Using Competencies Successfully



Using Competencies Successfully

Communicating the Way We Want People to Work

By Hugh Murray

Leader’s Guide to:

Using Competencies Successfully

Communicating the Way We Want People to Work

Produced and published by:

Newmarket Learning

A Division of Telephone Doctor, Inc.

30 Hollenberg Court

St. Louis, MO 63044

Under exclusive license issued by Scott Bradbury, LTD, UK.

Not to be distributed outside of North America.

Telephone: 314.291.1012

Fax: 314.291.3710

Web:

©Telephone Doctor, Inc.

Contents

Copyright 4

How to Use This Program 5

Flexible Use of the DVD 7

Introduction to DVD 8

The Story 9

Model Training Session 11

Using Competencies Successfully 17

Analysis of Individual Scenes 23

Programs From Newmarket Learning 25

Instructor Notes 26

Copyright

What You Can Do

The copyright in both this User’s Guide and the accompanying DVD belongs to Telephone Doctor, Inc. If you have not purchased the DVD, you may not use the material in this guide in any way other than to assist you in making a decision to buy the DVD. Buying the DVD gives you certain rights to use the material as follows:

You may use the DVD in your own organization for training your own employees.

You may photocopy or otherwise reproduce all or part of this User’s Guide for use in your own organization, provided you have purchased the DVD and accompanied material. Any reproduction of this User’s Guide, or part thereof, must carry the notice: ©Telephone Doctor, Inc.

You may edit and reproduce the PowerPoint® presentation for use in your own organization. Any reproduction of the PowerPoint® presentation must acknowledge Telephone Doctor, Inc. as the source.

You may host and deliver the DVD and this User’s Guide on your internal intranet provided that you purchase an additional license to do so from Telephone Doctor, Inc. and provided that you observe the terms of that license. A separate signed license agreement is necessary.

What You Cannot Do

You may not copy the DVD, not even as a backup. We understand that DVDs can become unplayable due to scratching or other damage and so we will replace the DVD if it becomes unplayable within ten years of purchase, even if this is the result of carelessness or accident. We will not charge for this but you need to return the unplayable DVD in order for us to replace it.

Acceptance of Terms

By using the DVD or the material in this User’s Guide, you are deemed to have accepted these terms. If you do not accept them, you should return the DVD without using it for a refund.

How to Use This Program

What is in the Program

1. DVD – Using Competencies Successfully

2. Leader’s Guide

3. PowerPoint® Presentation

Who the Program is For

All staff members in organizations that use competency frameworks.

What the Program Does

Helps people to understand what competency frameworks are and how to use them successfully.

Details learning objectives which can be found in the model training session on Page 11.

How This Program Achieves Its Objectives

Individual Self-study

You can give the DVD to an individual to view either on a computer or a DVD player. This will give the individual grounding in the subject or a reminder of the important principles.

In an Existing Training Program

The program has been designed as a resource for you to use as you choose in your existing programs. You can use the DVD as a training program in the conventional sense. Or you can use the different scenes as the basis for exercises and discussions. And you are welcome to use the PowerPoint® presentation and the component parts of this manual in any way that suits you.

How This Program Achieves Its Objectives (Cont.)

A Complete Training Program

This Leader’s Guide contains trainer’s notes for a complete training session lasting from half a day to a full day. If you have less time than this, you can use the DVD and the contents of this guide to devise a session of any length between twenty minutes and a full day.

What if the DVD Won’t Play?

If a DVD turns out to be defective and/or damaged, we will replace it immediately. However, there are a number of reasons why a DVD may not play other than a defective disc.

The easiest way to tell if a problem is caused by our DVD or your equipment is to take it home and try it in your television’s DVD player. Alternatively, bring in a feature film from home and try it in your office equipment. If the DVD plays satisfactorily at home, then one of the following could be the problem:

Your office computer has a CD drive rather than a DVD drive.

Your office computer has no sound card or no speakers.

Your office computer does not have the correct software (called a CODEC) to play DVDs.

Flexible Use of the DVD

You can use the DVD in creative ways of your own without rigidly following the guidance in this guide. This section is intended to give you some ideas as to how to do this.

The Menu

The first thing you will see when you play the DVD is the menu. You can get to the menu at any time by using the menu button on your remote control or DVD player. If you are playing the DVD on a computer, you will be using DVD player software such as Windows Media Player. Whichever software you use will have a button in it somewhere which takes you back to the menu.

