FYI For Your Improvement™: A Guide For Development and Coaching For Learners, Managers, Mentors, and Feedback Givers
FYI For Your Improvement™: A Guide For Development and Coaching For Learners, Managers, Mentors, and Feedback Givers
FYI For Your Improvement™: A Guide For Development and Coaching For Learners, Managers, Mentors, and Feedback Givers
A Guide for Development and Coaching for Learners, Managers, Mentors, and Feedback Givers
A usAGE GuIDE
Key Takeaways: FYI translates individual development into business results. FYI is an easy-to-use guide for coaching and development. Use FYI to build a skill that is mission critical or to reduce noise and avoid derailment. FYI is intended for individual learners, managers, coaches, and executives. The 67 Competencies, 19 Stallers and Stoppers, and 7 Global Focus Areas are the standard for leadership development at thousands of companies around the globe.
The new 5th edition of FYI For Your Improvement is designed to make coaching and development planning even easier and more targeted.
We know what makes people successful. We also know what causes derailment. Over 20 years of research helped us define the 67 Competencies, 19 Career Stallers and Stoppers, and 7 Global Focus Areas that matter most.
Research is also clear about how people learn. People learn the most from on-the-job experiences (70%), followed by learning from other people (20%), and learning from courses (10%). Through our research, we discovered which experiences provide the most development for a particular skill.
Since 1996 FYI has combined what makes people successful with how people learn into an easy-to-use development resource. This Usage Guide will address some basic questions about FYI and explain how and when to use this valuable development resource.
Who is FYI for? FYI provides a common set of characteristics required for success and facilitates the development and deployment of resources, enterprise-wide.
FYI is designed for any motivated person with a need and to serve as a guide for managers, mentors, coaches, and feedback givers. It is intended for all levels of an organization. Individual learners who want to take initiative and be proactive about their development. They find that FYI is a howto development guide for a do-it-yourself approach. Coaches and managers working with individual employees to build skill or avoid derailment. They use FYI to find the information and tools they need to provide coaching and create a targeted development plan. Executives responsible for talent management and human resource management. They use FYI as a resource to sustain leadership development efforts. FYI provides a common set of characteristics required for success and facilitates the development and deployment of resources, enterprise-wide.
What is FYI?
FYI is an entire library in one book. Each chapter is dedicated to a competency, staller/stopper, or global focus area found in the Leadership Architect Library. In each chapter you will find detailed definitions and descriptions, possible causes, as well as suggested remedies, on-the-job tasks, and readings that promote development. Competencies are defined as a measurable characteristic of a person that is related to success at work. It may be a behavioral skill, a technical skill, an attribute (such as intelligence), or an attitude (such as optimism) (The Leadership Machine, p. 5). The Leadership Architect Library contains a total of 67 Competencies.
Career Stallers and Stoppers are the negative characteristics or flameout factors that can derail a persons career. In many respects, they represent the flip side of competencies. The Leadership Architect Library contains a total of 19 specific Career Stallers and Stoppers. The Global Focus Areas are the additional characteristics required for global business leaders. The Leadership Architect Library contains a total of 7 Global Focus Areas.
Factors and Clusters All competencies and career stallers fall into one of 8 Factors and 26 Clusters. This means that a competency (or staller) in a particular cluster is somewhat similar to the others in that cluster. You may want to check for additional tips within the cluster (and perhaps the factor) for each competency. (Competencies and Stallers and Stoppers only)
The Map The map gives you the lay of the land. It reviews the general case for the competency, how it operates, and why its important. Especially important to remember are things about the competency you didnt understand before you read the map. Those added learnings will make a difference in your development plan. Some Remedies were developed from research findingswhat experiences teach them, what they look like, what their elements are. Based on our research and experience, these are the tips that are most likely to work. We kept these tips brief, doable, and action oriented. Ten or more tips are included to work directly on this need. Although a few may be longer-term, most are things you can start working on today. We wanted to give motivated people a way to get started right away and see results quickly. Remedy titles are written as diagnostic questions and action statements so you can easily identify and choose one or two to include in your development plan. Suggested Readings were selected from expert reviews, best-seller lists, and reputable publishers based on their relevance, global perspective, and ROI. We selected readings that were current, available, organized well, and full of suggestions and examples. Plenty for you to choose from! Develop-in-Place Assignments are job tasks that require application of certain competencies. Research shows that 70% of development happens on the job, and jobs differ in development power and in the competencies they address. You cant always change jobs for development reasons alone, but there is almost always a develop-in-place assignment that you can select in your current job to address your development need. Staller and Stopper name and number as well as factor and cluster information showing where it fits in the Leadership Architect Library.
