Leadership Development

   
Saturday, January 5, 2008

6 Ways to Measure the Effectiveness of a Leadership Development Program by Dan McCarthy
Much has been written about the importance of measuring the impact of leadership development programs or systems. Over the years I ve been looking for practical, meaningful, and effective metrics. Heres what Ive settled on for now, and although Im not completely satisfied with any single measure, a combination of these should give you a pretty good dashboard.

1. Company performance. The ultimate measure, nothing else really matters. In most cases, consistent great company performance can usually be attributed to great leadership. And of course, lousy leadership is usually the root cause of business failures.

2. External perception of leadership. External perception can be measured by awards, such as CEO Magazine œBest Companies for Leadersand hundreds of individual leadership awards (CEO of the Year, CIO of the year, CFO of the Year, etc).

3. Internal perception of leadership. Internal perception can be measured in two ways. First, if you are using 360 leadership assessments, you can maintain an aggregate score of a singleoverall effectiveness question, or run a report that aggregates the average score for all questions. Second, you can pull questions out of your annual employee survey pertaining to leadership and look for year over year improvement. You can also compare your leaders to other companies if youre using questions provided by a third party vendor, such as Gallop or the Leadership Practices Inventory.

4. Succession planning measures. Keep tract of the number of key positions filled by internal candidates or the number of “ready now candidates for each key positions (bench strength). Individual Development Plan (IDP) progress or completion. Track the completion of development activity for key leaders and succession candidate pools.

5. Leadership development training measures. Use the basic Kirkpatrick measures, satisfaction, knowledge, behavior change, and business results. Easier said than done for the last one, but it works in some cases. For example, you would expect a decrease in turnover and improvement in sales after the implementation of a successful sales manger hiring or coaching program.

6. Finally, the easiest measure and perhaps the one that has the biggest impact on your funding and career opportunities: ask your key stakeholders. Regular meetings with your top executives and other key stakeholders will ensure youre efforts are hitting the mark. These meetings are a great way to continuously assess current and future needs, communicate your accomplishments, and check for satisfaction

For more on leadership and leadership development, visit my blog at: http://greatleadershipbydan.blogspot.com/


About the Author

Ihave been a practitioner in the field of leadership development for over 20 years. Im currently the Manager of Leadership and Management Development at a leading provider of payroll and human resource services outsourcing.



Powered by ScribeFire.

0 comments:

 
Copyright  © 2007 | Design by uniQue | Modifikasi Design by DuitGoogle.Com             Powered by    Login to Blogger