Learn to enhance human performance through effective feedback by enrolling the Giving and Receiving Feedback course. Feedback or correcting errors and mistakes is an essential part both for the students and employees. Correcting your employees or students and make them feel positive towards the correction is as necessary as the Business plan. The course is helpful for both employer and employee. As an employer, you will explore how to provide useful feedback to your employee while as an employee you will learn to receive the feedback positively for enhancing your performance. The course helps you to develop a structured model for giving feedback and guides you to set your min while providing feedback. You will learn to change your behaviour by developing action plans and accountability. Upon completion, you will learn to use feedback for enhancing the human performance. What Will I Learn? You will learn the essential attitudes or mindset that leads to effective feedback. You will learn how and why feedback can go wrong and result in extreme anxiety on the part of both the giver and receiver of feedback. You will be able to use a structured model for giving feedback in a positive and helpful way. You will assure behaviour change by developing action plans and accountability. You will also practice a model for receiving feedback in a manner that will maximize the value of feedback received. Requirements Only the desire to help your team members improve their performance. Module: 01 Introduction FREE 00:03:00 Course Purpose and Objectives FREE 00:04:00 Why it Matters - When We Fail Straight Talk FREE 00:06:00 Activity - When and Why We Fail to Give Feedback 00:01:00 Characteristics of Great Managers FREE 00:03:00 Values that Enable Feedback 00:03:00 Activity - How have the Values Worked for You? 00:02:00 Module: 02 A Few Laws of Feedback 00:05:00 How Things Can Go Wrong 00:05:00 Activity - Creating the Right Mindset 00:02:00 The Continuum of Engagement 00:03:00 Guidelines for Giving Feedback 00:04:00 Module: 03 A Model for Effective Feedback 00:07:00 Activity - Practice Giving Feedback 00:01:00 Setting Goals and Action Planning 00:05:00 Continuous Improvement and Fact-Based Feedback 00:05:00 Guidelines for Receiving Feedback 00:06:00 Activity - Practice Receiving Feedback 00:01:00 Summary 00:02:00 Mock Exam Final Exam
Project Accounting and Finance Skills: In-House Training Do you manage both project schedules and budgets, but do not have insight into how actual results relate to the approved budget? Do you desire to have more clarity about the relationship between your project's performance with the accounting and financial systems in your organization? Do you need to understand financial and accounting terminology to bridge the gap between the 'world of finance' and the 'world of project management? Organizations have a need to manage-by-projects, because projects are the means to deliver on strategic goals and objectives. Therefore, the project manager must have an understanding of the financial world of investments to ensure the organization will realize expected business value. This requires a foundation in the principles of accounting and finance to comprehend how the project's contribution provides an organization with a competitive advantage. Learn what you must do to give your organization the assurance it needs that its investment in your project will realize business value. Learn what you must do to give your organization the assurance it needs to know that its investment in your project will realize business value. What You Will Learn At the end of this program, you will be able to: Explain the aspects of classical corporate accounting and finance effects on managing projects Determine how your project fits into the corporate income statement, balance sheet, and cash flow statement Analyze the financial aspects of managing projects Use earned value management as the basis for decision making throughout the project life Recognize the importance of the project manager's financial responsibilities Focus on what PMs do and should be doing, in support of accounting and finance Use financial information within a project environment to meet financial results Track and analyze the project's financial status and forecast with the goal of realizing benefits Generate work performance data to ensure a project's outcome aligns with financial metrics Foundation Concepts Accounting and Finance Terms and Concepts Accounting and Finance Essentials Financial Terms and Concepts Projects as Financial Investments Overview of 'Two Worlds' Project as Investments Accounting and Finance World: Standards, Principles and Practices Accounting and Finance Standards and Principles Accounting and Finance Practices Capital Budgeting Corporate Budgeting Accounting and Finance World: Economic Project Selection Methods Economic Project Selection Methods Economic Project Selection and the Business Case Project Management World Project Management and Financial Controls Project Management and Work Performance Data Project Management and Earned Value Management Project Management and Work Performance Reporting