A Problem lists statements to describe detailed behaviors that illustrate what a staller/stopper looks like when it is a problem. Read these to see if a staller/stopper might be an issue for you. Not a Problem lists statements to describe detailed behaviors that illustrate what a staller/stopper looks like when it is not a problem. Read these to see if a staller/stopper is not a concern for you. Other Causes A staller results from many sourceswhat you underdo (unskilled), such as Interpersonal Savvy (31) and what you overdo (overused), such as Drive for Results (53) or Command Skills (9). Review the list to see if any of the unskilled or overused competencies match your profile. Use this information to help you decide what to focus on in your development plan.
use FYI when you need to build a skill that is mission critical or to reduce noise and avoid derailing.
Explore the need 1 Look in the Index to find an entry that relates to your
need. Lisa looks up presentations and presentation skills. She decides to review the whole chapter on Presentation Skills. definitions to figure out what describes your before and after picture. Lisa realizes that she
Skills is moderately difficult to develop. Lisa gives herself six months to develop the skill.
Matrix to see how difficult the competency is to develop before you commit to the to be completed by date on My Development Need. Presentation
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may always present the same way, not adjusting to audiences and she wants to be effective in a variety of presentation settings.
3 Review Some Causes to understand why you might have this need. Lisa thinks maybe its because she gets nervous and is a flat presenter. 4 Read through the Map to understand more about why the competency is so important. The map helps Lisa understand how important it is to be sensitive to the audience. 1
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8 Select a Develop-in-Place Assignment that can help you learn through on-the-job experience. Lisa chooses the develop-in-place task present the strategy of my unit to others not familiar with my business as part of her action plan. 9 Look at the Quotes at the beginning and end of the chapter and choose one that inspires you. Lisa chooses Mark Twains quote and adds it to her My Development Need page. 10 Scan the list of Suggested Readings. Choose one or two that you could benefit from reading. Lisa wants to read The Exceptional Presenter: A Proven Formula to Open Up and Own the Room, by T. J. Koegel. She thinks it could help her overcome her nervousness.
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find the My Development Need page to jot notes along the way. John makes a photocopy of My Development Need so he can draft a development plan with David. They discuss the feedback and begin to tackle the issue. have this need. David thinks that hes too action oriented and knows too much about the work and that these things are contributing to the problem.
Explore the need 1 Scan the Table of Contents to see what might be
causing the problem. John reviews the Table of Contents and thinks that Davids issue might be Overmanaging.
listed. John turns to Chapter 117 - Overmanaging. definitions to figure out whether this staller/stopper might be whats causing noise. John sees that the Problem description (i.e., doesnt empower others, does too much of the work himself/herself) is similar to the feedback he was receiving regarding David. He sees that the Not a Problem statements like delegates and empowers and works to do less personally and trust others more will be good goals for David. He decides to bring David in for a conversation and action planning session.
competencies you might have too much or too little of that could be causing the staller/stopper. To improve Developing Direct Reports, David adds action steps from Chapter 19 to his development plan. why the competency is so important. David realizes that by doing other peoples work, he is taking himself away from other priorities. help you learn through on-the-job experience. David chooses to manage something remote away from my location for on-the-job development. or two that you think you could benefit from reading. David decides to read What to Do When You Become the Boss, by B. Selden. commit to a to be completed by date. John and David complete the My Development Need page and commit to check progress on a regular basis.
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to find out more about FYI For Your Improvement 5th edition, visit www.lominger.com.
FYI is an easy-to-use reference that has become the standard for leadership development at thousands of companies around the globe. How will you use FYI?
J. Evelyn Orr, M.A. is Intellectual Property Development Consultant with Korn/Ferry International Leadership and Talent Consulting.
About Lominger
Founded in 1991 by Robert W. Eichinger, Ph.D. and Michael M. Lombardo, Ed.D., Lominger produces a suite of competency-based leadership development resources for individuals, teams, and organizations. In August 2006, Lominger joined the Korn/Ferry International family of companies. For more information on the Korn/Ferry International family of companies, visit www.kornferry.com. 8