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How to maintain attention in online meetings

How to maintain attention in online meetings

by Peter Grabuschnig | Jan 10, 2023 | Best Practice, Leadership Tips, learning effectiveness | 0 comments

Read this article to find out how you can get everyone to listen to you in online meetings and what you need to keep in mind in a hybrid setting.

How to maintain attention in online meetings

You know it – sometimes you are leading an online meeting and you get the feeling that the participants do not pay enough attention to you. Even if the topics discussed seem exciting to you, it is sometimes simply not possible to keep everyone on the ball. Read this article to find out how you can get everyone to listen to you in online meetings and what you need to keep in mind in a hybrid setting.

The beginning is everything

The very start of the meeting is important. In a virtual context, we often lack “arriving in the room.” That makes it more important to pave the way for a pleasant start: make brief small talk and ask how people are doing. This can often be enough before jumping right into the topic. Activation methods, which you should use thoughtfully and appropriately, have a further influence on attention.

Clarifying expectations

It is also important to clarify the expectations of the meeting and its process right from the start. If you want people to listen and participate, you should make this clear from the beginning and mention that the meeting will not be a frontal lecture. Then your participants can prepare themselves. You should always avoid monologues – keep your participants active, let them talk and discuss, contribute actively. This way you will have their full attention right from the start.

Activation tools

To activate people, you can use simple techniques that also work well in face-to-face meetings. Ask lots of questions – These can be short chat questions that you address directly to individuals to get their attention. They can also be rhetorical questions that encourage participants to think. Short surveys using tools such as Slido or Mentimeter, as well as scale questions (e.g. from 1-10) also work very well.

Observe the energy Level

People love to self-assess. This can be a question about a specific topic, but it can also be a question about the energy level after some time in the meeting to decide if it needs a break. Break-out sessions create interaction and get quieter participants to become active. Make sure you have the right group size (never assign less than 3 and more than 5 participants to one team).

Also, try to make the content as interesting as possible. Think about what is appropriate for your audience and use storytelling to bring your facts and figures to life. Relevant examples will help you relate to your target audience. Dale Carnegie said nearly 100 years ago, “Talk to people about themselves and they’ll listen to you for hours.”

How to keep everyone in mind

As a facilitator, you should always keep an eye on the group, proactively address quieter participants, and cut frequent talkers short to the extent appropriate. For larger groups, you should work online with the “raise your hand” function. This allows you to keep a list of speakers and always see whose turn it is next. In addition, activate the view of the participants to always see all names and try to actively address people whose camera image you do not see. Otherwise you tend to address only the people you see in front of you.

Attention keeping in hybrid mode

Hybrid meetings bring additional challenges. The most important thing is not to forget the online participants. It’s best to have a separate screen for the video overview that everyone can see. In addition, practice has shown that an extra moderator on site for the virtual session is very beneficial. This can also simply be someone from the group who puts on the hat to look after the participants. In most cases, the overall quality of the meeting will suffer if you’re running the meeting and managing the virtual participants on the side.

As you can see, it is definitely possible to make your online meeting so exciting that your participants want to listen to you. Try out some of the tools next time!

Peter Grabuschnig

Peter Grabuschnig

Trainer, Coach & MDI Partner

Peter is a partner and trainer at MDI, advising major international corporations on implementing hybrid work policies and building a hybrid work and leadership culture.

He is considered an expert in training design. With his Webinar Guru Framework he has developed a tool that helps to design training content for successful and activating virtual learning.

  • LinkedIn

By the way, Peter will also be moderating the Leadership Horizon 2023:

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Workation evaluation – lessons we have learned so far

Workation evaluation – lessons we have learned so far

by Jana Wölfl | Nov 28, 2022 | Agile Leadership, Best Practice, MDI Inside | 0 comments

Vacation during working hours seems like a dream – but is it really?

We provide a workation evaluation, weigh the pros and cons and look at the lessons we have learned so far.

* Workation evaluation – Lessons Learned so far

Workation – Work and Vacation – has become a popular tool in recent years for companies to give employees a little relief. After all, who doesn’t want to escape the gray daily work life for a few weeks?

In this article, you’ll learn a little more about what we have learned from our workation experiences so far, and what possible consequences it could entail.

Work on vacation

At first glance, it seems strange to put the two words work and vacation together. Normally, when we are on vacation, we don’t want to think about our job, we want to switch off.

