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On this page: Keynote Presentation            Cracker Barrel
Symposia Clinics

Educational Sessions

   

Keynote Presentation
Thursday, September 25, 8:30 am

Walking on the Wild (Practical) Side: Connecting HPT Tools to Results!
Rodger Stotz, CPT, VP, Managing Consultant, Maritz Inc.

Stotz PhotoLearning the basics of HPT is foundational and important. However, it is their application and the organizational results achieved that are critical for each of us in the performance improvement profession. This presentation will walk you through a journey of discovery on applying HPT tools and models to real-life situations and their impact on organizational performance. So grab your backpack, and let's see where this trail takes us!

Participants will be able to:

  • Align tools and methods with specific applications.
  • Give examples of where the tools did not work and why.
  • Share examples of HPT applications that produced significant results.

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Clinics

An ISPI Clinic is a brief instructional session on a specific topic in which a performance improvement expert provides practical information, instruction, and advice for improving techniques and solving problems. Every clinic has a coached application component.

Thursday, September 25
10:45 am to 12:15 pm (Clinics A, B, C)

The Two Dimensions of an Organization: An Architecture for Achieving Business Results
Geary Rummler & Alan Ramias, Performance Design Lab
Clinic A

The purpose of a business is to create and deliver value to customers, but the value dimension in many organizations is overshadowed by a fixation on resources, which reinforces silos, causes endless internal competition, and results in poor decisions. How did organizations get themselves into this fix, and how can they get out of it? This session looks at the sources of this fixation on resource management, examines how it distorts organizational behavior, and presents an alternative vision of how organizations should be viewed, designed, and managed.

Participates will be able to:

  • Define the two dimensions of organization: value and resources.
  • Explain the underlying causes of resource fixation and its effects.
  • Provide examples of how managers would operate differently in the value dimension.

Using the Success Case Method to Prove--and Accelerate--Enhanced Value
Robert O. Brinkerhoff, Advantage Performance Group
Clinic B

Learning and performance improvement investments, more than ever, must include a process for measuring impact and value. Many current evaluation models and methods either lack credibility (e.g., 1400% ROI) or evaluate the wrong thing (e.g., Levels 3 and 4 as if they were totally controlled by performance improvement professionals). The Success Case Method® efficiently and credibly produces impact data that senior leaders believe and, more important, act on. In addition, participants will review several concrete applications by major corporations in the SCM user group (e.g., Holcim, Nike, 3M, Kellogg, Dell, etc.).

Participants will be able to:

  • Describe the steps in the Success Case Evaluation Method.
  • Understand when the method should be used to measure impact and continually improve results.
  • Understand how the method produces credible impact data that eliminate the need for models that use suspicious statistical gyrations and overblown estimates of ROI averages, assumptions, and equations.
  • Identify critical applications of the model.

Courageous Training: Bold Actions for Business Results
Tim Mooney, Advantage Performance Group
Clinic C

Much has been written about how to deploy performance improvement and training efforts more effectively and with more impact. Yet, despite all the advice, only 15-20% of learning actually gets applied in ways that contribute tangible results to organizations. Through my work with Robert O. Brinkerhoff, we have discovered some iconoclastic HRD professionals who achieved breakthrough results by having the courage to break away from the usual approaches and identify what is really needed and what really works. Studying why these bold leaders were so successful implementing the High Impact Learning process led us to distill the principles and practices of Courageous Training and capture these practices and cases in our book.

Participants will be able to:

  • Describe the key elements four pillars of courageous training--a proven process for turning learning into business results.
  • Understand why the Courageous Training Code--the mindset and personal principles for truly effecting change--is essential for delivering business impact.
  • Plan a performance improvement initiative utilizing the four pillars.
  • Diagnose their personal gaps in implementing change efforts using the Courageous Training Code.

Friday, September 26
1:00 pm to 2:30 pm (Clinics D, E, F)

Needs Analysis Can Save Your Life
Carol Haig, CPT, Carol Haig & Associates
Clinic D

Ever wonder what would happen during a needs analysis if you could ask someone's age or ethnicity, inquire about their behavior in a particular situation, or explore their past work history? What if you could probe their sources of income? The medications they take? Their personal relationships? Not very likely in the business world, but such questions are required for success in community crisis work. Come discover the power of the needs analysis process when lives are at stake and you have the means to save them.

