • Like 1 John Reeb, PhD, MBA • Volente, I have to disagree with you on a comment: "As a manager knowing enough about yourself and your principles in dealing with people lays a good foundation for how you can establish your own route to effectively managing people." Follow John I had a boss who understood himself very well and his principles. I happened to be in an HR role at the time. We could not keep a woman employee because he "knew how they liked to be treated." (And yes, that is a direct quote.) Knowing yourself and your principles www.linkedin.com/groupAnswers?viewQuestionAndAnswers=&discussionID=188765830&gid=3044… 5/20 12/26/12 Does formal Management Training produce better managers? Please share your thoughts | LinkedIn has no relationship to "effectively managing people." Only if they are GOOD principles does it matter. And believe me, there are many, many out there that don't have that and who run companies. 21 days ago • Like Follow Peter 1 Peter Fieger • As Minzberg suggested about a decade ago, an experienced manager will learn to apply new ideas and tools, a technician may never learn to manage.... I absolutely agree that education does not make a manager, but without the tools and perspectives gained through formal management education it is hard to be a really good manager! 21 days ago • Like 1 Robert (Bob) Ringstrom • I believe that good management skills tend to be inherent, socially developed qualities of the individual. That's not to say however, that most everyone couldn't benefit from the training. How beneficial it will be ultimately lies with the individual manager's commitment to apply his/her formal knowledge. Follow Robert (Bob) 21 days ago • Like Dr. Brian Monger • Bob, you are a coach and yet you say "That's not to say however, that most everyone couldn't benefit from the training."? 21 days ago • Like Dr. Brian Unfollow Follow John John Schultz • It appears that some contributors to this site view leadership and management as opposites. But in reality these situations are two sides of the same coin. And as a coin, there is value that buys quite a lot. Flip it, and you can’t lose. It’s a win-win toss-up. Each side, when skills are sufficient, will produce outcomes that are beneficial to the enterprise and its stakeholders alike. There are distinctions between leadership and management. Each position has its own characteristics and functional activities, but these activities are related and complementary arrangements for coordinating and controlling organizational operations. Leaders typically operate at the top of a hierarchy and managers at lower levels. But that doesn’t mean that managers aren’t capable leaders. In many cases managers have to be leaders as well as coordinators and controllers of complex transactions. John Kotter (1990) suggests the difference between management and leadership is defined by specific but balancing activities. The following is summary and adaptation of his thinking: • Setting direction versus planning and budgeting. The leader develops a future purpose and the accompanying strategies that will facilitate change toward the vision. Managers set the intervening targets and goals, establish and sequence the action steps, and allocate resources so that plans are achieved and in due course the organizations overall purpose. • Aligning people versus organizing and staffing. The leader brings people together— workers and stakeholders—in a common and committed effort that is aimed at achieving the organizations purpose or vision. This means communicating the intended purpose and direction so that others understand what needs to be done and remain committed to its achievement. Managers, on the other hand, create organizational structures capable of accomplishing plan requirements, staff the appropriate jobs with qualified people, and assign sufficient authority and responsibility to assure implementation is achieved. • Inspiring people versus controlling and problem solving. The leader keeps people moving in the right direction despite the obstacles and challenges by appealing to basic human needs, values, and emotions. In this case the leader needs to set an example—walk the talk—and create an atmosphere where people can participate by taking control of their own destiny. Managers, conversely, need to empower others and create an environment where the workforce is willing to take risks and make decisions. In addition, managers must create control mechanisms that can monitor results and signal when corrective action and problem solving are needed so effort remains focused on short-term results and the long-term vision. Yes, managers and leaders do have different responsibilities, but their roles are not exclusive. They are joined in a mutual and beneficial relationship where leaders drive change and managers control complexity. This however, doesn’t mean that managers and supervisors are not sufficiently expert to be leaders. Quite the opposite, these individuals are leaders at their own level and should be able to act with the same Profound Knowledge that an effective chief executive has. 21 days ago • Like 2 Dr. Alvin H Steward III • I agree John, and we find ourselves acting in both roles on a www.linkedin.com/groupAnswers?viewQuestionAndAnswers=&discussionID=188765830&gid=3044… 6/20 12/26/12 Does formal Management Training produce better managers? Please share your thoughts | LinkedIn regular basis, switching back and forth as needed. 21 days ago • Like Follow Dr. Alvin H Dr. Brian Monger • Well said John 21 days ago • Like Dr. Brian Unfollow Follow Sarah Jie Sarah Jie Wang • It depends. I want to mention an artical called Bad Management Theories are Destroying Good Management Practices by Ghoshal (2005), which might be relevant to this topic. Formal management training is generally designed based on management theories, which have a set of negative and pessimistic assumptions on human nature. Manager's behavior can be influenced and even dominated by these unrealistic and biased assumptions. For example, managers are more likely to avoid the agency problem as they assume agency problem exists. What if this problem was eliminate by the mutual trust or healthy relationship. Ghoshal stated that the training and education of management would have significant but negative impacts on managers' behavior. 21 days ago • Like Dr. Brian Monger • Sarah Dr. Brian Unfollow Re: "Formal management training is generally designed based on management theories, (OK with that bit) .... which have a set of negative and pessimistic assumptions on human nature. Manager's behavior can be influenced and even dominated by these unrealistic and biased assumptions. I am unaware that management theories are based on "a set of negative and pessimistic assumptions on human nature" AND I disagree with them being "unrealistic and biased assumptions." In the paper you reference, by Goshal, He said that management theories"have done much to stengthen the management practices we are now condemming. The paper was largely focused on amoral practices in business. 21 days ago • Like Follow Tracy Tracy Letch MBA Saint Mary's College Moraga • Hi John, thanks for referencing Kotter (one of my favorites) if it sounds like I distinguised one from the other it was a mistake (too brief maybe) I like what you have to say and I agree. One person I like to think of as inspirational, a good business leader/manager and charismatic (although I never met him) is one of the founders of Whole Foods~ know who I am talking about- I like his blog, and I think one in particular worth mentioning (believe it's called) Conscious Capitalism-Creating a New Paradigm for business Here is the link http://www.wholeplanetfoundation.org/files/uploaded/John_MackeyConscious_Capitalism.pdf 21 days ago • Like Safia Syed • There is always room to learn more. But the assessment of the area the training is needed for a particular manager is really important. 