Leading for Performance—Working Styles: Dimensions of Social Style™

Today’s workplace continues to grow more culturally, educationally, and philosophically diverse. Research shows that a manager’s ability to deal with different Social Styles has a direct impact on workgroup effectiveness and satisfaction. Managers need to model interpersonal versatility to ensure that their workgroups remain productive. This module will help managers communicate with and respond to different styles, increasing their versatility to work together for top performance.

Leading for PerformanceWorking Styles: Dimensions of Social StyleTM (LFP-WS) is based on the Social Style model, with its four distinct interactive styles: Driver, Analytical, Amiable, and Expressive. Working Styles provides proven skills for identifying Social Style, recognizing each style’s strengths, and developing interpersonal versatility to adapt one’s own behavior and work more effectively with others.

Program Outcomes

A manager’s versatility directly links to work unit performance and satisfaction. Working Styles will benefit any organization by showing a manager how to communicate better and improve teamwork and cooperation.

Approach

Working Styles is a one-day instructor-led module that can be facilitated by Wilson Learning or by a leader-trained in-house professional.

This enables:

  • Face-to-face interaction among the participants and the facilitator
  • True-to-life skills practice with immediate in-person feedback
  • The opportunity for real-time commitment to action

A highly recommended option and a key component in Working Styles is the Social Styles Profile, which will profile the participant by means of Social Style and Versatility.

Enabling Improved Performance

Working Styles features various performance applications, reinforcement, and support tools so participants can fine-tune and apply skills and behaviors on the job. Involving management and training them to coach is key for successful implementation.

To discover how we ensure learning is reinforced and applied for improved performance, read more about our Learning Journeys.

Measurement and Evaluation

Organizations that implement Working Styles have access to a broad range of tools to measure initial behavioral changes and business results. For Working Styles, one approach may be a web-based survey of participants to identify the degree of change and the differences this change makes.

To learn more about measuring the impact of learning, visit Measurement.