This unique course provides participants with all they need to know about the new manpower planning cycle –now called Human Resource Planning (HRP). This has become the fastest growing and most dynamic area in today’s Human Resources Departments. In some organizations, its value is fully recognized and it becomes a department in its own right. The new manpower planning requires a complete set of new skills, tools, and software. This advanced program will show you what needed and what results can be achieved.
Use the new linear strategic model works for manpower planning
Calculate and produce convincing results from manpower data including predictive trends
How each segment of the manpower model works, data collection, analysis, and succession planning
Design and master the ability to construct organizational charts and ratios
Know what software to use for predictive trend analysis and forecasting
Be able to draw a business process map and understand how to do business process re-engineering.
CEO’s and Directors
Department Heads
HR personnel
Those responsible for providing workforce data
Strategic planners
Succession planners
Anyone interested in the measurement of the Human Resource
Those interested in transforming HR into a profit center
Personnel involved in either manpower planning or succession planning who wish to significantly upgrade their skills and knowledge
The critical role of the new manpower planning activity
Getting strategic timelines for effective manpower planning
The new strategic model and the 10 critical inputs
Emergency planning –the critical role of manpower planning
Predicting when the organization needs to change – use of the land model
The land model – questionnaire
Case study on Manpower planning –what should manpower planning do?
Case study and review
How organizations are designed
Organizational design and its two major faults for the 21st century
The rules that apply to determine manpower levels – Exercise F and group feedback
The value of team working and its impact on management levels and productivity
Downsizing – Case study and group work
Right-sizing – case study
Right-sizing – group exercise
The three areas, Strategic focus, Manpower analysis and predictive forecasting ( area 2), and Situation fulfillmen
Manpower analysis – data and projections – what is involved
Critical data needed and software to do the job
Understanding performance – data needed
Understanding competencies – data needed
Understanding productivity – data needed
Critical software needed to action the above –demonstration
Case study, rightsizing and producing a workflow improvement in an existing organization
Understanding the “right” principle
Trend analysis, retrospective, and projective techniques
Use of Monte Carlo simulation – demonstration and discussion
Manpower data correlations – the financial advantage to the organization
Succession planning – the three option approach
Group development for succession planning – option 1
Individual and deputy selection – option 2
External selection – use of head hunters – option 3
Pay and rewards – the psychological contract
Recruitment - new techniques = new results
Innovations in interviewing since 2008
Training – making training effective and measurable
The critical role of performance appraisal
Business process re-engineering –demonstration and practical exercise
Achieving outstanding sales results in an increasingly competitive world is a difficult task. Only by establishing a modern sales force management system and by training sales management personnel effectively, can today’s firm compete. The Certified Sales Manager course provides frontline sales managers with the knowledge, skills, and tools they need to drive bottom-line performance. It focuses on improving organization and forecasting skills, as well as other technical competencies aimed at guiding salespeople towards higher performance.
Soft skills training is training that focuses on developing skills such as communication, teamwork, and problem-solving. Other soft skills include emotional intelligence, a positive attitude, and taking the initiative
Managerial accounting is an activity that provides financial and non-financial information to business managers and other internal decision-makers of an organization. This course examines how managerial accounting information is gathered, and how it is used by business professionals to make effective plans & decisions. Lessons such as fundamentals of managerial accounting cost accounting concepts, and managerial accounting approaches will provide you with the concepts, procedures, and analytical skills you'll need to make informed decisions in today's challenging business world
Enterprise Risk Management known as (ERM) has evolved considerably since the seventies. From simply 'buying' insurance, it has now grown in importance to become a prime function in many organizations as part of a bigger system known as Governance, Risk, and Compliance (GRC) which starts with corporate governance and ends with compliance. ERM is the function of studying the risks that may hinder a corporation's ability to achieve its goals and then deciding how to overcome those risks. Studies regarding risk management were done by different organizations, including ISO which issued ISO 31000 on risk management. However, the most accepted ERM system is the one designed by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO). This system, which is the one covered in this course, teaches the steps needed to control risk. It starts with the evaluation of the internal environment and the setting of objectives which are, mainly, a result of the tone at the top of the organization, the directives from corporate governance as well as the vision, mission, and corporate strategies. Then, the course goes through the steps management needs to consider in order to identify and assess risk and decide on proper risk responses and controls. The course ends with how to monitor, communicate, and report risk. In addition, the course looks at risk in different organizational areas such as strategy, reporting, compliance, operations, financial and physical risk as well as risk in different industries.
Process industry businesses are constantly seeking for ways to increase efficiency while posing the fewest risks to people's lives and property. This is feasible if these organizations are successful in identifying the relevant risks and setting up suitable safeguards against their impacts.
Process industry businesses are constantly seeking for ways to increase efficiency while posing the fewest risks to people's lives and property. This is feasible if these organizations are successful in identifying the relevant risks and setting up suitable safeguards against their impacts.