21 days ago • Like Follow Safia Follow Georgi Georgi Paleshnikov • Further to my previous comment a few hours ago, I do not imply that management theory is useless. As Safia said before me "There is always room to learn more." But if someone is really keen to be a good manager he would intuitively guess where are his weak sides as he compares him-/herself with good managers. There are enough books and resources on the internet worth reading, in order to improve oneself in every possible direction. It all depends on the individual: if there is a wish he/she will always find a way. But books & training are not always enough (please refer to my previous comment). 21 days ago • Like www.linkedin.com/groupAnswers?viewQuestionAndAnswers=&discussionID=188765830&gid=3044… 7/20 12/26/12 Does formal Management Training produce better managers? Please share your thoughts | LinkedIn Sandeep Muwal • Does formal Management Training produce better managers? Follow Sandeep If you are asking about 'Formal Management Training' than in my opinion 'YES'. Yes formal better management training produce better managers. The results of training will be fruitful in every test if the trainer and student both are having a sound set of objectives and practice while the training time period. In my life I have studied & learned many management books but the actual ''Applicability & Practice" (of all those management concepts, theories and models etc.) was learned at the professional training and actual field work & research. 'During training' and after that at the 'Actual field work' the candidate gets an exposure about his/her positive and negative points. He or she get to know about himself, about the work, how to work with senior and subordinates? How to be update with demands? etc. So in last, Dr. Brian Monger sir, if even after the 'training' people are failing to become a good manager than I think those were in a wrong training session and they should reorganize objectives of professional life. Thank you for your time sir. With best regards, Sandeep Muwal 21 days ago • Like Tan Kok Leong • The answer depends on four questions. What kind of training you are talking about ? Secondly what kind of company you are talking about? Thirdly, what kind of people under training you are talking about? and the fourth question probably is what kind of circumstances you are talking about? Follow Tan 21 days ago • Like Dr. Brian Monger • Tan, We are not actually seeking an answer to a question based on a specific situation, but rather looking at ideas and opinions based on a concept - so there is no real need to have those answers here. Dr. Brian Unfollow Follow Clemence But I guess you could contribute by expanding on each 21 days ago • Like Clemence Moyo • The question is " Does formal Management Training produce better managers?" The answer is an unequivocal "Yes". As long as we agree that management is a science based on some known theory then one must go through some prescribed training programe to gain proficiency. The case studies, role plays and assignments that students/participants undertake during the training programme are meant to potray a real life situation which would be encountered at the work place. Experience is then built on practice and the two are different sides of the same coin(borrowing from John). Most of the behaviours referred to in this discussion are well resarcehed and known and it is this knowlege that one uses in the workplace to solve managerial problems. While it is accepted that management as a social science may have many answers to to one problem depending on the interpretter, the foundation of good management remains well grounded theory based on sound training. 21 days ago • Like Neil Ribeiro • Being a product of the McDonald's Management Training program, I must say that there are many things that I do / mentor to others, that I learnt in that program. 21 days ago • Like Follow Neil Follow Yodit Yodit Fantahun • I think management trainings are significant to refine practical knowledge as long as they are run on the right software. And I believe the right software (management capabilities) are inherent and not necessarily learnt. It requires virtues that can not be easily derived from courses, especially when it comes to the delicate issue HR management. 21 days ago • Like 1 Thembisile Molose • Sometimes it depends what kind of training, who offered the training. this tells us that some people maybe good managers without formal training while the latter is also possible. 21 days ago • Like Follow Thembisile www.linkedin.com/groupAnswers?viewQuestionAndAnswers=&discussionID=188765830&gid=3044… 8/20 12/26/12 Follow Marzieh Does formal Management Training produce better managers? Please share your thoughts | LinkedIn Marzieh Djadidi • It depends.Good managers are people that have analytic, communicating and reflecting mind set. In this point of view, they are able to change to whether a formal or informal way of management, based on the situation and their business nature. I believe that formal Management Training, is not the cause of managing better, but it is related to prestige . 21 days ago • Like 1 John Schultz • This response is in defense of those individuals who feel training can include self-study and on-the-job experiences that are mostly observational. Learning is learning regardless of its source. It’s the outcome that counts, and in many cases we judge adequacy by assigning an assessment of good or bad. Follow John Leaders—for centuries—have been rallying people to greater accomplishment—to win wars, build empires, and of course complete the mundane rigors of day-to-day work. It seems the world has been able to produce leaders sufficient to match almost every challenge. Certainly there has been enough written on the topic. Libraries catalog and shelve numerous titles devoted to its practice. Anyone interested in becoming a leader can—through effort—promote herself or himself by employing what is already known. The ability to apply these skills is of course dependent upon situational and emotional factors—the group’s needs and circumstances, and the individual leader’s capability and good judgment. Leaders through training, experience, or personal aptitude are able to get others to achieve results that are deemed desirable by both leader and followers. 21 days ago • Like 1 Endi Kustamsi • FORMAL EDUCATION or Training is very important, BUT if you want to create a so called "Good Managers", then there is one MORE IMPORTANT thing, you MUST bring them to GEMBA LEARNING (please refer to Modern Mgmt vs Lean Mgmt in the book titled "Gemba Walks" by James P. Womack, Ph.D). Follow Endi 21 days ago • Like Mohamed R Patel • Formal training is essential implementation and execution are key components! 