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picture1_Leadership Pdf 164033 | 27 Sept 2018 How To Get High Potential Employees Interested In Leadership Development Programs


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File: Leadership Pdf 164033 | 27 Sept 2018 How To Get High Potential Employees Interested In Leadership Development Programs
how to get high potential employees interested in leadership development programs leadership training can make a huge difference in preparing professionals to advance in their careers and succeed in leadership ...

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          How to Get High-Potential Employees Interested in Leadership Development Programs 
        
       Leadership training can make a huge difference in preparing professionals to advance in their careers 
       and succeed in leadership roles. Many companies offer leadership  education programs to high-
       potential employees, but these programs don’t always receive much interest. How can leaders and 
       HR departments motivate professionals to enroll in leadership development programs? 
       Given how political and business leaders are celebrated in modern society, many HR managers might 
       assume that highlighting the possibility of becoming a leader would motivate employees to engage in 
       leadership development. We tested this idea in our current research. 
       To assess whether the promise of becoming a leader motivates employees to participate in training, 
       we sampled 530 working adults from the U.S. who had never taken a leadership development course. 
       We presented employees with a description  of  a  leadership  course.  However,  there  were  two 
       versions.  One  stated  the  program  would  help  students  become  a  leader  who  makes  effective 
       decisions, whereas the other said the program would help students learn and improve leadership skills 
       like effective decision-making. Aside from this, the two descriptions were identical. We asked people 
                              how difficult they thought the course would 
                              be, and how interested they would be in 
                              taking it. 
                              Participants who saw a course description 
                              focusing on becoming a leader thought that 
                              the course would be more challenging and 
                              difficult,  compared  to  those  who  saw  a 
                              course  description  focusing  on  learning 
                              leadership skills.  And  those  who  saw  the 
                              becoming  a  leader  course  were  less 
                              interested in signing up for it. 
       This finding suggests that how you frame leadership education can affect people’s interest in pursuing 
       it. Although we did not ask people to explain their responses, we believe that a course focused on 
       “becoming a leader” can discourage people from taking it, because it’s not clear how this would be 
       achieved. There is no easy and clear path to becoming a leader right away. On the other hand, the 
       focus on learning leadership skills may be more motivating because the task seems reasonable and 
       doable. 
       In additional experiments, we also found that framing the content of leadership education may impact 
       how effective a course is. For example, in one study, we presented students with educational materials 
       about the “seven models of how to be a leader.” Half the students received content framed in terms 
       of leaders (e.g., “Leadership is all about the leader. What are their strengths and weaknesses?”), 
       whereas others received the same content but framed in terms of leadership skills (e.g., Leadership is 
       all about the leader’s skills. What are their strengths and weaknesses?). 
       After students studied this material, we assessed how well they remembered what was taught. We 
       found that when people received leadership course material framed in terms of leadership skills, they 
       had 29% better recollection for the content than when they received the same material framed in 
       terms of leaders. 
       Our research suggests that to motivate people to engage in leadership education, particularly those 
       who have never had any previous leadership training, organizations should consider reframing the 
       goal of the course as learning leadership skills rather than becoming a leader. Doing so may also help 
       students grasp and retain the material. 
        
       https://tinyurl.com/y9uypccz 
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