Discover the crucial role that leadership plays in achieving better organizational performance and how best to use that role strategically.
Organizations stand or fall on their ability to execute strategy effectively. Has your company already tried implementing initiatives like Six Sigma, Balanced Scorecard, ERP, JIT, TQM, CMM, BPM, CRM, OPM3, or other spoonfuls of alphabet management soup—without seeing effective results? Strategic execution leadership could be the missing piece. This course addresses the crucial role that leadership plays in achieving better organizational performance in today’s dynamic global environment.
Participants acquire a clear understanding of the leadership role and how best to use it strategically. They learn how they can be effective leaders, whether for making strategic decisions, translating strategy, assessing risk, establishing sponsorship, or managing change within the organization. The concepts presented are reinforced through simulations, videos, demonstrations, structured exercises, and group laboratories.
The course focuses on leadership and strategic execution. It provides the critical context leaders must have to create the optimum level of performance through portfolio, program, and project management.
Target Audience
This course is designed for all professionals who are responsible for strategic management: mid- to senior-level managers, project, program, and portfolio managers, and team members. This course has no prerequisites, but Converting Strategy into Action is highly recommended.
Benefits to the Organization
As a result of Leadership for Strategic Execution, the organization benefits from:
- Increased organizational alignment that leads to fast, high-quality strategic decisions
- Visual tools that enable a shared dialog on the options, constraints, risks, and interfaces essential for more effective portfolio and project execution
- Better enterprise risk-management thinking
Learning Objectives
After attending Leadership for Strategic Execution, you will be able to:
- Apply a framework of strategic leadership at the organizational, team, and personal levels
- Use evidence more extensively in decision making
- Apply a decision-making process
- Describe how the various types of innovation create alignment issues
- Create maps of strategy to the execution layer
- Use a process for prioritizing action to manage the risks associated with organizational systems that affect execution
- Assess their total power levels and identify areas for improving execution ability
- Assess the strength of execution sponsorship, determine their role in sponsorship, and diagnose specific problems that require action
- Use a simple and powerful human dynamic model to change the way they interact with others and become more influential
Course Details
Cost: $2,295
Class in session: 8:30 am to 5:30 pm (one-hour break for lunch)
24 PDUs
Enroll today! (use company code: "usgov")
Course Topics
The DNA of Strategic Execution
- Introductions
- Course map and expectations
- A framework for examining leadership
- Case study for analysis
- Strategy, execution, and leadership
- Alignment across domains and organizational levels
What Wise Leaders Do: An Evidence-Based Approach
- Support for an evidence-based approach
- What is evidence-based management?
- Hazards of business advice
- Being wise is more important than being smart
- Leadership and the illusion of control
- Thoughts about leadership
Making Effective Decisions
- Elements of a quality decision
- Individual decision-making biases
- Application: Carter Racing case study
- Group decision-making bias
Strategy Innovation
- Factors that influence innovation decisions
- Which strategic outcome do we want?
- How mature is the market in which we will innovate?
- Types of innovation
- Dealing with organizational inertia
Strategy Execution Mapping
- The execution dilemma
- Strategy planning considerations
- Strategy mapping process
- Application: Cisco Enterprise IT case study
- Strategy mapping process: additional steps
- Communicating visually
System Risk Assessment
- Obstacles to execution
- Managing system risk
- System risk assessment process
- Application exercise
- System risk management guidelines
Leading with Power
- Ambivalence about power
- Sources of power
- Power case study: Tina Brown
- Attributes for acquiring and holding power
- Influence strategies
Sponsorship
- Perspectives on sponsorship in organizations
- Sponsorship is a two-way street—analyzing the manager/sponsor relationship
- Portfolio, program, and project sponsorship
- Rules for managing sponsor relationships
Insights to Leadership
- Leadership for managing change
- Insights profile feedback analysis and discussion
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