21 days ago • Like Follow Mohamed R Oleg Gorodnitskiy • What is that "formal" training for? for whom? and why now? Here is an interesting debate about MBA education (http://previewdebates.economist.com/debate/days/view/901): Follow Oleg Prof. Mintzberg's position is that companies see an MBA as a substitute for experience. As a result they fast track business-school graduates before they have learned the lessons of real-world management, which is to the detriment of both firms and the economy. Paul Danos, (Dean, Tuck School of Business, Dartmouth College), however, says that while the tools learned on an MBA programme give employees the advantage over peers who lack that knowledge, they still pay their dues in the workplace before reaching the top. 20 days ago • Like 2 Oleg Gorodnitskiy • "Changing education paradigms" by RSA http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zDZFcDGpL4U 20 days ago • Like Follow Oleg Follow Martin Martin Birt • Brian, One of my most memorable and enjoyable assignments included responsibility for our management development workshops. Let's think about the variables that influence the success of training initiative: > the participants (especially their readiness for training) > their managers (Have these senior managers selected and prepared their candidates? Will the senior managers provide opportunities to exercise new skills and will the seniors provide feedback?) > the material > the alignment of the material with the organizations culture and methods > the facilitator(s), and > the training environment. Let's define success: > We are successful if managers learn some tools, models and frameworks for thinking. > www.linkedin.com/groupAnswers?viewQuestionAndAnswers=&discussionID=188765830&gid=3044… 9/20 12/26/12 Does formal Management Training produce better managers? Please share your thoughts | LinkedIn We are successful if common values are emphasized and practiced. > We are successful if participants leave with a shared language. > We are successful if the group of participants becomes another supportive network. > We are successful if managers are provided the opportunities to exercise these outcomes. If we focus on the variables and desired outcomes, then yes, formal training can produce better managers. 20 days ago • Like 2 Alfredo Carrera B. • As Olga Piehler infers, learning occurs only when there is a change of behavior. Management is a blend of hard and soft competences. Thus, having hard competences is key, but not enough, as practically all of the above comments. Follow Alfredo 20 days ago • Like Dr. Brian Monger • Great input Martin 20 days ago • Like Dr. Brian Unfollow Dr. Brian Monger • Alfredo - learning occurs before change. Change is the implementation of learning. Dr. Brian Unfollow I can learn something, remember it and perhaps implement it at a later date. From the implementation I will learn more. 20 days ago • Like 2 Dr. Brian Monger • Oleg, As much as I usually admire Mintzberg and Danos, I find both arguments simplistic and way over generalised. Dr. Brian Unfollow Do you actually have a problem with understanding the general concept of what I was referring to when I said "formal Management Training" in the Discussion question? 20 days ago • Like Georgi Paleshnikov • With all these propositions for formal training and all sorts of courses, when do you think these learned managers will start to manage something right, as it has to be? Please, indicate a value in months, years or decades. Follow Georgi Follow Alfredo 20 days ago • Like Alfredo Carrera B. • To avoid the discussion about semantics, let me explain myself in another way. We go through phases: - Unconscious incompetence. - Conscious incompetence. - Conscious competence. - Unconscious competence. - Conscious unconscious competence. Most of us stay in the conscious competence stage, which is what you call learning or what I call knowledge. Being in conscious competence does not mean that the behavior has changed and that the knowledge is entrenched within us, like driving, or cycling. That happens when we are at the unconscious competence stage. Having hard competences is important for management, but not enough, we need to incorporate what we learn permanently, and apart from that, have the soft competences, or emotional intelligence, necessary to lead. 20 days ago • Like 3 Oleg Gorodnitskiy • With all due respect, Dr. Brian, your Discussion question is also quite general. I think that training (formal or not) can be very effective, as long as it is carefully designed for a specific audience, at the right time and at the right place. At any rate, based on your post, it seems that your position is closer to Mintzberg's view. Follow Oleg 20 days ago • Like Dr. Brian Monger • Thank you for the "due respect" Oleg. www.linkedin.com/groupAnswers?viewQuestionAndAnswers=&discussionID=188765830&gid=3044… 10/20 12/26/12 Does formal Management Training produce better managers? Please share your thoughts | LinkedIn Of course it is quite general. I wrote it to be that way, on purpose. 20 days ago • Like 1 Dr. Brian Unfollow Oleg Gorodnitskiy • Alfredo! You are right: "walking the path is the path"! Dr. Brian, learning is change, change is learning. Wouldn't you agree? 20 days ago • Like Follow Oleg Dr. Brian Monger • Oleg, refer to my comment above re change. Dr. Brian Unfollow Of course people learn (and others assist them to do so) usually to gain information and convert that to knowledge. Perhaps (but not always) change is a desired outcome. As a result some change does occur. At very least we have more information. This does not mean that further change will occur in the short term - or even the long term. Whenever there is a change in a person's behavior, it indicates some learning has occurred (assuming the change is not the result of a physical occurance. It does not mean that good change has occured either 20 days ago • Like Follow Robert 1 Robert Jensen AIMM, MAIPM • @Georgi P How long is a piece of string ? Let me come at your question in another way, what are you prepared to do to support your managers in training to ensure the transfer is timed and effective ? Are you engaged in the process, or would you say OK you are trained now, off you go, Manage ! Do your managers have mentors, or networks of peers. Do they know how to create and join them ? In other words training is not a guarantee in any instance, but what is guaranteed is if a manager in training has the FULL support of their sponsoring employer, the training is way more likely to transfer into operations timely and effectively, and in a way which fits the culture of the organisation. 20 days ago • Like 1 Aditya Madiraju (8884948072) • Hi Georgi, Season's greetings! Follow Aditya My experience is that most formal management trainings (including inhouse analytics practitioners) usually underestimate the time and energy required to cajole a "business person" to stand up & raise a hand. I realize fear of failure is overwelmingly stronger than curiosity. Regards, aditya 20 days ago • Like Georgi Paleshnikov • Dear Robert, Follow Georgi thanks for your comment. As already seen from my comments above, I am not against the formal training in general. I have had in my experience as an employee and as a manager I have always tried to provide full support to the employees if they need training in anything. But what makes you a good expert on something or a good manager is the real job and the initiatives you take. If you give it a thought you can never be fully prepared for everything and it's the creativity which saves the day at the end. What matters most is the inner drive to improvement and perfection which makes someone a good manager, not the amount of formal training he receives. By the way, going too often to training & seminars is a good excuse to transfer a few assignments to colleagues in the company. Someone has to do the job at the end. 20 days ago • Like Ibukun Adebayo FBCS, CITP, Cert.IoD, ACSI • Focused management trainng in www.linkedin.com/groupAnswers?viewQuestionAndAnswers=&discussionID=188765830&gid=3044… 11/20 12/26/12 Does formal Management Training