In the past, digital nomads in particular, i.e. remote workers, were not tied to a specific workplace. But in the age of digitalization and technological progress, more employees get the opportunity – regardless of the industry – to work from somewhere else.

Workation is about escaping your work routine.

For a limited time, employees can travel to a specific country and do their work from there. Whether from the beach, a big city or the mountains – the location doesn’t matter. The only important thing is that the Internet connection is stable enough and that the agreed times are adhered to. The rest is mostly up to the employees.

Is all that glitters gold?

Workation evaluation – Lessons Learned so far

Vacation during working hours seems like a dream at first. But is this concept really ideal? We weigh the pros and cons.

Pros:

  • The advantages are obvious. You discover new places and experience a different culture.
  • In addition to the usual work tasks, you can relax a little.
  • Change of scenery: Everyone needs a change from the usual four office walls.
  • Travel stimulates creativity. New impulses arise from new impressions.
  • Flexibility – employees are free to decide where they want to work from.
  • Traveling with other team members can additionally be a good way to get to know each other better and build a stronger team

2022 Facts and figures about workation

Clearly, the concept of Workation is extremely attractive to employees.

But we also come across some benefits for companies themselves. According to statistics from workation.com

  • 93% of employees are more productive than before.
  • This increases the performance of remote working by 20% overall.
  • In turn, the company saves per remote employee $11,000 per year.
  • In addition, 86% of Millennials want more flexibility in the workplace.
  • Workation can be a great solution to create more agility and increase employee satisfaction.

Cons:

  • Complete relaxation is not guaranteed. You probably think about work most of the time and so you can’t switch off completely. Especially when your job is hectic and you have a lot to do it’s hard to enjoy the vacation part of workation.
  • Your technical equipment – laptop, cables, etc. – adds extra baggage.
  • If the Internet connection is not stable, you can hardly do your job.

Maintaining a better work-life balance with workation

In the end, however, it is worth giving the concept of workation a chance. In most cases, employees return more relaxed and can continue working with renewed energy. Complications can’t be avoided, but after all, they also arise during normal travel.

We at MDI have already tested workation ourselves. If you want to know how it went, you can read about it here 🙂

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3 tips for efficient and sustainable OKR results

3 tips for efficient and sustainable OKR results

by Gunther Fürstberger | Oct 17, 2022 | Best Practice, Leadership Tips, Training Insights | 0 comments

3 tips for efficient and sustain

Do you want to learn more about OKR – Objectives & Key Results? Here are 3 leadership tips for efficient and sustainable OKR results.

1. Reserve the meeting dates for a year in advance

Long-term OKR scheduling

Long-term scheduling makes it easier to adjust to spontaneous changes on short notice. OKR meetings should become a routine. Habits, once achieved, require little energy. When team members have learned that, for example, the OKR quarterly planning meeting is always on the last Thursday of the quarter and an OKR check-in meeting is scheduled every other Thursday in between – OKR becomes a no-brainer.

OKR should become a no-brainer

Experience has shown that only the timely meetings are a challenge due to many other planned events. If you always send the appointment invitations for the entire next year, the company will get used to it and you will have more energy for content-related work.

Very practical are serial appointments with individual corrections, e.g. if they fall on holidays or on the Christmas vacation.

2. Max. 8 participants in the quarterly OKR planning meeting

The optimal OKR meeting size

4 – 8 participants are an optimal size for quarterly planning meetings, in order to consider sufficiently different perspectives on the one hand and to be able to discuss actively and time-efficiently on the other. However, if the team consists of fewer members, that is also OK. 2-3 people can manage with much less time.

In planning meetings at higher hierarchical levels, such as when developing the OKR set for the entire company, more people often want to be present. This is understandable, since the quarterly priorities are set for the company.

However, discussions with more than 8 people can be lengthy or lead to different levels of participation.

Take turns and have a OKR rotation schedule

One proven way to keep the number of participants low is for owners of similar departments or functions to take turns participating. If you personally do not have a place in the next meeting, you can make your wishes known in advance via the backlog list or another representative.

All hands OKR meeting

Never has it been more important to adjust continually to a dynamic environment. OKR proves to be a great method to overcome crisis situations – read more about it here. 