The menu has the following options:

• Play Movie

• Chris’s Appraisal

• Paige’s Promotion

• Author’s Notes

The options:

• Chris’s Appraisal

• Paige’s Promotion

Each takes you to sub menus to allow you to select individual scenes.

This menu structure is intended to give you flexibility in the way you use the DVD. For example, you can use the individual scenes to illustrate points or to provoke discussion on particular issues.

The rest of this guide will help you use the DVD to the full extent.

Introduction to the DVD

The story takes place in a modern office that is deliberately meant to be general rather than any particular industry or sector. The characters in the story are:

Paige A professional, committed and enthusiastic lady. Works hard. Anxious to move up. Loyal to the company.

Chris Hard working, self-confident but slightly cynical about the company when compared with Paige’s uncritical loyalty, but still basically a company man.

James Senior manager. Articulate and friendly, willing to help others learn and navigate the organization’s culture.

Judi Solid, professional manager happy at her level in the organization. Supportive of younger colleagues coming up and willing to help where possible.

David No nonsense manager.

Tracy Middle manager. Willing to advise younger managers and to share expertise generously.

Haq Recently promoted mid-level manager.

Eddie Experienced manager. Serious but approachable.

The Story

Chris and Paige meet on the stairs at a busy time – two days before the end of the quarter. Chris is preoccupied with his appraisal, due later that day, and Paige is anxious about her promotion interview, also later that day.

We jump to a few days later. Paige is sitting in the rest area of the organization’s cafeteria. Chris joins her and realizes immediately that something is wrong. Paige has just heard that she has been turned down for the promotion. She suggests half-seriously that Chris might try for the job. Chris says there is not much chance of that – not after his recent appraisal.

James, a senior manager, joins them and notices that they both seem despondent. Chris and Paige tell him the reason and Chris describes how his appraisal went wrong. We see Judi, his boss, trying to draw out some concrete, specific examples of when Chris has demonstrated a particular competency. Chris replies in general terms and seems unable, or unwilling, to give specific examples.

Back in the cafeteria, James asks Chris if he understands the importance of competencies. It is obvious that Chris regards them as unnecessary bureaucracy, but James explains that they are a crucially important part of the way the organization manages people. Competencies, James explains, are the way the organization communicates the way it needs people to behave. They deal with the how rather than the what of work.

Paige cuts in to say that she is fully committed to the competency framework, but that her promotion interview still went wrong. We see part of her interview with David and Tracy who ask her for evidence of her decision-making competency. She replies with what seems like good evidence, but David and Tracy are clearly not impressed.

Back in the cafeteria, James points out that Paige was only providing evidence of competence at her current level. David and Tracy will be looking for evidence of competence at a higher level. Paige argues that she cannot demonstrate this because her existing job does not provide the opportunities to demonstrate higher-level competencies. James accepts this, but argues that Paige needs to find ways around this if she is to get promoted.

The discussion ends as all three realize that they need to get back to work.

We jump to the following day. We see Judi, Chris’s boss, talking to him in the hallway. She says that James has reported the gist of the conversation from the previous day and that she thinks it would be helpful if she and Chris could discuss the issue of appraisal and competencies and why she had marked him down.

At the same time, we see Paige approach Tracy at the copier to ask if she would be willing to provide feedback on the unsuccessful promotion interview. Tracy agrees.

We then see the two discussions taking place in parallel. In the case of Chris and Judi, Chris comes to realize that he must demonstrate all the competencies that his job calls for – not just those that he considers necessary. He realizes that he must actively seek out opportunities to demonstrate competencies that he prefers to avoid and, if necessary, he must develop his abilities in order to do this.

In the case of Tracy and Paige, Tracy helps Paige to see that she must actively create opportunities to demonstrate the competencies called for by the higher-level job if she is ever to be successful in getting a promotion. Paige and Tracy devise a plan whereby Paige will actively involve her staff more in decisions in order to demonstrate the higher level competency and to collect evidence that she does so.

The story now jumps forward a whole year. Paige has applied for another promotion and Chris is having his first appraisal with Eddie, who has taken over from Judi as his boss. Paige is interviewed for her promotion by Haq.

We see these two meetings in parallel. Chris now has excellent evidence that he demonstrates the competencies that his job requires and Paige has excellent evidence that she demonstrates the competencies needed to perform at a higher level.