produce better managers? Please share your thoughts | LinkedIn specialist disciplines may produce better functional managers, e.g. financial managers, account managers etc. Follow Ibukun Adebayo On the other hand, I'd suggest that leadership training doesn't necessarily produce better leaders. Evolving into an authentic leader comes through mentorship, experience, and self-awareness, in my view. 20 days ago • Like 3 John Schultz • It seems that many of the contributors to this conversation are engaged in leadership and management training of one sort or another. Some of the contention over definitions and approaches appears to be driven by the models that guide individual teaching and coaching. Follow John But as I indicated previously, all management training has merit in somebody’s thinking, but some programs are more useful than others. And the only way to establish adequacy is to define what the expectations are. As the case may be, what are competencies that describe sufficient management or leadership? What should a manager know? Some participants have already indicated Mintzberg’s view as defining, while others cite Maxwell’s ideas, or even the notion of Gemba as a guiding philosophy. Training has to have rigorous and actionable objectives. Otherwise any curriculum can be deemed appropriate. And certainly there are many programs available that are nothing more than popularized and wistful notions with little merit, but do a good job of packing somebody’s wallet. 20 days ago • Like 1 Jim Carwardine • So many responses... Hard to nail down a complete answer to the question asked as evidenced by all the responses. Follow Jim Adults learn best in an action learning setting where their current problem is mulled over by the circle, action is prescribed and progress reported on at the next meeting. Is that "formal"... not sure. Leadership is relative to the environment where the interaction between the boss, the job and the team dictates the next leadership step, sometimes towards a known objective but many times, the objective is obscure and the process is the object. In a world of fast moving pieces, leadership is sometimes relative, different people assuming the role at different times. It an operational activity. Formality, best practices, written procedures, etc. are mostly historical by definition and irrelevant in a learning environment if they can't be modified on the fly by people who are responsible and accountable for what they do. A white board, a group of diverse people and a reason to be there are the tools of true training. Formal?, yes, I think... 19 days ago • Like David Fuller • I believe that formal training provides an individual with the basic tools however, just a with any other type of work skills, experience is the key. 19 days ago • Like Follow David Ashok Kacker • I believe the issue is does formal management training ( read MBA) produce better managers. Check this out. Follow Ashok http://www.mintzberg.org/book/managers-not-mbas I agree with this even though I am an MBA 19 days ago • Like 1 Benny Cohen • I believe that format education may enhance management skills. However traits such as leadership, being able to distinguish between important and urgent, good people relations are natural and come with experience 19 days ago • Like 1 Follow Benny Follow Ramkumar Ramkumar Ganesan • Management is necessary in day-to-day life. A formal training is good but we need to understand if that training takes care of the current needs. We are now talking about more of self-governance, owning the responsibility, motivation, and team play. However, the management training structure has not changed enough to support this. We need to define a better management educational system to get the best out of it. That is why natural leaders succeed today than just a management grad. 19 days ago • Like www.linkedin.com/groupAnswers?viewQuestionAndAnswers=&discussionID=188765830&gid=3044… 1 12/20 12/26/12 Does formal Management Training produce better managers? Please share your thoughts | LinkedIn Follow Graham Graham Gifford • Dr. Brian, clearly you have asked a question that many people have an opinion on. Your question is as multi-facted as the responses you received. Like Kevin, I have worked with highly educated managers that were completely ineffective and I have worked with others that did not have a formal education and were most effective. The work place is changing far too quickly for any of us not to taking the time to increase and grow our skill set, however, what defines a formal education. I do not know whether a "formal" education is as critical as it once was. I find the opinions stating that a formal education manifests technical skills, interesting. That was the one biggest fault that the poor managers exhibited -they had no people skills. They lacked the understanding of the human element. While I agree, in part, with Maria, great management skills are developed, but what do we consider to be "great" skills? That's a question for another time... 19 days ago • Like 1 Faisal Mahmood • A Robot cannot do the management.Some lands are barren and some are fertile.So formal training may be all in vain, a little beneficial or extremely beneficial. 19 days ago • Like Follow Faisal Follow Ozzie E Ozzie E Paez • As I read through the numerous comments, they illustrate how different “management” is defined within different contexts. Organizational size and scope, structure (flat vs. hierarchical), technology, operational environment (government, non-profit, profit) and other factors give specific meaning to the term. Finally, perspective is important because training has different value for the individual being trained and the organization paying for the training. With the above in mind, whether and to what degree training is beneficial would have to be equally contextual. Formal management training can contribute to management growth, but there is no guarantee and may not be the best strategy when considered from the organization’s point of reference. From experience, companies with effective training and development programs matched individual background and demonstrated performance to training and future expectations. Later on, employees had more flexibility in pursuing individual interests, but by then, they would have demonstrated their value to the organization and held the promise of greater returns in the future. So, in essence, there is no specific answer to the question, other than ‘depends.’ 19 days ago • Like 2 Marcus Kottinger • Dear Ashok, thanks for sharing this book hint. I guess this is not only an issue for management positions. In our country the economy will much more suffer by the lack of qualified and educated employees although we have a high immigration rate. Follow Marcus 19 days ago • Like ron baca • Having recently received my MBA in Management after a 30+ year C-level executive career (reverse order), I believe knowledge (training) coupled with experience may illuminate the way for managers to manage. Experience without training leaves excuses as to why management inefficiencies exist. Follow ron 18 days ago • Like 1 Dr. Brian Monger • We have had a few comments suggesting that formal management training needs to be good. What would it include that perhaps is not commonly there now? 13 days ago • Like Dr. Brian Unfollow Follow Wynne Wynne Price • Brian, we need to have, and to continue to promote, the strategic links between the training and the organisational requirements. There must also be follow-up between the trainee and their manager, within strategic framework. That is, the trainee's manager needs to have an excellent grasp of "how this training brings benefit to both the trainee and the organisation?" and to regularly and consistently follow up with the trainee. www.linkedin.com/groupAnswers?viewQuestionAndAnswers=&discussionID=188765830&gid=3044… 13/20 12/26/12 Does formal Management Training produce better managers? Please share your thoughts | LinkedIn 13 days ago • Like Wynne Price • ron baca congratulations. Your management experience must have been supported by your academic studies, as well as being extremely useful in class discussions. 