Chat with us, powered by LiveChat In the CapraTek: Succession Planning simulation, identify the three best candidates for the plant manager position, interview each candidate, and select your top choice. Create a career develo - EssayAbode

In the CapraTek: Succession Planning simulation, identify the three best candidates for the plant manager position, interview each candidate, and select your top choice. Create a career develo

  • In the CapraTek: Succession Planning simulation, identify the three best candidates for the plant manager position, interview each candidate, and select your top choice. Create a career development plan for the selected candidate.
    Introduction
    For this assessment, you will use the CapraTek: Succession Planning simulation. Using this simulation, featuring a fictitious technology organization, requires you to make decisions about the best candidates for a plant manager position, to interview the candidates, and to select your top candidate in order to create a career development plan.
    Note: The assessments in this course build upon each other, so you are strongly encouraged to complete them in sequence.
    Personal and Professional Goals
    Employees have personal and professional needs. Each employee is an individual who wants to understand who he or she is, to define his or her own professional goals, and to devise a plan for how to achieve these identified goals. It is your responsibility, as a training professional, to assist employees in meeting both their professional and personal goals. Ideally, the employee development system will allow employees to see how their personal goals align with organizational goals. Furthermore, it will set expectations for employees' continued growth within the organization and provide feedback on their progress toward professional and personal goals. For example, an increasingly popular and important method of employee assessment is the 360-degree feedback method. This assessment tool is a multisource assessment that provides the employee with a chance to receive multi-rater feedback from peers, managers, and other coworkers and sources that work directly with the individual, along with a self-evaluation. The results of this assessment assist the employee with identifying and understanding areas for improvement.
    Career Management
    An organization's most valuable resource is its employees. An organization that invests time, money, and human resources in caring for the well-being of employees should receive a return of appreciation that shows through longevity, continued contribution, performance improvement, and ROI. Career management is an important issue for organizations that hope to maintain growth for both the organization and employees. As our world changes, so does the need for the organization to maintain pace with advancements in technology and processes. Organizations must constantly look to the future and anticipate human capital needs. Similarly, employees should be encouraged to think about their own long-term goals and how the organization can help them achieve these goals. A solid career management process will meet both the organization's and employee's needs.
    To develop employees for longer-term, continual growth with an organization, this assessment introduces succession planning and developing a career management plan.
    Preparation
    Complete the CapraTek: Succession Planning simulation activity. Be sure to download your activity log results after completing this simulation; you will use them in this assessment.
    Requirements
    For this assessment, complete the following:
    • Analyze how succession planning supports an organization's strategic training plan.
    • Articulate why candidates were selected to be interviewed.
    • Develop a career development plan for the chosen candidate.
    • Analyze the selection of a candidate to hire for a position.
    • Additional Requirements
    • Written communication: Written communication is in a professional style with correct grammar, usage, and mechanics.
    • APA formatting: Resources and citations are formatted according to current APA style.
    • Headings: Incorporate level headings according to current APA style.
    • Length: A typical response will be 4-5 typed, double-spaced pages.
    • Font and font size: Times New Roman, 12 point.
    • References: Use at least two references.
    • Competencies Measured
      By successfully completing this assessment, you will demonstrate your proficiency in the following course competencies and assessment criteria:
    • Competency 1: Assess an organization's strategic plan for training.
      • Analyze how succession planning supports an organization's strategic training plan.
    • Competency 5: Identify effective organizational processes and roles for employee development.
      • Articulate why candidates were selected to be interviewed.
      • Develop a career development plan for the chosen candidate.
      • Analyze the selection of a candidate to hire for a position.

SESSION 1

Michael Delarosa, Department Manager

What suggestions do you have for improvement in regards to training new supervisors?

Make sure there are opportunities for hands on problem solving. Too much of our training is theory

and supervisors need to be focused on the real-world problems that come up.

What challenges do supervisors in our plants encounter that training would help them resolve?

I'd say that a lot of the challenges we see relate to the diversity on the line. There are a lot of different

types of people working at CapraTek and they don't always play well together.

What are the most important abilities for supervisors in our plants?

Well… the first thing that comes to mind is the ability to find information. Whether it's technical

information or answers for the people who report to you. Another key ability though is the ability to

acquire technical expertise. No one comes in knowing it all, but the ability to gain necessary

knowledge is very important.

What knowledge does a new supervisor need?

A solid understanding of the job itself. Supervisors provide a lot of training to new employees, so they

need to know our systems and processes inside and out.

Should training be conducted face to face, online, or a combination of both?

I'd say a combination. There are some topics that don't really need a classroom experience, but

others where the face-to-face interaction provides as much as the actual training materials. If it had to

be one or the other, I'd definitely say face to face.

Leland Butler, Shift Supervisor

What suggestions do you have for improvement in regards to training new supervisors?