Finally, we see Paige and Chris, in a cheerful mood, in the cafeteria again. James joins them and they tell him about their respective successes. They summarize what they have learned during the previous year.

Model Training Session

Learning Objectives

After this session, participants will be able to:

1. Explain what competencies are and why we use them.

2. Devise a plan to achieve high scores in appraisal.

3. Devise a plan to achieve success in promotion interviews.

4. Devise a personal development plan using their competency framework.

Preparation and Facilities

1. Read the guide on page 17.

2. Review the training session.

3. Review the PowerPoint® presentation.

4. Review your organization’s competency framework.

5. Prepare copies of your organization’s competency framework.

You will need a meeting room with a digital projector and computer for the PowerPoint®, a DVD player and monitor for the DVD and a flipchart for capturing ideas. The room should allow for participants to work in small groups as well as in a single large group.

The training session makes use of your organization’s competency framework. Make sure that you are familiar with this and bring enough copies to the session for each participant to have one. If the framework is very large, you may need to select relevant parts of it depending on the needs of your participants.

Running the Session

The session has been designed to be easy to run with the participants doing much of the work themselves. The elements of the session are:

Trainer Input

Trainer input sessions requires you as a trainer to explain key ideas using the PowerPoint® presentation. You should prepare these using your own notes and your own form of words based on the content we provide. You will find the guide on page 17 very helpful in preparing your input.

DVD Input

These sections require you to show parts of the DVD. The two parts that are used in this training session are Play Movie and the Author’s Notes. You should ensure that you know how to use both of these from the main menu.

Team Discussion

These sections require you to divide the main group into small groups or teams. The ideal size for these teams is four people. Three and five are workable, but do not go outside that range. If you have five or fewer people in your session, do not break them up, but ask them to do the group exercises as a single group. If you have six people, then use two teams of three. For seven people create one team of three and one of four and for all larger numbers use teams of three and four.

You may choose to retain the same teams throughout or to mix people up.

Team discussions are an essential part of the session. They are much more effective than asking questions of the whole group.

Pairs Exercise

These sections require you to divide your group into pairs to work together. If you have an odd number of participants, you may choose between pairing with someone yourself or having someone join a pair as an observer.

Segment 1 – Introduction and Learning Objectives

Trainer Input

Welcome participants and cover housekeeping and health and safety matters according to your normal practice.

Explain that the session will be about Using Competencies Successfully and will cover the learning objectives on slide 2.

Segment 2 – What are Competencies?

Group Discussion

Divide the group into teams. Pose the question on slide 3. Allow ten minutes for the teams to discuss this question and then invite a spokesperson from each sub-group to explain their conclusions to the group. Use the flipchart to capture the key ideas.

DVD Input

Play the Author’s Notes option from the DVD menu until the caption Using competencies in appraisal appears. Stop the DVD as soon as this caption appears and return to the main menu.

Group Discussion

Divide the group into teams. Hand out copies of your organization’s competency framework to the teams.

Pose the question on slide 5.

Allow ten minutes for the teams to discuss this question and then invite a spokesperson from each sub-group to explain their conclusions to the whole group. Use the flipchart to capture the key ideas. You are looking for ideas such as:

• Uses active words such as “does” rather than “knows” or “can”

• Consists of things we can actually see people do

• Is clustered into similar items

• Is expressed in levels

Trainer Input

Emphasize that competency frameworks focus on how people behave rather than what they are capable of. Use slide 6, along with the notes from this guide on page 17, to explain how a competency framework is built up.

Segment 3 – An Overview

Overview

Show program characters on slide 7 and the overview of the story on slide 8.

DVD Input

Select Play Movie from the DVD menu.

Take a Fifteen Minute Break

Discourage people from checking their e-mail and otherwise becoming involved in their work during this break. People need to unwind and relax before going on.

Segment 4 – Succeeding in Appraisal

DVD Input

Return to the Main Menu, click on Author’s Notes and fast-forward to the caption Using competencies in appraisal. Play this section. Pause the DVD when you get to the caption Using competencies to get promoted.

Group Exercise

Divide the group into teams. Pose the question on slide 9.

Allow ten minutes for this discussion and then invite a spokesperson from each sub-group to explain their conclusions to the whole group. Use the flipchart to capture key ideas.