13 days ago • Like Follow Wynne Follow Clemence Clemence Moyo • I liked Graham's line of thinking. In my third contribution to this discussion I raised the issue that many issues that are raised in this discussion as obtained outside formal training are in essence part of formal manageent training. Most MBA programmes are meant to be as extensive as possible to inculcate a wide range of knowledge and therefore produce a complete manager with skills in leadership, human capital management, finance, entrpreneurship and other issues that many people seem to suggest they can only be obtained outside formal training. Experience develops from applying taught priciples in the work place repeatedly which increasese proficency. I am not sure how anyone can honestly advance the arguement that formal training is not important because most people are what they are beccause of formal trainng . The issue of incompetent trained managers should not distract us as it applies accross all phenonmenon and is amply described by the normal distribution curve. You will have few, useless trained managers, a majority average performers and a feww highfliers.I questioned why many people believe that management does not require the same level of training to obtaina proficiency like other areas of business such as Operational and Financial management, engineering and medicinee. Perhaps the question to ask now is "What is it that we call management?" 13 days ago • Like Follow Clemence Clemence Moyo • Ashok, Professor Henry Minztberg has always spiced management teaching and thinking questioning its completeness. He questioned the fact that managers performed the four functions of planning, organising, leading and coordinating and introduced the concept of managerials roles. In strategy he questioned the fact that strategic management was structured and followed a definite plan and introduced the concept of emergent strategy. In the article you made reference to, he says MBA programmes should not be for youngsters but for experienced managers. What is correct about his thiking in the three examples is that he points out a fundamental weakness in mangement approach which is that we tend to take a casual approach without subjecting issues to rigourous analysis to check their completeness. This unfortunately may be the role of scholarship instead of management. If one attends graduate school after practising management, most misconceptions and myths about management will definitely be cleared during the study programme and a better manager will be produced. 13 days ago • Like 1 Ramkumar Ganesan • All reputed B Schools accept students with experience. Good. However, if we say management is a profession, then the MBAs also need to be given a license and they need to go through continuous education and credits to stay alive. Follow Ramkumar I am not sure how many of the world’s leading B Schools have psychology and political science as part of their curriculum. How many of them give real life experience eon best practice, technology perspective, strategic finance, dealing with human emotions and so on? What do they do to inculcate the values of being fair and honest? How many certified MBAs in their current role define motivational factors, productivity, transparency, respect for human being, tolerance to culture and opposite views, being objective? We need to understand many things before just only speak about formal training. 11 days ago • Like Follow Clemence 1 Clemence Moyo • A fact of real life is that no one person can encounter everything in one life.No one manager therefore encounters all the areas studied at college in real life. Management is a very broad area and cannot be expected to cover every facet of business. It is also correct that everyone will encounter something new in life but a properly trained manager will undesrtand how to obtain expert knowledge inside or outside the organisation. There are professionals in every area of endeavour. I am not sure whether there are MBA programmes that do not cover best practice, productivity, strategic finance, culture and motivation? Granted there are very good untrained managers but they are a minority and exceptions to the general rule. An MBA will provide the essential tools of management which can be applied accross industries. Technical management of functional areas is provided by specialists in those areas. The purpose of an MBA or any other management training programme is to provide the major tools of the descipline/profession. The MBAprogramme I attended was extensive covering 22 taught courses which by and large covered most of the issues covered by Ramkumar. Most MBAs programmes enrol students with a first degree in any area, the assumption being that those students would want to manage businesses in their industries. www.linkedin.com/groupAnswers?viewQuestionAndAnswers=&discussionID=188765830&gid=3044… 14/20 12/26/12 Does formal Management Training produce better managers? Please share your thoughts | LinkedIn 11 days ago • Like Georgi Paleshnikov • Good point, Ramkumar! An institution, issuing certificate/diploma for MBA, should be tracked (or licensed as you said) based on what its students achieve as managers in, let's say, 5-7 years after graduation. I would not elaborate on how to do that here. Follow Georgi Formal training/education is just a test for someone to see if he would like to further do what he studied and solve the eventual issues/problems which would arise. It's the inner drive from this moment on, which would make someone a good manager. And this inner drive will give the direction for further education/training/etc. based on what one feels is necessary to improve. 11 days ago • Like 2 Linda Nolan • Georgi Follow Linda I like the concept of a study that analyses the outcomes of training, so long as the data collected over the years is comprehensive enough to leave all possible outcomes and conclusions open. So, for example, it may not be wise to assume that, in a longitudinal study, the markers for success will be similar to those of today. Feedback from me, from observation of MBA graduates at close hand in diverse organisations, is that MBA standards vary so much, depending on the awarding institution combined with the experience and aptitude of the graduate, that the qualification is meaningless on its own. As many others have commented, you can lead a horse to water etc.... A very poor manager, who may have achieved their position through political, rather than real ability, can still write good theory and talk wisely about successful workplace projects that succeeded through someone else's efforts. Many others simply fail to understand that knowing how to manage is nothing like being a good leader or manager in practice. These are common derailers in any company. The only kind of formal management training that spurs and helps them to change is that which which is driven by top level analysis, feedback and interaction with real events in the workplace. This may include MBA or other formal training. So many top achievers understand good practice instinctively and through their natural analytical and people skills. They prove that formal learning is not the only route, just an extra learning option. 