Making You A Leader Fast Track – Become the Leader You Want and Need

Canceled!

Fall 2018 Course

Date: Monday, December 17, 2018

Time: 8:00am – 5:00pm

Decision date: Monday, December 10, 2018

Early Registration Date deadline: Monday, December 3, 2018

Before Early Registration Date:

Members $235
Non-members $260

After Early Registration Date:
Members $260
Non-members $280

WHERE: Crowne Plaza, Hotel, Woburn

Phone 781-245-5405
email sec.boston@ieee.org

If paying by check, the check must be received before the appropriate dates for Early Registration and Decision Dates.

Make Checks payable and send to:
IEEE Boston Section
One Centre Street, Suite 203
Wakefield, MA 01880
Speaker: Robin Goldsmith, President, GoPro Management
Course Overview:

Making You a Leader – Fast Track – Become the Leader You Want and Need

We do projects to make change. Yet, change will not occur without leadership, and leaders are rare. Leaders make others want to do what the leader wants done. Leaders cause ordinary people to achieve extraordinary things. Managing is not the same as leading, and titles do not make leaders. Seminars can teach you to manage, but they cannot teach you to be a leader. Rather, making a leader takes special techniques—such as our personal development clinics—that can change deep-seated behaviors learned over a lifetime. However, since clinics usually last about ten weeks, this mini-clinic was devised as a more convenient alternative. This format places responsibility upon the participant to carry out an extended informal follow-on program after completion of the formal seminar workshop session. During the follow-on period, the participant uses time-condensed methods that simulate the lifetime learning which makes a leader. Therefore, commitment to carrying out these exercises is essential for successful transformation.

Objectives:

• Leadership characteristics and practices that are essential for project and personal success.
• Differences between management and leadership, how they conflict, and why leaders are so rare.
• Behaviors leaders use to influence others, up and down, to want to do what the leader wants them to do
• Special techniques personal development clinics use to change lifetime learning and make leaders.
• How to employ those special techniques in a follow-on mini-clinic to develop the leadership skills they need to make their projects successful.

Who Should Attend: This course has been designed for business and systems professionals who want to improve their ability to lead and influence other people.

Course Outline:

LEADERSHIP CHARACTERISTICS & ROLE
How leadership looks and feels
Management vs. leadership
Leadership components of project success
Basic leadership practices; power sources
Real change leaders in organizations
TEAMS AND LEADERSHIP
Everyone feels leadership is lacking
Everyone thinks s/he is a leader
Results, not actions or intent
Workgroups, teams, and leaders
Situational leadership styles
Coaching and sports analogies to projects
INSPIRING AND MOTIVATING
Gaining commitment to project success
Communicating that influences others
Addressing negativism and groupthink
Conscious and unconscious messages
Greatest management principle
Hierarchy of needs effects on projects
Hygiene factors vs. motivators
Helping project players get their rewards
Influencing up and down without authority
Inspiring the extra efforts projects need
Energizing the project team
SHARED VISIONS
Relating values and vision to projects
Getting others to embrace one’s vision
Developing a motivating project vision
WHERE AND HOW LEADERS ARE MADE
Born or made? How do we know?
Habits of thought that affect project success
Overcoming self-limiting lifetime learning
Leader’s critical success factors
Traditional education doesn’t make leaders
Special way—personal development clinics
SETTING AND ACCOMPLISHING GOALS
S.M.A.R.T. goals for self and project
Action plans to achieve your goals
Visualizing and emotionalizing
DEFINING THE FOLLOW-ON PROGRAM
Clarifying project leadership objectives
Breaking into prioritized subgoals
Establishing rewarding daily achievements
Special techniques to change habits
CARRYING OUT THE MINI-CLINIC
Working with a follow-up support structure
Mapping results regularly to goals
Objectively recording leadership changes
Self-leadership through the process

Speaker’s Bio:
Robin F. Goldsmith, JD is an internationally recognized authority on software development and acquisition methodology and management. He has more than 30 years of experience in requirements definition, quality and testing, development, project management, and process improvement. A frequent featured speaker at leading professional conferences and author of the recent Artech House book, Discovering REAL Business Requirements for Software Project Success, he regularly works with and trains business and systems professionals.