Trainer Input

Emphasize that managers will be looking for evidence. They will be looking for specific examples that demonstrate clearly that you actually behave in the way the competency framework calls for – not that you know how to do it, but that you actually do it.

Explain that managers are likely to have been trained in the way described on page 19 of this guide and use slide 10 to illustrate this.

Group Exercise

Divide the group into teams. Pose the question on slide 11.

Allow ten minutes for the teams to discuss this question and then invite a spokesperson from each sub-group to explain their conclusions to the whole group. Use the flipchart to capture the key ideas.

Trainer Input

Use the notes on pages 19 - 22 of this guide to present the key ideas about preparing for a competency-based appraisal. Use slides 12 - 15 to illustrate your points.

Pairs Exercise

Divide your group into pairs. The purpose of this exercise is to practice identifying areas of weakness – areas where you do not currently have good evidence that you behave according to the competency framework.

Use slide 16 to explain how to conduct the exercise.

Explain that the person asking the question should probe to clarify the answer and make sure that he or she is convinced that the other person really does display the behavior called for. If the other person really cannot produce convincing evidence, he or she should say so and note that behavior as a development opportunity.

Pairs Exercise

Use slide 17 to explain what the pairs should do next.

Pairs Exercise

Use slide 18 to explain what the pairs should do next.

Segment 5 – Succeeding in Promotion

DVD Input

Resume the Author’s Notes. Show the section captioned Using competencies to get promoted. Pause the DVD when you get to the caption Using competencies for self-development. (NOTE: The author refers to a character named Jenny. In the US version, that character is named Paige.)

Group Exercise

Divide your group into teams. Pose the questions on slide 19.

Allow ten minutes for this discussion and then invite a spokesperson from each sub-group to explain their conclusions to the whole group. Use the flipchart to capture key ideas.

Trainer Input

Use the notes on page 21 to explain how to prepare for promotion. Use slide 20 to illustrate your points.

Segment 6 – Self-development

DVD Input

Resume the Author’s Notes and show the section captioned Using competencies for self-development.

Trainer Input

Use the notes on page 22 to explain how to use competencies as the basis for self-development.

Group Exercise

Divide your group into teams. Pose the questions on slide 21.

Allow ten minutes for this discussion and then invite a spokesperson from each team to explain their conclusions to the whole group. Use the flipchart to capture key ideas.

Summary and Close

Use slides 22 – 23 to remind people of the key areas of the session.

Hand out copies of the notes on pages 17 - 22.

Close the session in your normal way.

Slide 23 is a summary slide:

• Use them in appraisal or performance reviews

• Use them to gain promotion

• Use them for self-development

Using Competencies Successfully

What Competencies Are

Competencies set the standards for the way people do things in an organization. In the same way that budgets and targets govern the financial state of the organization, competencies govern the standards of behavior at work.

“Standards of behavior at work” is another way of saying, “the way we do things around here.” When an organization sets up a competency framework it is saying, “These are the ways that we expect people in this organization to do things.” It is setting the culture, the tone and the style for the organization.

A competency framework is just a written description of all the competencies (i.e., all the standards of behavior) an organization wishes people to display.

Organizations will have a culture whether there is a competency framework or not but the framework makes it explicit. Without it, different managers and different teams may behave in different ways and customers, suppliers and other stakeholders will have varying experiences of the organization. In young or small companies the culture is very often set by the leader and no formal framework is necessary. As companies grow and mature, the original leadership culture tends to dissipate and a competency framework can restore that sense of coherence of having a particular way of doing things.

How Competencies are Arrived at

The organization looks at the way it does things and identifies behaviors that it wants to encourage. These are the behaviors that it believes will lead to success. Once it has identified those behaviors – those ways of doing things – that it believes will lead to success and that it wants to encourage, it sets them down formally in a competency framework.

There are various techniques that an organization can use to help identify the behaviors that it wants to encourage but these are beyond the scope of this guide. In writing it, we have assumed that your organization has done this work and has a competency framework in place.

What a Framework Looks Like

Observable Behavior

The building blocks of a competency framework are observable behaviors. They are something that we can actually see, hear or experience. They are expressed in terms of how someone actually behaves and not in terms of their ability or knowledge. So, for example, “Takes prompt corrective action in a crisis” is an observable behavior – we can see whether or not someone does it. In contrast, “knows what to do in a crisis” is not something we can actually observe. It may be true, but it does not tell us anything about how a person will behave in a given situation.

