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A Road MAP to Management Competency: Part Two

In the last issue we introduced the Managerial Assessment of Proficiency MAP – approach to learning what skills your managers have ... and have not.

Developed by Dr. Scott Parry, founder of Training House, Inc., the MAP competency model utilizes information collected by large US corporations such as AT&T, Kodak, Martin Marietta, Ford and the American Management Association. From the data he collected, Parry identified 12 competencies common to every study, to be evaluated based on thousands of scores from across the country.

Using the MAP competency model, you will have an extremely cost effective and reliable basis for establishing training programs for managerial effectiveness in your organization.

Competencies are defined as a group of related skills, knowledge and attitudes which correlate with success on the job and which can be improved through training.

Twelve Competencies You Can Assess and Improve ... Step by Step

1. Time Management and Prioritizing

Ability to manage time, both your own and others’. Includes such skills as: negotiating priorities; exercising self-discipline; controlling interruptions by shaping the behavior of others whose priorities are not your own; being time-effective vs. time-efficient.

2. Setting Goals and Standards

Ability to manage activities and projects toward measurable goals and standards, setting these jointly with others so as to develop their understanding and commitment. Includes the following skills: distinguishing among wishes, activities, and quotas; reducing barriers to the goal-setting process; evaluating goals against the major criteria of effective goal setting; using goals to motivate.

3. Planning and Scheduling Work

Ability to manage projects (one-time programs) and processes (ongoing work flow) by applying the major tools and techniques of management. Includes the following skills: analyzing complex tasks and breaking them into manageable units; selecting and managing resources appropriate to the tasks; using systems and techniques to plan and schedule the work; setting checkpoints and controls for monitoring progress.

4. Listening and Organizing

Ability to understand, organize and analyze what you are hearing so as to decide what to think and do in response to a message. Specifically, includes such skills as: identifying and testing inferences and assumptions; overcoming barriers to effective listening; summarizing and reorganizing a message for recall; withholding judgment that can bias your response to the message.

5. Giving Clear Information

Ability to assess a situation, determine the objectives, and give clear, concise, well-organized, convincing messages that will best meet the objective. Includes the following skills: overcoming physical, psychological, and semantic barriers in our interactions with others; keeping on target and avoiding digressions; using persuasion effectively; maintaining a climate of mutual benefit and trust.

6. Getting Unbiased Information

Ability to use questions, probes and interviewing techniques to obtain unbiased information and to interpret it appropriately. Includes such skills as: using directive, non-directive, and reflecting questions effectively; employing the funnel technique of questioning; using probes to elicit additional information; recognizing latent and manifest meanings; confirming understanding and obtaining agreement.

To read Part One of the series on Managerial Assessment of Proficiency (MAP), click here.

 

 
 

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