390 likes | 495 Views
Doing More with Less? 2008-2009. Financial markets, uncertainty, and lawsuits, causing cutbacks?Knowledge loss due to turnover and retirements in diocesan and parish staffs?Challenges of working with volunteers, multigenerational groups?. Five Styles of Dealing with Any Issue. AvoidingAccommo
E N D
1. Diocesan Fiscal ManagersTriumph through Collaboration:Keys to Success
2. Doing More with Less
2008-2009 Financial markets, uncertainty, and lawsuits, causing cutbacks
Knowledge loss due to turnover and retirements in diocesan and parish staffs
Challenges of working with volunteers, multigenerational groups
3. Five Styles of Dealing with Any Issue Avoiding
Accommodating
Compromising
Competing
Collaborating
4. Which Do You Like to Use and Why? Influencing factors
Birth order
Personality
Comfortable with it
It works for you!
5. Case Study One of your parishes had a financial meltdown last year. You suggested a part-time accountant be brought in to help the staff. They did not do that. You have just received a call that they have discovered a worse situation this year
6. Avoiding hang up and take Tylenol
Accommodating go over and fix it
Compromising take back some responsibilities
Competing have the Bishop lean on the Pastor
Collaborating schedule meetings and find a permanent solution Do You Use
7. Generally Speaking Avoiding and accommodating are good temporary solutions
Compromise produces short-term movement
Competing should rarely be used only if the issue is important and you know you are right
8. So Why Dont We UseCollaboration All the Time? It is time consuming, expensive, and requires unique skills: listening skills and creative problem solving.
A little empathy also helps!
9. Why is Working with People So Challenging? For the first time in US history, we will have four distinct generations in the workforce with noticeable differences in attitudes, expectations, and management styles
10. What is theMulti-Generational Workforce?
11. Whats the Difference?
12. Changes in the Workforce
13. You are What You Were When
What was going on in your world when you were nine years old
..
14. The Boomers
15. The Boomers Dont make demands
Believe hard work will be rewarded in time
Value health insurance and security
Profit sharing, retirement plan, etc.
Work long hours
An honest days pay for an honest days work
Dont want to be coached/micro-managed
16. The Boomers
17. Facts and Myths: Boomers
18. The Gen X-ers
19. The Gen X-ers the Latch Key Kids Independent
Value freedom and flexibility
Efficient through use of technology
Dont want to be coached
Obsessed with training marketable skills
Toolbox of skills
Direct
20. The Gen X-ers
21. Facts and Myths: Generation X
22. The Gen Y-ers
23. The Gen Y-ers Bob Daniels, Owner of PrideStaff:
Gen Y will constitute 45 percent of the workforce in a few years
Entrepreneurial and tech-savvy
Demand immediate gratification
Want their dream job right now
The free agent generation
Team players with an eye always focused on winning and advancing
Value social networking and work environment
24. The Gen Y-ers
25. Facts and Myths: Generation Y
27. So
You raised em
now you manage em
28. Respect for Authority
29. Time on the Job
30. Multitasking
31. Leadership
32. Balance
33. Working Together Different life experiences help shape how these different generations view the world of work and their role in the workplace
A critical element to working with these generations is to understand how they differ, and how to compensate for their weaknesses by playing to their strengths
Turn a negative into a positive for your organization and its workforce
34. Working Together Problem: Gen X-ers want to build experience and move up
Solution: The cross-training they crave for their skill toolbox, which will help increase their ability to succeed in their current environment and move up in management
35. Working Together
36. Working Together
37. Closing Comments In times of scarce resources, collaboration is essential
Collaboration is challenging with diverse groups
Generational gaps do exist in the workplace
A good manager understands the value of communicating and embracing these differences
One generations weaknesses are anothers strengths
38. Mario Andretti If you feel like youve got
it under control
you are just not
going fast enough!
39. Thank You!