Competency

A competency is built up from these building blocks. It may consist of one observable behavior or several. So, for example, you might have a competency called “Communicates Effectively” and this might consist of related observable behaviors such as: “Writes clearly and succinctly;” “Presents to groups convincingly;” and “Explains ideas clearly and persuasively.”

Clusters

Very often, the competencies are grouped together into related “clusters.” There might be a “leadership cluster” that includes competencies such as: “Communicates Effectively,” “Gives a clear sense of direction to the team,” “Provides feedback and support,” “Motivates people,” etc. Each competency in this cluster would be expressed in terms of observable behaviors.

Levels

It is very common for an organization to describe its competencies using levels. “Communicates Effectively” might be expressed as levels one, two and three. Each level has its own observable behaviors. So the lowest level might include: “Explains ideas clearly to colleagues and team leaders,” “Writes clear and appropriate e-mails,” etc. while the highest level might include: “Presents complex arguments clearly and persuasively to large groups using appropriate audio-visual support,” “Asks appropriate and effective questions to establish the facts of a situation” and “Writes effective reports that communicate complex issues in an easily accessible way.”

Job Profiles

Once a competency framework has been established, job profiles can be created using combinations of competencies and levels. A particular job might require “Communicates Effectively” at level three but only require “Motivates People” at level one. It is not necessary for a senior job to require only high-level competencies and it is quite possible for a junior job to require one or more high-level competencies.

Using Competencies Successfully

Three ways to use competencies successfully are:

In Appraisal or Performance Reviews

We’ll use the word appraisal, but we are talking about any situation in which your performance is reviewed at work.

Using competencies effectively in appraisal is more than just presentation. It requires you to approach your appraisal in an active way and to begin planning for your appraisal as soon as the previous one is completed. You need to keep in mind that your manager will be looking for evidence that you display the behaviors called for in the competency framework for your job profile. So your starting point should be the framework. Begin by looking at each of the behavior indicators that you know your manager will be looking for. Ask yourself, in each case, whether you could produce convincing evidence, using real and specific examples, which would convince your manager that you display the desired behaviors to the standard required.

The chances are that you will find a mixed picture. There will be some behaviors that you display frequently and for which you have ample evidence. Take note of these along with specific examples and think about how you would present your evidence. You might like to talk to your manager about how he or she likes to hear evidence presented. Many managers will have been trained using a model such as STAR or PROBE. STAR stands for:

Situation

Task

Action

Result

And PROBE stands for:

Position

Responsibility

Objectives

Behavior

Effect

Both of these reminders, and others, follow the same basic principle, which is:

Tell me the background of the example you are about to give.

Tell me what you actually did.

Tell me what happened as a result.

The manager is likely to ask questions as you go along, such as:

How, exactly, did you do that?

Why did you do it that way?

How did other people react to what you did?

And you should be sure that you are able to answer such questions.

As well as the behaviors that you are confident that you can demonstrate, there will be behaviors where you are not so sure. Either you do not regularly display them, or your evidence is weak. These are the behaviors that you need to concentrate on if you are going to have a successful appraisal. Identify these weak areas and make a written note of them.

Now you need to prepare a plan – one that will ensure that you demonstrate all the desired behaviors and that you have convincing evidence of this in good time for your next appraisal.

This plan will address two situations. One is where you have the necessary skills and knowledge to demonstrate a behavior but, for whatever reason, you do not do so. The other is where you do not demonstrate a particular behavior because you do not know how to do so. Let’s take the first situation first.

You need to actively look for opportunities to demonstrate the weaker behaviors. Sometimes, you will find that you are avoiding particular behaviors because they don’t come naturally to you or because you feel uncomfortable displaying them. This is entirely natural. The organization will have identified a range of desirable behaviors and different people in the organization will find different behaviors come more or less naturally. Where you find that you are avoiding a particular behavior, give yourself a written target. This will help ensure that you actively seek out opportunities to demonstrate the behavior. In the film, for example, Chris gave himself the target of giving each of his staff at least one piece of feedback per week.

The other thing that you may need to do is actively create opportunities to demonstrate the desired behaviors. A common reason why people may not have evidence of a particular behavior is because the opportunity to demonstrate the behavior may not be there on a day-to-day basis. In the program, Paige found it difficult to produce evidence that she involved people in decisions because she knew so much more about the work than any of her team. She had to look for ways to create opportunities to demonstrate the behavior.

