Course Methodology
This highly practical and interactive course uses models, practical
exercises, case studies, presentations and group discussions to develop
managerial problem solving and decision making capabilities.Participants in a
group will be challenging other groups' findings and results and will be
defending theirs. The use of participants’ real work situations adds
practicality and facilitates transfer of learning. Participants will safely
practice learned techniques which will then be easily applicable at the
workplace
Course Objectives
By the end of the course, participants will be able to:
- Explain the structured model for systematically
addressing problems and decisions
- Practice the use of key tools and techniques for
analyzing and solving problems
- Conduct a comprehensive root cause analysis of any
problem
- Demonstrate the use of several disciplines in
decision making
- Identify various creative idea generating tools
which can be practically applied at the workplace
- Apply influencing techniques to enable better
decision making and implementation
Target Audience
Team leaders, department managers and supervisors who are involved in
leading and participating in solving their teams’ problems, as well as making
and implementing decisions.
Target Competencies
- Problem solving
- Decision making
- Creativity
- Situational analysis
- Influencing
- Leadership
Structured problem solving
- Definitions, principles and overview
- Direct relationship between problem solving and
decision making
- Types of problem solving
- Problem solving mindsets and attitudes
- Developing the questioning mindset with team
members
- Problem ownership
- Drilling down complex problems into progressively
smaller parts
- The 6 step problem solving method
- Classifying and prioritizing problems
Understanding and analyzing problems
- Techniques for recognizing problems
- Appreciating the magnitude of problems facing us
- Isolating causes from symptoms
- Data collection and analysis
- Pareto analysis
- 'SWOT' analysis
Root cause analysis
- When is it necessary to undergo a wide scale
root cause analysis
- Root cause analysis: the interrelation
- Root cause analysis: the process
- Cause and effect analysis: key points of the
process
- Three types of corrective actions
Decision making
- Everyday decision making techniques
- Principles of decision making
- Components of optimum decision making
- Using critical thinking as an aid to decisions
- Different tools for decision making
- Subjective versus objective decision making
- The uncertainty problem
Creativity and problem solving
- Intelligence versus creativity
- The role of creativity in problem solving
- Mental blockers of creativity
- Brainstorming: different techniques
- Opposite thinking and 'what if'
- Mind mapping
Problem solving and people
- Leading the problem solving effort
- Solving people related problems
- Removing the 'groupthink' effect from the team
- Team problem solving: ensuring participation,
agreement, and implementation of the solution
- Behaviors that influence or block problem solving
- Convincing stakeholders with your solutions