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Training Needs Analysis
Training & Organizational Development
Training Needs Analysis
A forum for exchanging ideas about skills training, leadership training, management training, compliance training, e-learning, as well as organizational development and effectiveness.
I have to conduct a training needs analysis to determine what training is needed. Does anyone have templates they've used?
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Re: Training Needs Analysis

posted at 10/25/2011 1:42 AM EDT on Workforce Management
Posts: 26
First: 10/12/2011
Last: 3/9/2012
A Training Needs Analysis is a review of learning and development requirements for staff, volunteers, and trustees within in your organization. The Training Needs Assessment Process:-

1. Determine Agency Benefits of Needs Assessment

2. Plan

3. Conduct Needs Assessment

 

Thanks.

Re: Training Needs Analysis

posted at 1/20/2012 3:48 AM EST on Workforce Management
Posts: 2
First: 1/20/2012
Last: 2/17/2012

My company is plannig to conduct a TNA.

I would be honoured to have a template for TNA.

My email add: sunjhoottee@yahoo.com

Thanks

Re: Training Needs Analysis

posted at 1/24/2012 1:00 PM EST on Workforce Management
Posts: 2
First: 1/24/2012
Last: 1/24/2012
Hi everyone, I went through the list of requests today and I think that I have responded to everyone. If I missed you please feel free to drop me an email and I will have the TNA's sent to you. I also have a series of self-study programs and a Project Management TNA.

My email is blake@trainersdirect.com

The self-studies are available for purchase via Kindle BUT if you send me an email requesting them I will send you a link to where you can download them at no charge.

Please: If your organization, or you, are not interested in information on our on-site training or webinar events, let me know so that you are not contacted. 

Thanks,

Bob Blake
TrainersDirect

----

Our Dynamics of Effective Management & Leadership course is designed to provide the current and the future manager the skills necessary to succeed. The self-paced format allows the student the flexibility to move within the course in order to attain the highest degree of success. 

The course consists of nine independent self-study modules which can be downloaded as a complete unit or as separate modules.

Identifying Your Management Style
As a supervisor or manager, you interact with many people while doing your job. If all of them were exactly alike, this module wouldn't be important. But the people you encounter at work aren't exactly the same. They each have their own predominant patterns of behavior. These patterns of behavior are sometimes referred to as "styles."

To be effective as a supervisor or manager, you must work effectively with a variety of people. That's what this module is about - making choices to effectively deal with situations and people in the workplace. We hope you'll use the information in this module. If you do, we're confident you'll enhance your ability to supervise/manage different types of employees and deal with a variety of situations.

Effective Employee Relations
As a supervisor or manager, you have a significant impact on employee relations. Your actions affect employee morale, turnover, and productivity. This module is designed to give you information useful for managing the employee relations climate in your area of responsibility. Refer to it whenever you foresee especially challenging employee relations situations.

Identifying Your Strengths and Weaknesses  
Organizational self-assessment is only one factor in the improvement equation. Study after study shows that effective managers and supervisors continually assess and seek to improve their own knowledge, skills, and behavior.

This module is about personal self-assessment; organizational self-assessment is covered in another module. This
module is designed to help you:

• Identify and act upon your strengths and weaknesses

• Recognize your impact on others

• Evaluate your standards and ethics

• Handle stress and prevent burnout

Introduction to Leadership  
Leadership is an ageless topic that has been studied from many different viewpoints. In this module, when we use the term "leadership," we are referring to the process of helping to direct and mobilize people and/or their ideas to achieve a shared vision. The elements produced by leadership are movement and change. Throughout the ages, individuals seen as leaders have produced movement and change, sometimes for the better and sometimes not. They have done so in a variety of ways, though their actions always seem to boil down to establishing where a group of people should go, getting the group lined up in that direction and committed to movement, and then energizing the group to overcome the inevitable obstacles it will encounter along the way.

Introduction to Management

  • Accepting responsibility
  • Delegating work
  • Defining job functions
  • Promoting ownership

Most of us have room for improvement in our performance of one or more of these duties. Use this as an opportunity to hone your skills and make optimal use of your responsibility and authority.

Problem Solving & Decision-Making
As a manager or supervisor, your workdays are filled with challenging problems and decisions. Some of the best
practices for efficiently solving problems and arriving at good decisions are distilled within these pages. Though we may be armed with the best practices for either challenge – problem solving or decision-making – occasionally we reap unacceptable results.

Continuously improving your problem-solving and decision-making skills produces the best possible results – with the
available information and within a finite schedule. Good solutions and decisions are the sum of an equation that includes data plus time available to take action plus results.

Wise managers and supervisors recognize that seeking perfection invites organizational gridlock. The purpose for this
module is to help you increase the skills you already have to think straight, stay out of gridlock, and use logical
processes for problem solving and decision making within your group and throughout the organization.

Effective Communication Techniques
Communication and organizational success are directly related. Good communication can have a positive and mobilizing effect on employees. Poor communication can produce powerful negative consequences, such as the following:

 1. Distortion of goals and objectives of the organization.

Through anxiety, distrust, lack of support, rigidity, and other human resource issues created by poor communication,
employees develop patterns of work in which they set their own agenda without regard for the organization's mission. They focus on tasks that are only partially related to the major goals of the organization. For example, employees may devote their work efforts to pet projects instead of working to accomplish organizational objectives.

 2. Misuse of resources.

Another consequence of poor communication is the misuse of an organization's resources. For instance, money may be budgeted for purchases that are only marginally effective, and employees may be assigned tasks that do not take full advantage of their abilities. Because of mistrust, a highly competent employee may be given routine duties and never be allowed to make significant decisions and to advance in the organization.  

Re: Training Needs Analysis

posted at 2/17/2012 8:11 AM EST on Workforce Management
Posts: 1
First: 2/17/2012
Last: 2/17/2012
In Response to Training Needs Analysis:
I have both a Staff and a Management level Needs Analysis that I can email you. Either can be tailored to your needs. Email and I will send you one or both at your request. Bob Blake TrainersDirect www.trainersdirect.com blake@trainersdirect.com
Posted by Bob_Blake



Bob,
I would like to receive a copy of the Staff and Management level Needs Analysis templates. Please email to: jbwinans@bsu.edu
Thanks,
Jerry

Re: Training Needs Analysis

posted at 11/23/2012 2:31 AM EST on Workforce Management
Posts: 1
First: 11/23/2012
Last: 11/23/2012
Bob,I would appreciate both analyses also. Thank you.
Sultan
sidnri@gmail.com

Re: Training Needs Analysis

posted at 11/26/2012 2:30 PM EST on Workforce Management
Posts: 2
First: 11/26/2012
Last: 11/26/2012
In Response to Training Needs Analysis:
I have both a Staff and a Management level Needs Analysis that I can email you. Either can be tailored to your needs. Email and I will send you one or both at your request. Bob Blake TrainersDirect www.trainersdirect.com blake@trainersdirect.com
Posted by Bob_Blake


May I have a copy of both?

Re: Training Needs Analysis

posted at 11/26/2012 2:33 PM EST on Workforce Management
Posts: 2
First: 11/26/2012
Last: 11/26/2012
Would you send  a copy of both the Staff and Management level Needs analysis to pnicometo@glynncounty-ga.gov

Thanks.

Re: Training Needs Analysis

posted at 1/10/2013 1:44 PM EST on Workforce Management
Posts: 1
First: 1/10/2013
Last: 1/10/2013
Hi Bob,

Happy New Year!

Would you send me a copy of both the Staff and Management level Needs analysis to michelle.moone@howard.edu.

Thanks,
 
Michelle
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