Creating opportunities may not be easy – there will always be short-term pressures that take precedence. But you must make the time to think about how you will do it or you will not be able to get the top possible reviews in your appraisals and this will ultimately affect your career progress.

Now we come to those behaviors that you do not demonstrate convincingly because you do not have the necessary skills or knowledge. Here you have two challenges. You still need to identify opportunities to display the desired behaviors, but you also need to look for learning opportunities to help you develop your approach so that you can demonstrate them more effectively. You might find that you need to try out a particular behavior in order to help you identify the aspects of it that you find difficult.

Once you have clearly identified the aspects of a particular behavior that you are currently unable to display, discuss them with your manager and develop a learning plan to help you master the parts that you find difficult. This may involve discussing the approach you should take with colleagues and managers, it may involve using learning resources such as books and DVDs or it may involve a formal course.

To be successful in appraisal, you need to:

• Demonstrate those behaviors that your job calls for

• Prepare specific and convincing evidence to demonstrate that you do this

• Look for opportunities to demonstrate behaviors where your evidence is weak

• Develop yourself to demonstrate behaviors that you currently find difficult

Finally, remember to make a note of specific examples to use in the interview.

To Get Promoted

The most common mistake that people make is to assume that being good at their present job qualifies them for promotion. As James points out in the program, if this were true we would all be promoted until we found the first job that we could not do.

Interviewers will be looking for evidence that you can do the job that they are trying to fill. This means that they will be looking for evidence that you display the competencies required by that job and not necessarily those required by your present job.

Your starting point, in looking for promotion, should be the competencies required by the job that you are considering. But if you leave it until you are about to apply, the chances are that you will not have enough time to change your behavior so as to demonstrate the desired behavior. You should be developing yourself for promotion the whole time, if promotion is what you want.

So look at the higher-level competencies in the framework. Identify those behaviors that you will need to demonstrate in order to convince an interviewer that you can handle a more senior post. The chances are that these competencies will involve a mixture of behaviors that you do not demonstrate at present and those that you do demonstrate, but not at the level required. Be particularly careful with those behaviors that you do display now, but at a lower level than needed. Look at the differences in wording between the descriptions of behavior at your level and the higher-level. Make sure that you understand exactly what the higher level calls for.

Identify and write down the differences between the way you behave now and the ideal behaviors for a more senior position. You may find it helpful to discuss these differences with your manager or with a competent person in HR. These differences will form the basis of a personal development plan.

Next, you need to plan to modify or develop your behavior so that you will be able to convince an interviewer with clear, compelling evidence that you can do the job that he or she is trying to fill. Just as with appraisal, this means actively looking for opportunities to display the higher-level behaviors and it means creating opportunities if they do not exist currently. And just as in appraisal, it means identifying those behaviors that you currently find difficult, or which you avoid, and creating a plan to develop yourself so that you do display those behaviors effectively in the future.

For Self-development

The third area in which you can use competencies successfully is in self-development. Actually, much of what we have said so far applies to self-development. Everything we said about getting a promotion involves developing yourself and your behaviors so that you could convince an interviewer that you were ready to do the job that he or she wanted to fill.

But there is also a more general approach to self-development where you can use competencies successfully.

The competency framework should be a key input to your self-development plan. It tells you how the organization expects its people to approach their work. You should constantly seek to measure your own behaviors against it and you should seek feedback from others in terms of how your behaviors stack up against those in the framework. You should be constantly looking for opportunities to develop your behaviors to bring them in line with what is desired. And when you are satisfied that you can demonstrate that you display all the behaviors needed at your level, with convincing and compelling evidence, start to develop your higher-level behaviors – those that the competency framework tells you will be needed later on as your career develops.

Analysis of Individual Scenes

Chris’s Unsuccessful Appraisal

Select this scene by choosing Chris’s Appraisal from the menu and then choosing Chris’s Unsuccessful Appraisal from the sub-menu.

Judi takes one of the behavioral indicators from the competency framework and asks Chris for an example of when he has displayed this behavior.

Chris is clearly having problems. Despite Judi’s best efforts, he is unable to come up with any specific examples.

This is a typical situation in an appraisal. The appraisee talks in general terms about a subject without giving any useful examples from which the appraiser can make a judgment.

We don’t know at this stage whether Chris has simply failed to prepare his evidence or whether he actually has a problem displaying this particular behavior.