Don't think you can cover this stuff once and be done with it. I went through supervisor training when I

was promoted, but I've gotta admit, I don't remember much of it. That kind of stuff doesn't always

stick unless you're doing it. Having an opportunity to be in the job and then get training on what you're

actually dealing with is better than sitting in a training room listening to someone talk about theories

and policies.

What challenges do supervisors in our plants encounter that training would help them resolve?

Well… like I said, being able to apply the leadership and supervisory ideas in realistic situations. I'm a

hands-on kind of person and it's always better if I can do something, so maybe like getting training on

performance reviews or some of the paperwork we're all dealing with. That would be helpful.

What are the most important abilities for supervisors in our plants?

Communication and flexibility. Hands down. You need to be able to shift gears decisively and

communicate with your team.

What knowledge does a new supervisor need?

He or she needs to know what the role of their team is to the division. How it all fits together. A good

supervisor needs to be able to communicate to the people who report to him what's going on and why

things are the way they are. So, he's got to be in the loop so he can keep his people in the loop.

Should training be conducted face to face, online, or a combination of both?

A lot could be self-paced online, but I think the leadership training would probably be better face to

face. So you can talk to other people about the issues. See how other people might respond

differently than you did.

Lorraine Hughes, Shift Supervisor

What suggestions do you have for improvement in regards to training new supervisors?

Hmmm. That's a tough one. I'm not sure.

What challenges do supervisors in our plants encounter that training would help them resolve?

Creating strong teams. A lot of supervisors… well, a lot who haven't done well… try to rule their teams

instead of leading them. They are too hierarchical and they end up with teams that don't have any

initiative.

What are the most important abilities for supervisors in our plants?

I'd say the ability to communicate and work with a broad range of employees. When I started, I was

the only female supervisor and I knew I had to neutralize the resistance some of my guys had toward

working for a woman. Being able to keep focused on the goals and keep your team focused on the

goal is the key skill here.

What knowledge does a new supervisor need?

They need both the technical skills and the people skills. It's a balance. You need to have both and

you need to be able to be a collaborative problem solver.

Should training be conducted face to face, online, or a combination of both?

Oh without a doubt, face to face! How can we train team building if we aren't in the same room?

Daniel Fox, Shift Supervisor

What suggestions do you have for improvement in regards to training new supervisors?

Less mandatory training on the latest trends in management and more focus on training that helps

solve the problems supervisors are actually facing. Like how to do more with less, or how to be fair to

everyone in these days of diversity and protected classes and all.

What challenges do supervisors in our plants encounter that training would help them resolve?

We're all being asked to do more with less. I don't know if training can help with that, but if it could,

that would be a good place to start.

What are the most important abilities for supervisors in our plants?

The ability to be fair. A lot of times, it seems that the squeaky wheel gets grease… well, if you ask me,

that's bull feathers. The people who just suck it up and go the extra mile… they shouldn't get

overlooked because someone else is pitching a fit.

What knowledge does a new supervisor need?

What the bottom line is… what does the policy say, how's it going to be applied, what are the

expectations from the brass. You obviously need to know the job, but I'm assuming that was covered

in hiring or promoting.

Should training be conducted face to face, online, or a combination of both?

The more online; the better. That way, a person can do it at his or her own pace on his or her own

schedule. The thing that drives me nuts about training is when my people have a problem and I can't

deal with it because I'm in some training class.

Sandra Tucker, Shift Supervisor

What suggestions do you have for improvement in regards to training new supervisors?

Maybe have some follow-up? I feel like we get training when we're hired, or when we move into a

new job, but if there was some way it could be ongoing without taking up too much time.

What challenges do supervisors in our plants encounter that training would help them resolve?

That's a great question! Let's see… conflict management probably. There's a lot of diversity in all of

our teams: gender, racial, orientation… and knowing how to keep the people we supervise working as

a well oiled machine is really important and really difficult.

What are the most important abilities for supervisors in our plants?

To get things done. We're getting the word from above, the plant manager, the executive leaders, and

it's up to the supervisors to translate that to the line workers and make it happen.

What knowledge does a new supervisor need?

Obviously, a good supervisor needs to know what the jobs are for every member of the team. I'd go

so far as to say a great supervisor should be able to step in for any one of the people who report to

him or her. But there's more to it than just the actual job… you need to know how to get things done.

A good supervisor needs to be able to anticipate problems and solve them before they happen.

Should training be conducted face to face, online, or a combination of both?

It's going to depend on what the material is. Some stuff is great online, some stuff, I like having the

experience of being able to work with other supervisors and collaborate. I always feel like there's a

bond between people I go to training with… like I know what this person is like because we went

through something together.

Related Tags

Academic APA Assignment Business Capstone College Conclusion Course Day Discussion Double Spaced Essay English Finance General Graduate History Information Justify Literature Management Market Masters Math Minimum MLA Nursing Organizational Outline Pages Paper Presentation Questions Questionnaire Reference Response Response School Subject Slides Sources Student Support Times New Roman Title Topics Word Write Writing