11 days ago • Like Follow Ozzie E 3 Ozzie E Paez • Linda - You make excellent points. There are vast differences between the training needs of fairly inexperienced individuals and those who have managed, led, started businesses, etc. The value of formal training such as that offered by MBA programs varies greatly with the institution doing the training and the individual receiving it. In today's fast paced economy, many of the skills needed are evolving much faster than academia can possibly analyze, absorb and turn into new teaching materials, curriculum content, etc., so what experienced managers need and what is offered in such formal environments may not overlap so well and, just as important, may take too long to have a measurable impact on the issues being faced by the organization paying for the training. There are many management development programs being offered by Harvard, Notre Dame and other institutions with narrower, more up to date, targeted instruction, which can deliver great value. The University of San Francisco, for example, offered a marketing program focusing on the Internet and Social Media, whose content was current and relevant. It just so happened that I was taking some MBA classes that included marketing, which focused on how it was done in the 1980s and 90s. The text books were dated to that timeframe as well. Anyway, in today’s environment, there are options that can deliver direct, relevant value more timely than traditional programs. That does not mean that traditional programs are useless, they do serve a purpose, but it does raise questions as to the value that companies should expect by paying for different types of management development training. 11 days ago • Like Linda Nolan • Yes, Ozzie Follow Linda Watching with interest how those open access, online, courses being offered by some of the world's top Universities evolve and pan out. It will be useful to see how the cost-benefit equation works out for these strategies. From a base in HR, the focus must be on demonstrable ROI for any Leadership or Management Development initiatives and responses. That always means the most perfectly tailored solutions for the company, taking into account our Global marketplace. It's not about cost per unit of training; that is very yesterday. It's about measurable impact www.linkedin.com/groupAnswers?viewQuestionAndAnswers=&discussionID=188765830&gid=3044… 15/20 12/26/12 Does formal Management Training produce better managers? Please share your thoughts | LinkedIn on the Company bottom line; present and future. For Management, Leadership and Talent Development, the most interesting approaches I'm seeing combine innovative Research methodologies with very intelligent technology. This works via continuous feedback loop, generating agile learning and training responses, right through the Customer, Company and Employee matrix. By the way, talking of bottom lines and cost centres; sponsoring an Employee to do MBA or other formal programme, is often not so much about Learning and Development as about Reward and Retention. 10 days ago • Like Follow Ozzie E Ozzie E Paez • Linda: As input, I took an eight week executive course in Advanced Intercultural Management that contributed much to expanding my awareness of the issues, methods of assessment and tools for continuously expanding understanding. It was highly focused, hands on and practical, with participation from others in a range of industries across the world. These types of courses, in my view, can deliver short to long term returns. More importantly, the selection of courses can be aligned with the needs and goals of individual managers and others in the HR development process. 10 days ago • Like Follow Binod 2 Binod Atreya, Ph.D • Agreed with Linda and Ozzie. Formal courses like MBA offers ground for an individual to enter the job market, a platform for them to test whether learned knowledge can be implemented in the organization or not. The real organization situation is quite different. The socio cultural, political environment, with people of different background and personalities, and the inherent official bureaucracy, with operational management practices which are distinct than the theories, make organizational environment quite different and challenging. Therefore, experience deserve a great value in decision making system and developing great managers. Formal training offers upgrading individual knowledge and skills and a point to compare what other have been doing significantly different than the one we are doing. 10 days ago • Like Follow Ozzie E Ozzie E Paez • Binod - A key differentiator today is the constant state of change affecting organizations. Perhaps your company wants to enter new markets and the cultural skill sets and relations, important in the new market, are lacking in the sales force; or new foreign competition enters the market driving product value towards commoditization; or new technologies suddenly threaten how the company has been doing busines... Leading, managing and making decisions in these environments is challenging and requries individuals to upgrade their skill sets, sometimes on their own and sometimes through more formal training. 10 days ago • Like Follow Mashanka Mashanka Chahal • Personally, I won't typecast 'formally trained managers' as inferior or superior in their management & leadership style. I strongly consider 'management training' as yet another platform that equips a professional with the necessary tools in the box. Now whether that formally trained manager decides to use those tools appropriately and to their advantage or NOT is completely his/her prerogative & wisdom. Bad management should not be a reflection of bad training. Over the years, I have learnt to separate people from their problems and it has helped and to me this scenario isn't any different ... Now thats my take on this subject ! 10 days ago • Like 2 Clemence Moyo • Brilliant piece Mashanka! 9 days ago • Like Follow Clemence Follow Teck Kim Teck Kim Khoo • I see management training as being part of the process for an individual to become a manager. It provides the necessary educational background and certain topical studies to enrich the individual together with practical benchmarks and guidelines. However, much depends on the individual since management training does not always provide all the lessons to be a good manager. Personally, theoretical knowledge cannot replace practical experience and this is one of the major differences between average managers and excellent mnagers. The knowledge one gains from formal management training does not mould one to be a good manager. It has to be combined with practical experience and know-how which will then add value to organisations. Much also depends on the individual's traits...like possessing a positive attitude, good inter-personal and communication skills, a flair for developing people, team player, good www.linkedin.com/groupAnswers?viewQuestionAndAnswers=&discussionID=188765830&gid=3044… 16/20 12/26/12 Does formal Management Training produce better managers? Please share your thoughts | LinkedIn leadership skills, etc. These characteristics when combined with management training will develop effective managers for organisations. 