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A MANAGER’S GUIDE Using StrengthsFinder for Personal Development

Strengths-based Manager's Guide to Personal Development

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Page 1: Strengths-based Manager's Guide to Personal Development

A MANAGER’S GUIDEUsing StrengthsFinder for Personal Development

Page 2: Strengths-based Manager's Guide to Personal Development

Managers account for 70% of the variance in

employee engagement

Actively disengaged employees cost S’pore S$6 billion in lost productivity

9 in 10 people struggle to be effective managers

unless developed

13 in 15 employees worldwide are disengaged or actively

disengaged at work

Page 3: Strengths-based Manager's Guide to Personal Development

“Empowering managers to focus on their strengths and those of their teams is key in increasing employee engagement.

- Victor Seet

Page 4: Strengths-based Manager's Guide to Personal Development

3 STEP GUIDE TO GROWTH

1. Know and understand your dominant StrengthsFinder themes

2. Take ownership of your talent themes

3. Aim your strengths towards your goals as a manager

Page 5: Strengths-based Manager's Guide to Personal Development

STEP ONE: UNDERSTAND YOUR DOMINANT THEMES AS A MANAGER

➤ Dig into all the resources you can find to help you understand your Top 5 CliftonStrengths themes

➤ Reflect on your usual behaviour, habits, and past experiences

➤ Key Question: can you connect your StrengthsFinder talent themes to your past experiences, patterns of thought, decision-making processes, or habits? Try doing this for each of your Top 5 CliftonStrengths themes.

Page 6: Strengths-based Manager's Guide to Personal Development

STEP TWO: OWN YOUR DOMINANT THEMES AS A MANAGER

➤ Ownership comes when we start to accept and view our StrengthsFinder lenses in a positive way. Ownership drives us to action.

➤ If we dislike our StrengthsFinder themes or are skeptical about them, we won’t be able to aim them toward specific goals we have in our work and personal lives.

➤ Key Question: Can you link your dominant talent themes to an ‘identity’ you can assume at work? How does assuming this identity help build greater ownership in your role as a manager?

Page 7: Strengths-based Manager's Guide to Personal Development

STEP THREE: AIM YOUR DOMINANT THEMES AS A MANAGER

➤ Understand the negative impact that our strengths can have on our team members at work.

➤ Connect our StrengthsFinder themes with specific, actionable goals tied to broader work outcomes.

➤ Key Questions:

➤ In which areas do you tend to impose your thoughts and decisions on your team?

➤ How do your themes tend to manifest in times of stress?

➤ What is your natural leadership style, and how does this relate to your strengths?

Page 8: Strengths-based Manager's Guide to Personal Development

STEP THREE: AIM YOUR DOMINANT THEMES AS A MANAGER

➤ Using the SMART goal framework, can you set a goal for each of your strengths?

➤ For example:

➤ Activator: Connect with 50 new organisations within a year and convert 20% of them into clients

➤ Communication: Share with and influence 2,000 people in Asia to do the StrengthsFinder profiling assessment through Strengths School within a year

➤ Strategic: Get recurring business from 80% of our existing clients within a year

Page 9: Strengths-based Manager's Guide to Personal Development

“A Strengths-Based Manager leading by example will have taken the vital first step in engaging his or her team members.

- Victor Seet