The GBMC Project Management Tools and Techniques course is ideal for anyone looking for a certificate in project management. Whether you're an experienced project manager or just starting out, this course provides invaluable knowledge and actionable strategies to elevate your project management proficiency. Covering everything from project planning to execution and monitoring, this course equips you with the skills for effective project management. Enroll today and advance towards becoming a skilled project manager!
Dive into a transformative journey with our cutting-edge Effective Manager Training program. Designed to empower managers with essential skills, this immersive experience blends practical coaching techniques with strategic insights. Elevate your leadership prowess, foster team synergy, and drive exceptional results. Join us and embark on a journey towards managerial excellence today!
Google set out to determine what makes a manager great at Google. But first, a research team tried to prove the opposite: that managers actually don’t matter, that the quality of a manager didn’t impact a team’s performance. This hypothesis was based on an early belief held by some of Google’s leaders and engineers that managers are, at best, a necessary evil, and at worst, a layer of bureaucracy.
The team defined manager quality based on two quantitative measures: manager performance ratings and manager feedback from Google’s annual employee survey. This data quickly revealed that managers did matter: teams with great managers were happier and more productive.
But knowing that managers mattered didn’t explain what made managers great. So the team asked employees about their managers. By going through the comments from the annual employee survey and performance evaluations, the team found ten common behaviors across high-scoring managers. The researchers also conducted double blind interviews with a group of the best and worst managers to find illustrative examples of what these two groups were doing differently.
R. Cole, P. Eklund, and G. Stumme. Principles of Data Mining and Knowledge Discovery. Proc. PKDD 2000, volume 1910 of LNAI, page 367-374. Heidelberg-Berlin, Springer, (2000)
M. Waldner, C. Pirchheim, and D. Schmalstieg. IPT/EDT '08: Proceedings of the 2008 workshop on Immersive projection technologies/Emerging display technologiges, page 1--4. New York, NY, USA, ACM, (2008)
P. Barreau. Gestions hospitalières, (October 2008)D. Anzieu, Le Moi-peau, Dunod, 19Ub.
M. Benasayag, La Fragilite, La Decouverte, 2007.
Contact auteur Sainte-Anne Form@tion p.barreau@ch-sainte-anne.fr.
R. Cole, P. Eklund, and G. Stumme. Principles of Data Mining and Knowledge Discovery. Proc. PKDD 2000, volume 1910 of LNAI, page 367-374. Heidelberg-Berlin, Springer, (2000)Part of cole03document.
R. Cole, and G. Stumme. Conceptual Structures: Logical, Linguistic, and Computational Issues. Proc. ICCS '00, volume 1867 of LNAI, page 438-452. Heidelberg, Springer, (2000)Part of cole03document.
R. Cole, and G. Stumme. Conceptual Structures: Logical, Linguistic, and Computational Issues. Proc. ICCS '00, volume 1867 of LNAI, page 438-452. Heidelberg, Springer, (2000)Part of cole03document.