3. Visualize the progress also during the quarter 

Discuss your progress regularly

Choosing well-worded OKRs is one side of success, the other is discussing progress regularly, e.g. bi-weekly. For this, it helps to visibly grade progress. Some prefer to work with color codes from the beginning. I.e. all Key Results start in red and partly reach the colors orange, yellow and green during the quarter. Others prefer to work with the numbers 0,0 – 1 during the quarter and use the colors only at the quarterly review. A third possibility are progress bars, where the filled area increases step by step.

Progress visualization increases motivation because messenger substances such as dopamine and endorphins are released in the brain.

Mag. Gunther Fürstberger

Mag. Gunther Fürstberger

CEO | MDI Management Development International

Gunther Fürstberger is a management trainer, author and CEO of Metaforum and MDI – a global consulting company providing solutions for leadership development. His main interest is to make the world a better place through excellent leadership. He has worked for clients including ABB, Abbvie, Boehringer Ingelheim, DHL, Hornbach, PWC and Swarovski. His core competence is leadership in digital transformation. He gained his own leadership experience as HR Manager of McDonald’s Central Europe/Central Asia.  At the age of 20 he already started working as a trainer.

  • LinkedIn

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Third Workplace – A Plea for More Flexibility

Third Workplace – A Plea for More Flexibility

by Aline Deporter | Sep 20, 2022 | Best Practice, Leadership Tips, MDI Inside | 0 comments

Third Workplace – A plea for more flexibility

And here I am, sitting in Croatia, on the decked patio, at the dining table with my work laptop and a sleeping cat – that came with the all-inclusive holiday home ?

Work from Anywhere

Spontaneously I decided in the morning to have a “Work from Anywhere” day instead of my current holiday day – because the weather is not looking inviting. Instead, I put my holiday day on next Monday. With bright sunshine, a day at the beach is simply more fun and the relaxation factor is much higher.

Transparent communication

Luckily, our CEO feels the same way – one WhatsApp message later, the plan is set. Partner and holiday companions have flown out, so the necessary rest is guaranteed. Let’s get started!

I immediately informed our team via Microsoft Teams message @all – about the changes in my availability. When you are not visibly on site, transparent communication is all the more important. Some team members quickly took the opportunity to clarify urgent issues with me.

About Aline

Aline joined MDI in 2020 as a Marketing Manager with over 10 years of B2B marketing experience. She is primarily responsible for the overall coordinated organisation of MDI’s advertising activities and the management of marketing projects. This includes, among others, the MDI Business Unit SDI as well as Leadership Horizon and personalist.at. Aline is a strong marketing all-rounder with a passion for leadership development, digital transformation and event organisation.

In this article, Aline shares her personal experiences and some “Third Place Working” learnings.

What do I need to work effectively from anywhere?

  • A good internet connection (this is probably not a big surprise). It’s best to clarify the internet performance again by phone or email directly before you go on holiday
  • Shade when working outdoors. That way the laptop screen is not blinding
  • An extension cable (sounds trivial, but this way you can really work from anywhere)
  • If you have the possibility of renting a holiday home/hotel room with a furnished workstation or at least a PC screen, it’s even better
  • Think of enough screen breaks
  • A certain time structure and work packages with breaks
  • Water, coffee, refreshments of choice

Get to know your own working style

Personally, fewer distractions are better for me. By that I mean children, family, friends, etc. In other words, people who are not working with me at the same time. Because I am definitely a “people person”. If other people who are not working talk to me frequently, I get distracted more quickly.

So my tip here would be: get to know your own working style. I am very creative, for example, in moving forms of transport (plane, train, bus, car, etc.) or when things are happening passively around me (coffee, park, waiting room, etc.).

It shouldn’t be too quiet for me. I love music in the background and vary the style of music according to the motivation I need (chill out always works, classical music helps me to concentrate, 90s songs motivate me and encourage me to sing along loudly).

It’s also good to have several seating options so that you can remain at least somewhat ergonomic. A pool to cool down and get some exercise in between is of course a big plus. But a yoga mat or a short walk will also do.

Pro Tip – Coworking Spaces:

If there is little/no opportunity to work quietly or more ergonomically, look for co-working spaces (with daily or weekly rates) in your area. There are now an increasing number of them. Apart from the better quality of work, you can network during breaks and make new, exciting contacts.

In my area, currently Pula, there is for example the Club Kotac with free admission, air conditioned, fast internet (30/20 Mbit/s), 10-18h Mon – Fri. A great alternative!

Currently, however, I don’t want to abandon the cat, so I’ll stay ? .