9 days ago • Like Follow Ozzie E 1 Ozzie E Paez • Teck - Interpersonal and communication skills, development of your core team, working well with others and even leadership skills can be taught and developed. I would say that these are among the first set of skills that new supervisors and managers should demonstrate and, if they lack them, organizations would do well to send them for training. The same applies to decision-making skills at every level of the organization. This is one area where I focus and know can deliver good returns on investments. In today's fast paced environment, keeping these skills up to date can make a significant impact on the organization's performance, key employee retention, human development, agility and adaptability. From experience, I've come to realize that these areas overlap the formal training of academia and the hands on training found in On The Job Training and similar programs. 9 days ago • Like Follow Kier Kier O'Neil, PMP, CSM • My company has management training at all levels. If you get promoted then you are expected to complete that level's training within a certain amount of time. The knowledge that it conveys is beneficial but not as important as providing a consistency across all managers at that level. The real benefit is that workers can expect all managers at that level to act and react in a similar manner. I cannot overstate how nice this is. In other companies that I have been involved in each manager could have completely different ways of dealing with the same situation and the learning curve was prohibitive for the people that had to interact with them. 9 days ago • Like Follow Judy Judy Kaylor • You can provide training. You cannot guarantee the learner has learned and is able to transfer the learning into meaningful actions. All training needs assessments (pre and post) and in the situation of supervisory/managemetn training, link the supervisory behaviors to the performance plan. 9 days ago • Like Follow Michael Michael MacNeil Sr. • I'm the worst manager I have ever met! But! I have managed to survive in Business for 28 years. I have learned to LISTEN to other's,get advise from people who have done it. Not a self help book. if You want to be a Fireman, hang out with Firemen. If you want to be in Finance hang out with Bankers. If you want have a profitable business! Hire a great Manager! And let them manage. Find one who is educated, polished and that you can trust and enjoy his company, Because You are going to spend a lot of time together. This is coming from mistake's I have made. and the less mistake's you make the more money you will have in your jean's. a vary wealthy friend of mine in the Oil biz told me something about myself one day. "Michael, you have make a lot of money in the construction business! Now you have to learn to keep some. 8 days ago • Like Follow Diana 1 1 Diana Leach • I concur that good management results from a combination of inherent traits, experience, and good training/education. I want to add something else not mentioned specifically yet. One of the many reasons that I chose to get a graduate management degree is that I wanted to be able to "speak the language" of management with those upper level managers and their subordinates. People are more at ease with someone who "understands" without definitions and explanations. Made quite a difference for me. 8 days ago • Like 3 Dr. Brian Monger • Diana, what do you describe as "inherent" traits? 8 days ago • Like 1 Dr. Brian Unfollow Follow Charles Charles Wolfe • I seem to be late to this forum but I have a few thoughts to share that haven't been written yet that may help to make the case for management training. First like many others I agree that much that happens in a training session is often lost in most organizations. Second though, I had the experience of working with two very successful organizations that did management training that worked very well. www.linkedin.com/groupAnswers?viewQuestionAndAnswers=&discussionID=188765830&gid=3044… 17/20 12/26/12 Does formal Management Training produce better managers? Please share your thoughts | LinkedIn Many years ago I worked at Harvard Business School's Executive Program for Management Development. I did some research to determine the effectiveness of this program by surveying executives that had participated six months after it had ended for them. I found that when functional managers had come into the program knowing that when they returned to their companies they were returning to become general managers, the program was amazingly successful in helping them prepare. However, one executive that went back to his old job as a chief financial officer spoke about the experience in a way that captured what many felt. He said he felt like Charly, the man in the movie that came from the story Flowers of Algernon. He felt like he had been a very unintelligent human being before coming to Harvard's program. When he left he felt like he had been given the gift of genius. However, when he returned to his old job he felt all the new learning slipping away. So the moral to the story, context is incredibly important to learning being transferred from a classroom to a workplace. Second, I left Harvard to work at Exxon. Exxon was amazing in the way they developed their people. There were constant conversations about every leader at all levels regarding what was the next best developmental move for each individual. Tied to this were specific weeklong management programs for those promoted into supervisory, first and second level management roles. In each of these weeklong programs, some internal person like myself was the key facilitator and we were partnered with two high potential plant managers who resided with us for the week, attended every session and gave presentations of their own. It was an amazing experience and because these plant managers were people that every participant looked up to, these courses were extremely powerful and people definitely learned how to lead. On the other hand, I worked for an insurance company where we had week long management classes for general managers of regional offices along with corporate managers. We also received a partner to work with. In one telling instance the person sent to work with us was on probation with the company and many of the GMs knew about it. And while the content of the program may have been just as good as what was taught at Exxon, the symbolism of having an executive on probation to co-facilitate with made the experience far less valuable. Again context is incredibly important for the transference of learning to take place. Warm regards, Chuck Wolfe 8 days ago • Like Follow Samantha Samantha Sutton • I believe outcomes of management training need to be addressed before arguing whether formal management training produces better managers. Management can be defined as "the process of dealing with or controlling things or people." Therefore, is a training outcome to train people to become better "controllers"? I prefer the synonyms for management and liken these to the journey people should take to become better managers… administration -> direction -> conduct -> leadership. Bring back humanistic qualities and outcomes in management training. Create leaders who innovate, take risks and stretch boundaries, not limit managers to confined tools or frameworks. 8 days ago • Like Follow Michael 1 2 Michael MacNeil Sr. • I thirst for knowledge! You have to excuse Me, I'm not a Collage grad. I dropped out of high school in grade nine. And i'm Dyslexic. Not severe but enough to dampen my learning at a young age. Great vision, self taught master at math, but not so good on the language arts. I have a real thirst for the law, and that is a inherent trait, my biological Father's people were Lawyer's ( O'Connors ) . And Chuck,What is the meaning of context? 