Title: Leadership in program management
1Leadership in program management
2- Solid leadership is the foundation to building an
effective team and delivering an effective program
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4Its about you
- Are you a leader?
- Leadership is a skill, what are you doing to
improve? - What do you feel are the best traits of an
effective leader?
5Keys to successful program leadership
- Understanding your role as leader
- Understanding the work
- Build a team, co-accountability
- Developing key staff
- Create an enjoyable work environment
- Supportive personnel practices
- Tracking progress at the program level
- Emphasis on quality and customer satisfaction
- Planning, planning, planning
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6Leadership
- leadership n
- 1. the office or position of the head of a
political party or other body of people - 2. the ability to guide, direct, or influence
people - 3. guidance or direction
- 4. a group of leaders (takes a singular or plural
verb)
7Leading a team
- Successful leadership is maximizing the talent
and resources available within the team to meet
common goals that align with the teams values and
vision.
8Building a Team
- Part of being a team is being able to trust and
rely on your teammates. Once that trust is broken
you cease to be a team, each team member walking
through the motions of their own responsibility
without taking advantage of the efforts and
talents of the others.
9Leadership responsibilities
- Guidance
- Mentoring
- Clear expectations
- Roles and responsibilities of the team and
individual - Planning
- Long term
- Short term
- Manpower planning
- Implementation
- Appropriate delegation
- Creating shared vision
- Evaluation
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10Leadership styles
- Autocratic leadership dictator
- Bureaucratic leadership by the book
- Charismatic leadership follow me
- Democratic leadership participative
- Laissez-faire leadership let it be
- People-oriented leadership relations-oriented
- Servant leadership supports everyone
- Task-oriented leadership get it done
- Transactional leadership carrot and stick
- Transformational leadership inspiring,
communicative
11- http//www.mindtools.com/pages/article/newLDR_84.h
tm
12Finding your leadership style
- Acknowledging your current primary leadership
style and working on other styles will help you
develop a situational leadership style.
13Situational Leadership
- There is no one right way to lead or manage that
suits all situations. - To choose the most effective approach for you,
you must consider - The skill levels and experience of the members of
your team - The work involved (routine or new and creative)
- The organizational environment (stable or
radically changing, conservative or adventurous). - Your own preferred or natural style.
14Your style
- A good leader will find him or herself switching
instinctively between styles according to the
people and work they are dealing with. This is
often referred to as situational leadership
15Embracing your role as leader
- Establish order and routine on the job so all
workers know where they stand and what is
expected of them. The discipline makes the staff
feel theyre in capable hands. - Always keep the door open to your staff members,
and be generous with information that affects
them. Well-informed employees are more eager and
better prepared to participate.
16Shared vision
- Sustainable organizations rely on leadership that
can create systems and lines of communication
that allow for the continual adjustment of course
to achieve established goals created by the the
team out of shared vision. -
17Shared vision is created through conversation
- conversation n
- an informal talk with somebody, especially about
opinions, ideas, feelings, or everyday matters - the activity of talking to somebody informally
- an informal talk about something involving
representatives from various interested groups - 4. an interaction with a computer carried on in
real time
18Role responsibilitydefined
- role or rôle n
- 1. an individual part in a play, movie, opera, or
other performance played by an actor, singer, or
other performer - 2. the usual or expected function of somebody or
something, or the part somebody or something
plays in a particular action or event - 3. the part played by somebody in a given social
context, with any characteristic or expected
pattern of behavior that it entails
19Understanding the work
- Get into the field
- Observe staff in action
- Have contact with clients
- Review projects with staff
- Knowledge of program policies and specification
- Be involved in your state network
20Developing key staff
- Emphasis on learning
- Meaningful evaluation
- Involve them in planning
- Provide them with the information they need to
make decisions - Give them the authority equal to the
responsibility - Utilize and further develop their strengths
- Support them in areas where they need improvement
- Get to know them, find out what gets them excited
21Key
- Your No.2 is your most important hire. Pick one
who complements your management style, shows
loyalty without being a yes-man, and has a talent
for working with others. - Shackleton
John Davies Building Performance Center, Director
22Create an enjoyable work environment
- Surround yourself with cheerful, optimistic
people. They will reward you with the loyalty
and camaraderie vital for success. - Do your part to help create an upbeat environment
at work. A positive and cheerful workplace is
important to productivity.
23Personnel management
- Good hiring practices (hire based on values and
then experience) - Compensation
- Evaluation
- Professional development
- Mentoring
- Praise
- Creating the culture
24Good Read
25Shackletons Wayon hiring
- Be a creative, unconventional interviewer if you
seek creative, unconventional people. Go deeper
than job experience and expertise. Ask questions
that reveal a candidates personality, values,
and perspective on work and life. - Hire those who share your vision. Someone who
clashes with your personality or the corporate
culture will hinder your work.
26Supporting staff
- To help your staff do top-notch work, give them
the best equipment and training you can afford.
Working with outdated, unreliable tools creates
an unnecessary burden. - Always keep the door open to your staff members,
and be generous with information that affects
them. Well-informed employees are more eager and
better prepared to participate. - Shackleton
27Implementationthe responsibility of program
leadership
- The single biggest barrier to program development
or its success is the lack of effective
implementation.
28Implement - defined
- to put something into effect or action
- 2. to provide or equip somebody with the tools or
other means to do something (formal)
29Tracking progress at the program level
- Make roles and responsibilities clear to all team
members. - Provide staff with reports that make sense to
them - Meet with staff and review progress
- Dont depend on grant/fund accounting to run your
business - Take the time to analyze the data
30Emphasis on quality
- Make your standards clear
- Identify quality when you see it, praise it
- Perform in-progress inspections
- Involve staff in resolving quality issues
- Create feedback loops
31Solutions through systems thinking
- Document individual roles and responsibilities
- Consolidate contacts with clients (project
coordinators and lead technicians) - Develop a timeline for expected project closure
- Establish annual and monthly production goals,
review monthly - Meet monthly and review every open project as a
group - Track program expenses at the program level,
real time accounting
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