Project Accounting and Finance Skills Do you manage both project schedules and budgets, but do not have insight into how actual results relate to the approved budget? Do you desire to have more clarity about the relationship between your project's performance with the accounting and financial systems in your organization? Do you need to understand financial and accounting terminology to bridge the gap between the 'world of finance' and the 'world of project management? Organizations have a need to manage-by-projects, because projects are the means to deliver on strategic goals and objectives. Therefore, the project manager must have an understanding of the financial world of investments to ensure the organization will realize expected business value. This requires a foundation in the principles of accounting and finance to comprehend how the project's contribution provides an organization with a competitive advantage. Learn what you must do to give your organization the assurance it needs that its investment in your project will realize business value. Learn what you must do to give your organization the assurance it needs to know that its investment in your project will realize business value. What You Will Learn At the end of this program, you will be able to: Explain the aspects of classical corporate accounting and finance effects on managing projects Determine how your project fits into the corporate income statement, balance sheet, and cash flow statement Analyze the financial aspects of managing projects Use earned value management as the basis for decision making throughout the project life Recognize the importance of the project manager's financial responsibilities Focus on what PMs do and should be doing, in support of accounting and finance Use financial information within a project environment to meet financial results Track and analyze the project's financial status and forecast with the goal of realizing benefits Generate work performance data to ensure a project's outcome aligns with financial metrics Foundation Concepts Accounting and Finance Terms and Concepts Accounting and Finance Essentials Financial Terms and Concepts Projects as Financial Investments Overview of 'Two Worlds' Project as Investments Accounting and Finance World: Standards, Principles and Practices Accounting and Finance Standards and Principles Accounting and Finance Practices Capital Budgeting Corporate Budgeting Accounting and Finance World: Economic Project Selection Methods Economic Project Selection Methods Economic Project Selection and the Business Case Project Management World Project Management and Financial Controls Project Management and Work Performance Data Project Management and Earned Value Management Project Management and Work Performance Reporting
The Performance Edge open program begins each month as a small group class of managers and leaders focussed on improving their own and their team's productivity.
Practical Sales Skills 1 Day Workshop in Leeds
Practical Sales Skills 1 Day Workshop in Darlington
Overview This course will help you manage project risk effectively by identifying, analyzing, and communicating inevitable changes to project scope and objectives. You will understand and practice the elements needed to measure and report on project scope, schedule, and cost performance. You will be equipped with the tools to manage change in the least disruptive way possible for your team and other project stakeholders.
Overview This course will provide participants with an introduction to the key elements to consider in analysing financial institutions for example factors used in the assessment of the operational performance of financial institutions including but not limited to solvency, liquidity, earnings, management and systems/controls. The program will primarily cover banking institutions but there will also be some sessions devoted to risks associated with insurance companies.
Earned Value Management: On-Demand Earned Value Management (EVM) incorporates a set of proven practices appropriate for project or program management methodologies. These include integration of program scope, schedule, and cost objectives, establishment of a baseline plan for accomplishment of program objectives and use of earned value techniques for performance measurement during the execution of a program. EVM provides a solid platform for risk identification, corrective actions, and management re-planning as may be required over the life of a project or program. The course emphasis is on the latest EVM principles and concepts in accordance with changes and guidelines for Earned Value Management in PMI's A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK® Guide) and The Practice Standard for Earned Value Management. What You Will Learn You'll learn how to: Develop a project baseline, using an effective WBS Record actual project performance Calculate EVM measures Evaluate project performance based on EVM measures Respond to project variances Integrate EVM and risk management Determine how EVM will add value to your organization Develop an EVM implementation plan for your organization Getting Started Foundation Concepts Creating a Work Breakdown Structure Building a Project Baseline Recording Actuals EVM Performance Measures EVM and Risk Management Responding to Variances Reporting Project Performance Implementing an EVMS Summary and Next Steps