Real Client
This is a workshop designed to
utilize the concepts, models and skills learned in Flawless Consulting
Parts 1 & 2 in a real world / real client situation. It takes the
participants the next step by allowing them to consult “for real” with
real managers or other clients in their own organization.
Here’s how it works.
In advance of the workshop, real clients from
within the organization are contacted and asked to volunteer to
participate in the workshop. Volunteer is a key concept in the
success of this workshop. These clients must have a real issue
that they would like to have addressed, and have to be willing to work
within the schedule and framework of the workshop design.
Once the volunteer clients (usually 3) are
identified, the Designed Learning consultant who will facilitate the
workshop will contact them and discuss their real problem. The end
result of this discussion is a one paragraph description of their
situation. The problem may have to be “scoped down” to be analyzed
within the time limits of the workshop. Their commitment to the
workshop schedule is also secured in these discussions.
Clients are told to expect real feedback and
recommendations about how to improve their situation, that this feedback
will be skewed heavily toward management issues, and that their own role
in managing the situation will be discussed.
One limitation of this design is the physical
proximity of the clients to the workshop site. It is important
that the consultants have access to the clients place of work during the
workshop.
The workshop.
This is a four-day combination workshop including
all the material from Flawless Consulting Skills Parts 1&2.
At the workshop, the participating consultants are
arranged in teams corresponding to the available number of clients.
Each team is given a paragraph description of their client’s situation
and they prepare for their first (Contracting) meeting with the client.
On the second day of the workshop, the clients come
to the conference room p and meet privately with their team of
consultants to agree on how to proceed (Contracting).
The third day of the workshop is spent
investigating the client’s situation (Discovery). On site
observations, interviews, access to information and people who work in
the client’s environment make this possible.
The data is organized, feedback messages prepared,
and recommendations created.
On the fourth day, the clients return to the workshop and hear the
findings of their consulting team, and next steps are discussed
(Feedback and Decision-Making).
This may be where the consulting team’s
relationship with the client on this project ends, or they may agree to
stay involved and engage in Implementation following the workshop.
Further involvement is a separate issue for negotiation and is not
required in the workshop design.
The benefits.
When real clients are used, real organizational
issues get addressed.
When real clients are used, the stakes are raised.
Participants take the exercises very seriously.
Even though the clients and situations are real,
the participants are still in a laboratory and there is more room for
learning and skill building.
Real clients learn about the methodology that the
consultants are learning to employ. They become educated as to the
processes, the consulting role of staff, and what kind of output to
expect in future encounters. Very often they become advocates for
the internal consultants with their colleagues.
Long term continuing relationships with these
clients are often created. Often the consulting team continues
with the project after the workshop seeing it through to completion.
For additional information you may contact Phil
Grosnick, President Designed Learning Inc.