8 days ago • Like Derek Brand • This is a very interesting topic Brian which is bound to polarise the readers. My view is that formal training does make a manager better but only in half of the required skills for being a successful manager and only if co-existing with some strong personal/professional attributes. Follow Derek Management covers an exceptionally wide variety of roles from supervising an automated product line through middle management to Cx roles. As we consider some of these roles the required skills tend to be quite different; for instance the product line manager may require high level subject matter expertise (SME) which will be highly specific to the company and product and almost certainly requiring years of experiential learning with management training unlikely to add significant value. As one moves into middle management responsibilities and therefore required skills tend to broaden; people management, stakeholder management, performance management etc. It is often this step that organisations fail to consider as a substantial step instead thinking that a strong SME will make a great middle manager but forgetting the dramatic difference in responsibilities and required skills which is a great time to consider formal management training. Implicit in the skills required for these roles is a combination of frameworks that could be applied that others have referred to as a ‘toolkit’ and could be assisted by tertiary training but also personal attributes; people skills, professionalism, leadership, vision, communication, personal and professional improvement etc. People can seek to build and improve these while skills others are born with them and can polish them but each www.linkedin.com/groupAnswers?viewQuestionAndAnswers=&discussionID=188765830&gid=3044… 18/20 12/26/12 Does formal Management Training produce better managers? Please share your thoughts | LinkedIn requires self-awareness and determination. Finally as one moves into executive management roles the subject matter expertise of the field starts to lessen while the subject matter expertise of the executive role starts to increase; strategy, operations, finance, marketing, HR etc. In my view these can also be learned however formal management training from a strong tertiary institution does provide a broad base ‘toolkit’, that affords the individual a range of ways to deal with issues rather than perhaps one or two tried and true techniques, this can make their skills more portable between companies and industries. If the institution harnesses both theoretical knowledge and the widely varied knowledge and application of the students (especially in part-time and executive courses) then this can deliver highly applicable, transportable and practical tools. That said, I still think that while these roles require a stronger ‘toolkit’ this does not take away from the importance of those personal attributes mentioned previously. In summary a management leader who can employ those personal professional attributes authentically while also having the depth of both formal training and experiential application of their ‘toolkit’ is likely to be a very successful manager. However a manager without those personal attributes is probably unlikely to be receptive to new learning irrespective of formal or experiential and managerial success may be limited. 8 days ago • Like Charles Wolfe • Hi Michael, Follow Charles The way I use context relates to the question "Does formal management training produce better managers." In the case of the Harvard Executive Program for Management Education the answer is "yes" if the person being educated is going back to a new challenge where they can apply all the general management skills they are learning. When the person goes back to a situation where they cannot use the skills they have learned then the answer is "no" they will not become better managers. In the Exxon situation the addition of a high potential manager to the weekly management training sessions sends a signal to all attendees that the week, and what they are learning, is very important. So for these participants they work very hard to learn the content and the answer again is yes, these participants do become better managers. In the case of the insurance company, the fact that they sent an executive who was on probation to attend sends a signal to participants that this week of learning is not important, and so the participants are much less likely to value what they are learning, and therefore they, at least many of them, do not become better managers. So what I meant by context is that the circumstances involving the training make a big difference in terms of how you answer the question "Does formal management training produce better managers?" In some cases "yes" and in other circumstances "no". 8 days ago • Like 1 Ann Houston • I see the positive results of management training daily. It provides confidence in individuals to use their own natural and new strategies in managing teams and organisations. It increases awareness of aspects that learners hadn't been conscious of - whether through lack of exposure or their own behavioral traits and 'blind spots'. Follow Ann In effective facilitation of training interactions, significant peer learning will occur, capitalising on the diverse experience within the class. Additionally it is reassuring for learners to see that others face similar challenges. An organisation that invests in training sends a strong cultural message, internally and externally, that continuous improvement is a foundation value. For some attendees, training will be a catalyst for growth and development. Others may need further coaching to assist in embedding this knowledge and skills into their daily work. Formal training, that addresses specific skills gaps, does not guarantee better managers, but where it doesn't - you'd have to ask the question - "Is this person suitable for this management role? 8 days ago • Like Follow Alan 1 Alan Seymour • This discussion has elicited some very good view points. My belief is unless one has the emotional fortitude and ability to internalize Management Training and manifest the same in the real world Management training can go waste. I have met many an entrepreneur with absolutely no management training that themselves have built successful business. I have seen them in action and can confidently say they have skill sets that many professionally trained managers could learn from. I am prone to often evaluate my children's skills as mangers and my 17 year daughter's perspective on many a management situation has been better than mine. We need to be able to differentiate between technical operations and Managing situations and people. Good decisions make good managers. It has been said... Good managers live to decide and decide to make a living. 8 days ago • Like • Reply privately • Flag as inappropriate www.linkedin.com/groupAnswers?viewQuestionAndAnswers=&discussionID=188765830&gid=3044… 19/20 Add a comment... Send me an email for each new comment. Add Comment Ads by LinkedIn Mem bers Help Center About Press LinkedIn Corporation © 2012 One Marketing Dashboard Cornell Marketing Cert See One Version Of The Truth In A Simple Dashboard. You Know You Want It! Add an Ivy League Marketing Cert to your Resume in 12 w eeks. Apply Now ! Blog Careers User Agreement Advertising Privacy Policy Talent Solutions Community Guidelines Tools Mobile Cookie Policy Developers Copyright Policy Publishers Send Feedback Language Upgrade Your Account