Go to the Home Page


The Bob Pike Group
14530 Martin Drive
Eden Prairie, MN 55344
Online Contact Form
1-800-383-9210
 
Getting Manager Buy-In
By Liz Wheeler

Managers before training have the number one responsibility for making sure training sticks; however, getting manager buy-in can be difficult. What ways have you found to effectively get managers enthusiastic about sending staff to training and becoming involved in making sure training transfers?

 

Write us at EzineEditor@BobPikeGroup.com. We would love to share your great ideas with others who struggle. Or if you have other creative training tips (ways to choose group leaders, tips for choosing a great facility for training, new technology or websites as resources, effective visuals, etc.), let us know about them!


Related Articles · More Articles
New Study shows Corporate Social Networking Trends in Talent Management Overused words banned from English Stress from a computer screen?
If learners are motivated, they retain more information. But can you extrinsically motivate your session attendees? Is it possible? “While you can’t make your participants be motivated, you can create a motivating environment,” said Becky Pluth, vice president of training and development at The Bob Pike Group. Research shows that interacting with your learners “is one of the most powerful factors in promoting learning” while “interactions among learners is another” (Angelo 1993). And teachers who present the information in a dynamic manner and display a genuine interest in what they
Getting people to use learning resources in the company library can be tricky, Kathleen Miller-Buettner and Susan Hayley-Gates say. Their library has books, videos and audio tapes on communication skills, management skills, balancing work and home lives, and dozens of other topics. But, as in many organizations, the materials once went mostly unused. To encourage corporate library use—and learning—the training department initiated a TOM (theme of the month) Club. Membership is free. Each month has a topical theme – effective feedback, industry information and the like. Trainers, however, don’t disclose what the month’s theme is. Instead they post clues throughout the office and via email on the first day of each month. Employees guess the theme, placing their guess in one of the special TOM Club raffle boxes around the workplace.
Back To Archives


©2004 - 2009 The Bob Pike Group (Creative Training Techniques) - All Rights Reserved.