Participates will be able to:

  • Discover the power of needs analysis for immediate results.
  • Demonstrate how needs analysis can prevent suicide and resolve personal crises.
  • Leverage analysis skills to serve the greater community.

The Business Case for Coaching in Organizations: Justifying the Investment in an Economic Downturn
John Lazar, MA, MCC, and Brenda Smith, MBA, CPEC
Clinic E

Coaching has grown to a $1.5 billion industry in less than 10 years, and is becoming a strategic intervention in the "war for talent" and is a key performance-enhancing tool in the global business environment. This session will discuss, illustrate, and demonstrate how to master the language, metrics, and power of developmental coaching to build a powerful business case and deliver results. We will explore global and demographic trends, justify why investment in people development is not discretionary in a slow economy, build a business case for soft skills development, and share best practices for coaching in organizations.

Participants will be able to:

  • Understand the key environmental factors that are influencing the choices they and their organization need to make.
  • Have and use models for recognizing where coaching can contribute disproportionately to performance improvement.
  • Recognize where and how they can support performance through listening, questioning, and coaching.
  • Use a template for making a business case for performance improvement where coaching is one intervention of choice.

An Implementation Model for Linking People, Processes, and the Organization
John M. Swinney, CPT, Wal-Mart University
Clinic F

Overlooking the implementation process during an otherwise well-designed performance improvement effort is likely to result in less-than-stellar results. This session describes a fundamental implementation model that considers the receiving system, the organizational process in play, and the people who can make or break the success of the effort to improve organizational performance.

Participants will be able to:

  • Design or evaluate implementation processes for organizational interventions or change initiatives within their own organizations.
  • Use the tools offered in this session to do the designing or evaluating.

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Symposia

An ISPI Symposium is a three-hour focused discussion related to a particular aspect of Human Performance Technology. An expert leads the symposium, presenting key concepts in-depth and then guiding discussion for further exploration and practical application.

Thursday, September 25
1:00 pm to 2:30 pm (Symposia 1, 2, 3)

The SCAN Organization Model: A Periodic Table for Performance and Change
Don Tosti, CPT, PhD, Vanguard Consulting
Symposium 1

At last, a model that integrates all forms of organizational consulting, Six Sigma, organizational development, process improvement, training, culture change, strategic analysis, customer service, restructuring, control systems, leadership development, HPT, and all the rest. It is the SCAN model. And the SCAN model does it with a focus on performance and results. Not a change management model, but a change analysis model. It allows you to prioritize all your initiatives and select those with the greatest payoff for organizational success. It takes areas other disciplines have previously dealt with in isolation and with less precision--like leadership, teamwork, culture, and personal attitudes and styles--and integrates them into the body of HPT by defining them in performance terms. Such practices follow the same general rules and methods of analysis, as do performance tasks, so we can draw on the years of research and development within HPT to address these issues as well.

Participants will be able to:

  • Become proficient in the SCAN performance logic models that provide the bases for dealing with performance issues at all levels of the organization ranging from the individual /job to the enterprise/executive to the business environment/marketplace.
  • Examine two dimensions of performance logic--functional systems flow and organizational alignment--and how they ensure delivery of the right results.
  • Examine ways in which the SCAN System Framework can form the technological bridge between other forms of consulting such as marketing, new product development, cultural transformation, and so forth.

Performance Improvement Models and Tools for Creating New Business
Mariano Bernardez, CPT, PhD, Roger Kaufman, CPT, PhD, Jose Angel Valdez, MS, & Robert Carleton, Sonora Institute of Technology (ITSON)
Symposium 2

In a knowledge-based, globalized economy, starting successful new businesses and organizations is a key success factor and a major challenge that conventional "performance improvement" approaches and tools cannot address adequately. Through the study of multiple cases of real-world companies, participants will explore a new PI paradigm, tools, and models and learn how to apply them to business creation from needs assessment to strategy, organization, and implementation.

