"All self-improvement begins with the humility to increase one's self awareness."
I had a conversation with a manager last week that's stuck with me. Brilliant bloke, sharp as a tack, natural leader - the sort of person who seems to have it all sorted. But his team was struggling, and he couldn't work out why.
"I've tried everything," he said. "Different approaches, new systems, even brought in external training. Nothing's working."
The problem wasn't his methods - it was that he'd never looked in the mirror.
As trainers, facilitators, and HR managers, you know the frustration all too well. You deliver brilliant sessions, your delegates nod enthusiastically, they complete their feedback forms with glowing reviews – and then what? Six months later, you discover they've reverted to their old ways, making the same costly mistakes and poor decisions that brought them to your training room in the first place.
Did you know that our habits as trainers can reduce our delegates cognitive engagement by up to 30%?
It's human nature, isn't it? We stick with what works. But here's the uncomfortable truth I've learned from my years in business consulting and executive coaching.
What feels comfortable for us as trainers might actually be limiting our delegates' learning potential.
As leaders, we're constantly trying to crack the code of high performance. We invest in personality assessments, team-building exercises, and leadership development programmes. Yet many of us are still missing a crucial piece of the puzzle...
Picture this: Listening in on two seasoned facilitators, Sarah and Marcus, sitting across from each other in a bustling conference centre café during the break of a leadership development summit. Both have decades of experience designing and delivering leadership programmes, yet they found themselves on opposite sides of a heated discussion about incorporating Visionary Leadership Theory into their next training initiative.
From Fumbling Facilitator to Sensory Genius: How Learning Accessories Transformed My Training Career
Twenty-three years ago, I stood in front of my first corporate training room, armed with nothing but PowerPoint slides and misplaced confidence.
The sea of glazed expressions staring back at me told the whole story - I was losing them faster than a leaky bucket loses water. That painful early experience set me on a journey that would fundamentally change how I approach adult learning, leading me to discover the transformative power of sensory engagement through learning accessories.
The Science of Empowerment: How the Jonico Window Transforms Leadership Through Effective Delegation
In contemporary organisational psychology, few concepts have garnered as much empirical support as the relationship between delegation, empowerment, and leadership effectiveness. The Jonico Window, developed by Dr. John Nicholls, represents a sophisticated framework that bridges theoretical understanding with practical application in the realm of managerial empowerment. This assessment tool provides leaders with a structured approach to understanding their delegation patterns whilst simultaneously fostering employee development through strategic empowerment practices.
In the bustling world of corporate training, where new methodologies emerge faster than you can say "synergy," there exists a rare breed of assessment tool that has stood the test of time. The Interpersonal Influence Inventory has quietly earned its place as a trainer's classic, not through flashy marketing or trendy buzzwords, but through something far more valuable: genuine, transformative results.
In my two decades of working with organisations across the UK, from startups like the Letterbox Cocktails Company to giants like Vodafone and BMW, I've witnessed a concerning pattern that Ken Keis powerfully addresses in his work "Dying to Live." The story that particularly resonates with me is one he shares about James, a high-performing executive who seemed to have it all together on the surface.
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