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Phyllis Weiss Haserot's
Organizational Effectiveness Issue of the Month
THE FULLY REALIZED PROFESSIONAL: GAPS IN PROFESSIONAL
DEVELOPMENT
January 2006
As we predicted would occur when the situation changed from
a buyers' to a sellers' market in the pursuit of talent, the professions
are experiencing a renewed interest in professional development at many
levels. Not only are firms and their clients seeing an increase in work
with a better economy, but also the change in the demographic picture
as the large cohort of baby boomer senior professionals start to transition
out is significantly influencing the demand and requirements for professional
development - training, coaching and mentoring. While more is happening
on the training front, important gaps between what is being offered and
what "knowledge workers" need in terms of skill and fulfilling
of client needs are still evident.
WHAT'S MISSING?
Where are the gaps? What significant topics are not being
addressed in most firms? Unquestionably some firms have made tremendous
strides and understand how pivotal good training and coaching is to the
strength and long-term success of firms. Areas that had lacked attention
such as marketing, business development and sales are getting more emphasis.
However, management and relationship skills development lag far behind
in most firms. While not a comprehensive analysis of professional development
needs, here are the areas where neglect is hurting and holding back achievement
the most.
* Soft Skills:
For example, how to get the confidence of clients; communication to superiors,
juniors and staff, clients, and other stakeholders; how to mentor and
give feedback
* Inter-generational Relations:
From understanding and working with the differing attitudes and objectives
of firm colleagues and clients of different generations to transitioning
of roles and responsibilities, implementing multi-generational teams.
* Identifying and Capitalizing on Personal Style:
Increasing individuals' self-awareness as well as teaching them to
"read" other people's styles and flex theirs sets a solid foundation
from early on in one's career for business development and management.
* Preparing New Partners:
Helping new partners (or shareholders) anticipate the psychological/intra-firm
dynamics, business generation, financial and work/life changes they will
encounter and ease adjustment so they don't face additional stress and
corresponding reduction in productivity.
* How to Manage People Internally:
Patterns of bad behavior are frequently passed down in the treatment of
the next generations, often because people don't know better behaviors.
More constructive and productive models need to be taught.
* Transitioning from "Worker Bee" to "Entrepreneur":
To make the mental shift required for more senior positions, a solid understanding
of firm economics and both the individual and team as an economic unit
is needed. The owner mentality must also respect and foster the integrity
of the institution as a first priority.
* Transitioning Planning:
Planning for senior partners in order to assure smooth transitions of
responsibilities as well as clients when senior partners approach firm
mandated or anticipated retirement ages.
Clearly the gaps apply not only to the younger professionals, but often
to the more senior people as well.
LAST, BUT CERTAINLY NOT LEAST
Coaching is the cornerstone of professional development
which provides the ultimate benefit. It is personalized teaching that
expands awareness, brings clarity, develops new habits that achieve growth,
and fosters self-motivation. Studies show that coaching after training
increases the value (return on investment) by four times (!), integrating
and sustaining newly learned skills. Good ongoing coaching at all levels,
is missing in most firms and needs to be "the next big thing."
I welcome your comments to pwhaserot@pdcounsel.com
© Phyllis Weiss Haserot, 2006. All rights reserved.
For training, coaching and special programs on maximizing
the potential of your organization and your young professionals, call
Phyllis for an exploratory talk or complimentary coaching session at 212-593-1549
or e-mail at: pwhaserot@pdcounsel.com.
See www.pdcounsel.com/nextgen.html
and www.pdcounsel.com/about.html.
Now we offer compelling programs and transition planning services for
senior professionals too.
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