Participants will be able to:

  • Explore how to apply a new model of performance improvement to develop successful new business and breakthrough organizations.
  • Analyze how HPT and other disciplines combine along the different phases of new business development.
  • Learn how to combine Roger Kaufman's, Geary Rummler's, and Bob Gilbert's models in a practical, multilevel framework to develop social, organizational, and individual performance.
  • Learn how to develop a sound business case measuring mega, macro, and micro results.
  • Use a new framework to define and select the right organization and technology for the new business.

Building and Aligning Strategy with Online Collaborative Tools
Diane Gayeski, PhD, Ithaca College/Gayeski Analytics
Symposium 3

Too often, organizations struggle to implement strategies that are flawed, do not have buy-in from key stakeholders, or are outdated by the time they are finally released. Performance improvement professionals can take the lead in helping to build better strategies in the first place, using many new Web 2.0 collaborative tools such as group decision support systems, blogs, wikis, and web conferencing. This interactive session will allow participants to review and experience some of these tools, and to decide which applications might work for their own situations. Participants are asked to bring their laptops with wireless Internet capability, if possible.

Participants will be able to:

  • Discuss why typical strategy development and alignment is flawed.
  • Identify and use collaborative software and Web 2.0 tools to build strategy.
  • Decide which software tools are best for various strategy formation and implementation situations.

Friday, September 26
8:30 am to 11:30 am (Symposia 4, 5, 6)

Designing a Performance Improvement Curriculum for Local, National, and International Impact
Dale M. Brethower, CPT, PhD, Sonora Institute of Technology (ITSON)
Symposium 4

Six major design issues will be described and discussed relevant to a doctoral program in performance improvement. The challenge is to provide just-in-time, just-enough, just-for-me instruction that enables doctoral students to design, then implement, then grow a new business, a new product, a new set of educational services, or a new community alliance for economic development. The design issues are derived from the situation and context in Sonora, Mexico, and from Kaufman's Mega Planning, Rummler's Anatomy of Performance, and Brethower's Total Performance System concepts. Brainstorming activities will be conducted for each of six issues to identify arrays of pitfalls and of (recommended) practices. The "IS" curriculum development and delivery procedures will be described briefly. Participants will engage in identifying, reviewing, and recommending "should" curriculum development and delivery procedures that could carry the curriculum development process forward.

Participants will be able to:

  • Identify six major design issues.
  • Specify design strategies and tactics.
  • Identify seven key ideas for improving the curriculum.

Change, Choices, and Consequences: Ensuring Your HPT Works at All Levels
Roger Kaufman, CPT, PhD
Symposium 5

This interactive session provides an overview of the concepts and tools of strategic thinking, planning, needs assessment, and evaluation and continual improvement. Then applications to cases--either supplied by participants or from the presenter's experiences--will be assessed to allow participants to see how these concepts and tools may be applied to their organizations.

The participants will be able to:

  • Identify three templates (or guides) for strategic thinking and planning.
  • Identify tools and techniques for applying these templates.
  • Apply the templates in their organizations.

A Focus on Performance Management and Employee Development to Improve Business Results
Robert Carleton, Helen Naum, & Natalie Swann, T-Systems North America
Symposium 6

This session is a case study on the steps taken to move an organization to a performance-driven culture to improve business results. The goal was to redefine an organization previously managed through cost-cutting, cut-backs, and over-allocation of resources with a blinded focus only on financial results. In a time when profits were low, customer satisfaction was slipping, employee morale was low, and referenceability of services was minimal, a change in focus was required. The objective was to make the fundamental changes necessary to prevent a loss of business as well as prepare for growth and increased market penetration. The steps taken were twofold. First was a focus on the necessary behaviors, processes, and support tools to ensure proper performance management throughout the entire organization. Next was the identification and implementation of appropriate development activities that properly support corporate objectives as well as employee needs. The results are an organization capable of pleasing their customers, providing referenceable services, and prepared for both organic and inorganic growth.

