Thanks Maru for sharing a nice tip today.
I add further to your tip:
Enterpreneuership skill is not something special,but can be nurtured by all through training.
In fact every human being born have enterpreneural ability within to some level, by way of risk taking,speech,dressing up and so on.
But in present situation,the risk taking ability is considered to be the main trait of an entrepreneur.
If employees work with the entrepreneural ability,they will be a big asset to the organisation.
Regards
AVS

From India, Madras
HR Tip of the Day: Retaining the Best Employees-Even when downsizing : Think creatively about how to maintain the retention and motivation of key members of your organization—if you do not put retention strategies in place now you may see many talented employees exiting your organization when the economic upturn inevitably comes
From India, Madras
HR Tip of the Day: Retaining the Best Employees-Even when downsizing : Think creatively about how to maintain the retention and motivation of key members of your organization—if you do not put retention strategies in place now you may see many talented employees exiting your organization when the economic upturn inevitably comes.
From India, Madras
HR Tip of the Day: Appraise your staff regularly: An effective appraisal system should allow for realistic, but challenging objectives. There should also be interim reviews to ensure objectives have not changed and to give an opportunity to identify training and development. Consider who is best placed to carry out the reviews - in some cases it may be more appropriate to use a middle manager.
From India, Madras
Dear Bharathi
Always one should not believe the interim manager and appraise the staff. Sometimes top level managers must directly involve themselves and appraise their working style and productivity through other available sources, so that there should not be any wrong or incorrect appraisal towards the staff concerned.
Thanks for sharing such useful tips and keep on sharing Bharathi

From India, Kumbakonam
HR Tip of the Day: Selecting Candidates for your Leadership Development Program: When designing your Leadership Development Program be sure to select candidate with the potential to succeed and possesses the “right stuff”. This involves creating clear criteria to assess potential candidates for the program. Remember, some candidates may be “diamonds in the rough” right now, but with a little polishing even the roughest diamonds will sparkle!
From India, Madras
Dear Bharathi
Always the Leadership Development Programmes are fetching good results and bring change in the minds of the attendees and the impact of the programmes will have always positive results in the organisation.
Thanks for sharing such useful tips Bharathi

From India, Kumbakonam
HR Tip of the Day: Hiring Team Players : When hiring team members, be sure candidates can fulfill their team roles as well as technical requirements.The candidates can undergo training to make them into team players.
From India, Madras
I am pleased to share the below article which is very interesting.

May be it is long and it is worth to read.

Regards

AVS

__________________________________________________ ______

A Tale Of Team Building.

From time immemorial, stories have fascinated children and adults alike. Stories are an important part of education and are used as a medium of imparting moral values. It is now considered an effective tool for gaining employee loyalty and commitment in the business world.

A well-structured story successfully ingrains complex issues in the minds of employees. This is because stories are

Easy to remember: According to a research by Roger Schank, Director, Institute for Learning Sciences, Northwestern University the human mind takes in the story and compares it with the available information. The differences and similarities make it easier to understand and remember the stories

Credible: Another research states that stories are more acceptable than actual facts because they show the consequences of a situation

Motivating: The listener relates his experiences and values to those in the story and aligns them with organisational values.

Nike has understood and implemented this well. It believes that “the best way for a company to create a prosperous future is to make sure all of its employees understand the company’s past”.

Nelson Farris, Director, Corporate Education of Nike, reiterates their storytelling values. Says he, “Our stories are not about extraordinary business plans or financial manipulations. They’re about people getting things done”.

A story for the teams

Companies like FedEx and 3M hail the power of storytelling in building teams. They claim that storytelling helps the team to

Disseminate core values

Share vision, knowledge and successes

The art of storytelling and the process of teambuilding are similar in various aspects. Hence, the former enhances the effectiveness of the latter. Storytelling, as also teambuilding, needs extreme diligence, time and attention to develop. Like stories, teams too have a beginning and an end, characters, plots, emotions and most essentially, a purpose. Team members go out of their way, take up challenges and strive to overcome them successfully like the hero in the stories. Through stories, listeners learn the finer details of life and gain experience. Similarly, team members take with them the knowledge, wisdom and experience to new teams when they disband.