As a trainer, you could ask your course participants to consider:

• What should Chris do if he realizes that he does not display the behavior required?

• What should he do if he is confident that he does regularly display the required behavior, but cannot think of an example in the heat of the moment?

Paige’s Unsuccessful Promotion Interview

Select this scene by choosing Paige’s Promotion from the menu and then choosing Paige’s Unsuccessful Promotion Interview from the sub-menu.

David begins in a very open way by telling Paige exactly what he and Tracy are looking for. Paige is well aware of the competency framework and has prepared her evidence carefully. The problem is that she has prepared evidence of her behavior at the level required of her present job.

• Can you think of any way that Paige could improve her chances at this stage?

• What should Paige have done to avoid this situation?

Chris’s Successful Appraisal

Select this scene by choosing Chris’s Appraisal from the menu and then choosing Chris’s Successful Appraisal from the sub-menu.

Chris has clearly studied the feedback competency carefully and understands that a critical behavior that it calls for is reaches agreement on required improvements when dealing with a performance problem.

We know from the earlier part of the film that he does not enjoy giving support and feedback and tends to avoid it. He has learned the importance of this behavior during the previous year and has sought out opportunities to practice the behavior by giving himself the target of giving each member of his team at least one piece of helpful feedback each week.

In addition to seeking out opportunities to demonstrate the appropriate behavior, he has undertaken self-development by discussing the subject of feedback with Judi and his colleagues and by taking the feedback module in the company library. He approaches this latest appraisal with good evidence that he displays the necessary competency. As the scene develops, it becomes clear that Eddie, his boss, is able to obtain good evidence of Chris’s competence in giving feedback.

Paige’s Successful Promotion Interview

Select this scene by choosing Paige’s Promotion from the menu and then choosing Paige’s Successful Promotion Interview from the sub-menu.

Haq begins by openly stating that he is looking for someone who gives a clear sense of direction. Paige is ready with her evidence. She has studied the job profile for the target job and she is clearly well aware of the competency requirements. What is more, she has clearly recognized the differences between the competency requirement of her current job and those required for promotion. She could easily have implemented the new reporting rules without any recourse to her team simply by using her own knowledge and experience to work out what needed to be done. This would have been a perfectly satisfactory outcome at her current level. However, it would not have told Haq anything about whether Paige could operate at a higher level.

Paige has recognized this and has modified her way of working in order to demonstrate higher-level competencies than her job requires. She has set about involving and motivating her team in the full knowledge that the higher-level job requires that managers gain commitment to change before implementing it. As a result, she is able to give Haq convincing evidence of her competence at the higher-level. And, as we see later, this is sufficient to ensure that she gets the job.

Programs From Newmarket Learning

A Question of Evidence: The Behavior-Based Interview

If you like our program on Using Competencies Successfully you will like A Question of Evidence. This program focuses on using competencies for successful recruitment and selection.

Aim for Development: Setting Personal Development Objectives That Work

If you need to help people devise personal development plans, you will love this program. It shows people how to combine their personal aspirations with their organization’s needs to devise development objectives to which they will be really committed.

Delivering Feedback: Fixing Performance Problems

This popular program deals with the thorny issue of how to tell people that they are not doing as well as they should, but in such a way that you motivate them to improve, rather than generate conflict.

Coaching: The Power of Questions

Widely regarded as one of the best programs on coaching yet made, this complete training kit demonstrates to your people what they actually need to do to coach effectively – not just a theoretical model, but sound, practical advice on how to get the best out of people.

Gaining Commitment: Setting Performance Objectives That Work

Performance objectives can be as specific, agreed upon and as time-bounded as you like, but unless they are actually achieved, they’re useless. This course provides new insights into getting team members emotionally and intellectually engaged in achieving their objectives. The manager plays a key role in engaging their people so that they want to achieve their agreed objectives. Managers also need to be able to explain how what they are doing fits into the overall corporate goals.

Using Competencies Successfully: Communicating the Way We Want People to Work

Most organizations have a competency framework in place.  But not everyone is sure about the purpose.  This powerful new training DVD is applicable for both managers as well as staff.  Using Competencies Successfully explains what competencies are, why organizations put them in place and how they will impact promotions, appraisals and self-development efforts.

Instructor Notes

Instructor Notes

Instructor Notes

................
................

In order to avoid copyright disputes, this page is only a partial summary.

Google Online Preview   Download