Participants will be able to:

  • Define a performance-driven culture.
  • Operationalize the service profit chain.
  • Create an organizational foundation upon which to grow.
  • Connect performance management to business results.
  • Develop the workforce to support corporate transformation and rapidly increase business growth.

Saturday, September 27
9
:00 am to Noon (Symposia 7, 8, 9)

Certification: A Way to Link Talent Management to Financial Results
Judith Hale, CPT, PhD, Hale Associates/ISPI
Symposium 7

This session is about best practices of using certifications to link talent management and development to the organization's financial and business results. It discusses how an investment in proficiency-based evaluation can help you align recruitment and development with the need to rapidly deploy the right people anywhere in the world. The best practices address how to use certifications to help the HR processes adapt to changing market demands as well as internal innovations in technology and business strategies. Participants will get a 12-step process for how to design a certification program that is proficiency-based, cost-effective to manage, and adapts to changing needs.

The Six Boxes® Approach: "Performance Thinking" for Your Organization
Carl Binder, CPT, PhD, Binder Riha Associates
Symposium 8

This session introduces the simple but powerful Six Boxes® Approach for driving HPT and "performance thinking" in any organization. In contrast to the many complex and sophisticated HPT models and methodologies, the Six Boxes Approach is a lean, easy-to-grasp way of introducing basic HPT concepts that apply to any performance opportunity, from individual performance management to moving beyond training into performance consulting, process improvement, strategy implementation, or leadership development. This session outlines the five elements of the Six Boxes Approach, provides examples of how it has been used, and suggests ways of introducing performance thinking into any organization.

Participants will be able to:

  • Link individual and team behavior to organizational results.
  • Discuss advantages of a simple, easy-to-remember performance improvement approach.
  • List behavior influences in each category of the Six Boxes Model.
  • Think of ways that they can apply this approach immediately.

What Do Supervisors Need to Know About Performance in the Workplace
Miki Lane, CPT, MVM Communications
Symposium 9

Front-line supervisors have a huge impact on organizational culture: If effective, they will lead happy, productive teams that work together to exceed company goals and expectations. If unprepared, they can cause rifts in the very fiber of the organization, negatively affecting corporate culture, HR retention, and the bottom line. This session will look at the role of the supervisor in the organization and how the understanding and utilization of some basic performance principles can ensure success on the job.

Participants will be able to:

  • Describe the role the supervisors have in improving organizational performance.
  • Describe how a systems approach will help a new supervisor.
  • Deal effectively with the challenges that supervisors face.
  • Describe a performance model for their organization.
  • Determine what motivates themselves and their direct reports.

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Cracker Barrel
Friday, September 26
2:45-4:45 pm


This fun and highly energetic ISPI tradition features roundtables hosted by experts in the field. Presenters deliver three, 30-minute presentations on topics of their choice. Between presentations, attendees enjoy a short break with complimentary beverages, cheese, and crackers before selecting their next topic. This format is repeated three times.
 
Table Presenter Title
1 Bob Carleton Radical Approaches to Systemic Organizational Change: New Thoughts, New Ideas, and Some Success and Failures
2 Carl Binder The Six Boxes™ Approach: HPT for Dummies
3 Carol Haig Self Start-Up: Yes You Can!
4 Diane Gayeski Tips on How to Manage Virtual Teams
5 Donald Tosti Power and Leadership: A Performance-Based Approach
6 Edward Muzio Love Work: Enhanced Enjoyment Equals Enhanced Results
7 John Swinney Building Results into Your Implementation Process
8 Judith Hale How to Measure the Adoption of New Behaviors, New Initiatives, and Solutions
9 Lynn Kearny Get Graphic: Help People See What You Mean
10 Miki Lane Formative and Summative Evaluation: What, Why, and How
11 Roger Addison Performance Improvement: Detectives and Architects
12 Jean Strosinski Where Are Your Work Teams: Where Do You Want Them to Be?
13 Paul Cook C-BAM! A Strategy for Organizational Change Management
14 Mary Norris Thomas Practical Evidence for Best Practices
15 Clare Carey Secrets to Managing Your Manager
16 Roger Kaufman The 7 Stupid Things People Do When they Do Strategic Planning
     

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