Consultation
(noun)
A conference for the exchange of information and advice.
Examples of Consultation in the following topics:
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Overview of Inputs to Strategic Planning
- Strategic plans can take the form of business or marketing plans, and consultants and industry experts are used in their development.
- Industry experts: Whether internal employees or external consultants, a few individuals with extensive experience in a given industry are valuable resources in the planning process.
- Consultants: Consultants are commonly brought in during strategy formulation and for a variety of other reasons.
- Review the various tools for effective plan development, including stakeholder input, consultants, and data collection
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Decision-Making Styles
- He does not consult with anyone else or seek information in any form.
- Consultation: The leader explains the situation and provides relevant information to a group or individual, and together they generate and evaluate many alternatives.
- The leader may consult with others before the meeting in order to prepare his case and generate alternatives that are acceptable to everyone involved.
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Financial Rewards for Managers
- These may include coaching, higher education, mentoring, reflective supervision, technical training, and consultation.
- Consultation – Consulting assesses employee abilities through observing performance, reflecting upon these observations, and suggesting methods for improvement.
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Leadership and Decision Making: The Vroom-Yetton-Jago Model
- CI – Consultative Type 1: The leader seeks input from select followers individually based on their relevant knowledge.
- CII – Consultative Type 2: Similar to CI, except the leader shares the problem with relevant followers as a group and seeks their ideas and suggestions.
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Behaviorism: Follett, Munsterberg, and Mayo
- Mary Parker Follett (September 3, 1868 – December 18, 1933) was an American social worker, management consultant, and pioneer in the fields of organizational theory and organizational behavior.
- She also distinguished herself in the field of management by being sought out by President Theodore Roosevelt as his personal consultant on managing not-for-profit, non-governmental, and voluntary organizations.
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Team Roles
- The consultant Meredith Belbin studied high-performing teams and devised a typology based on how members contributed to the group's success.
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Team Building
- The human resources department may coordinate team building, though sometimes companies hire consultants or trainers skilled in facilitating those types of activities.
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Shared Leadership
- Team members consult each other in a group that employs shared leadership.
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The Organizational Chart
- New employees or managers can then know with whom to consult about particular issues, as well as understand the distribution of authority within the company.
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Employee Selection
- Some organizations may hire consultants or firms that specialize in developing personnel-selection systems rather than developing them internally.