How the plot thickens

The practice of storytelling could be initiated during the development stages of the team. This effort could help the team progress by leaps and bounds.

Forming: In this stage, team members come together and identify each other’s skills, strengths and weaknesses. They narrate their experiences and career development plans. This phase helps them relate to each other in a better fashion and identify expertise that could help the team to perform well.

Storming: This is the most crucial stage. Team members start planning to achieve the set goals and, in the process, express their concerns and personal views. As a result, differences arise. At this juncture, it is important to give every member an opportunity to talk about his previous successes and failures in order to trigger off quality decision-making.

Norming: During this stage, the teams set certain principles that would help them achieve their goals. These principles become milestones in the team’s success stories in future.

Performing: All the team members work towards realising collective goals. Once obstacles are overcome and challenges faced, it’s time for them to recognise each other’s contribution and celebrate the team’s success. These small successes would further energise them to work towards bigger goals.

Adjourning: This is the last stage where the project is completed successfully. Teams dismantle after this stage. They take with them a sense of pride and many heroic tales of success. The members finally share their heroic moments before they disband to relive their experiences. This helps them use these success stories elsewhere, to make a difference.

These stages do not necessarily follow the order mentioned above. For instance, a team that is in the performing stage may have go back to the storming stage owing to the arrival of new team members. Such situations perfectly restate the previous rules and values set by the team.

Telling your story

Every employee can excel in the art of storytelling by implementing the following tips:

Avoid pretensions

Genuineness marks an effective storyteller. False pretensions would only distance the listener from the storyteller. Pretending while narrating stories might sidetrack authenticity of the stories.

Believe in brevity

In other words, “Keep It Short and Simple”. Long stories with complex facts lose their charm and fail to impact the listener. Therefore, if the story talks about employee commitment towards the organisation, the storyteller must plainly talk about how it was gained and not embellishes it with unnecessary facts.

Do not rely on props

The storyteller need not make a power point presentation to make a story effective. The listener’s imagination and comprehension can do the job perfectly.

Relate it to the situation

A story is best interpreted when it is related to the current situation. It must give some insight on the following course of action. An irrelevant story is a colossal waste of time.

It’s story time

Nike is the epitome of hard work, commitment and success. It reminds them of Bill Bowerman, a retired track and field coach and co founder of Nike, Steve Prefonatine, the deceased Olympic runner, and CEO Phil Knight. This is because Nike strongly believes in corporate storytelling, which it has used to its advantage.

Their employees take pride in their heritage because Nike has left no stone unturned in ensuring that all their employees are aware of their past. Each story has its own learning curve. When Nike talks of how coach Bowerman poured rubber in to the waffle iron for making better shoes they are not talking of how the famed waffle shoe was bornbut of the value of innovation.

Similarly stories depicting commitment and hard work are the essence of their corporate story telling programmes. They have helped Nike steer away from tough times to better times. There is tremendous learning from such and organisation that has a rich heritage to talk about.

The end of the fairy tale

Storytelling should not be the only mode of communication in organisations. Information that deals with facts and figures cannot be conveyed in a story form. The type of information must decide the mode of communication.

There is no individual who has got no stories to tell its only how effectively they tell the story that matters. Bill Capodagli, the Executive Vice President of Creative Technology and Research, Walt Disney Imagineering says, “I’ve never seen a great military, or political leader who was not a great storyteller. Telling stories is a core competency in business, although it’s one that we don’t pay attention to”.

Source: Manage Mentor

__________________________________________________ __________

From India, Madras
Dear Bharathi
There are two types of employees available in the market. The first category is they can work independently and whatever task you are allotting them, they will without any hurdles, accomplish the tasks allotted to them. The second category can work only in groups and in teams. These people can accomplish their task when the team is formed and delegated to them. We have to identify the group in micro level, so that the team players can achieve their goals. Our duty in this is to identify and segregate the work roles and responsibilities and assign them with independent work for the first category people and the task requires teamwork should be earmarked for the successful team who can work collectively and accomplish the task.
Thanks for sharing and keep on sharing such useful HR Tips.

From India, Kumbakonam
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