There are already some search tools to help you with your quest here:

  • coworker.com
  • coworkbooking.com
  • heydesk.com
  • instantoffices.com
  • desksnear.me
  • coworkingnomads.com

Flexibility as a motivating factor for work?

Employer Attractiveness – Trends and Tendencies

By coincidence, the new issue of Personalmanager is lying next to me at the moment. The main theme of the issue is “Employer Attractiveness”.

So, what makes an employer attractive to me?

I don’t have to think about that at all: definitely high flexibility, personal responsibility, fair compensation as well as opportunities for further development, the team and the common purpose. If you look at the latest surveys on this topic, then I am not alone in this.

Needs of Gen Z & Millenials

Deloitte surveyed 23,000 Gen Z’s and Millennials about their workplace experience. The strongest topics communicated were purpose & financial security. Due to the current global situation, both generations are worried and uncertain. This has an impact on loyalty. Almost 40% (Generation Z) want to leave their job in the next 2 years.

As an employer, you should take a closer look here. Flexible working hours & locations, purpose as well as fair remuneration should be at the top of the list of must-haves.

The Hybrid Work Concept

We at MDI have been embracing the hybrid work concept, also known as the synchronous hybrid model, for some time now. Our team likes to work this way and, according to a study by Cisco, it is also very popular with other employees.

Specifically, this means a mixture of office, home office and third workplace (on the road). MDI’s hybrid work concept currently includes 60% office, 40% home office and 3 weeks third workplace (e.g. workation). I combine one week of this with a week’s holiday in Croatia, for example. The other two weeks will be spent by two other MDI colleagues and me in Greece (Rhodes). This strengthens team bonds and increases the motivation to work on location.

Open and authentic corporate culture

Of course, the respective work concept has to fit the company. The larger, the more organisationally complex.

The right way will look different for every organisation. However, I think it is important to have a clear, open and authentic corporate culture.

Potential new employees should know exactly which working concept applies and which working modalities have to be dealt with. That way, they can get a clear picture of the future work in advance. As a company, this can also reduce the fluctuation rate.

Trust & Flexibility –
Third Workplace – A plea for more flexibility

I nevertheless plead (where possible) for more flexibility. As an organisation and/or leader, have the courage to trust – because flexibility boosts mutual trust.

In my opinion, employees should be given the highest possible flexibility in order to even be able to fulfil their role as a strong and reliable member of the team.

From my own experience, I can report that this increases motivation and loyalty immensely. And sometimes all it takes is a simple WhatsApp message …

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Third Workplace – can you really work from anywhere?

Third Workplace – can you really work from anywhere?

by Anja Franzmeyer | Aug 22, 2022 | Best Practice, MDI Inside | 0 comments

Third Workplace: Can you really work from anywhere?

You don’t need a crystal ball to know one thing: The future world of work is flexible!

Whether home office, workation, third workplace or work from anywhere:

As a company today, you have to be willing to experiment and remain open to trying new things. At MDI, we always strive to maximize our team development and the possibilities of hybrid working! That’s why in spring 2022, we introduced the possibility of 3 weeks of workation / third place working for the entire MDI team. 

How this has been managed so far and whether you can really work from anywhere is discussed by Anja, one of our project managers:

About Anja

Since December 2021, Anja has been successfully working as a project manager at MDI. She ensures the smooth running and organization of a variety of international leadership trainings.

Anja is a true world explorer #globetrotter. She loves to travel and most of the time she even does it on her own. Culinary and culture are at the top of her list of preferences. She also photographs and documents her experiences on Instagram.

Experience Review:

Work from anywhere: Can you really work from anywhere?

Office, home office, third place working – there are more and more options that companies can offer their employees to pursue their work. For many, like me, being able to work from the home office is still a privilege. Also, having the freedom to work from anywhere in the world is nothing short of a miracle – provided the internet connection holds up.

Where is your Comfort Zone?

Even though I appreciate the possibility to work from home, I tend to go to the office – a clear separation between work and private life, a wonderful team and the possibility to talk to others personally – even about private things – lure me there every day and sweeten my workday. All the more surprising was my own reaction when I got the opportunity for Workation – excitement!

Workation – but from where?

As soon as the opportunity was communicated to us – the team – I started making plans with my friends who live abroad. Especially with longer distances it is more difficult to visit for a weekend or to take time off at the same time. With the possibility of Third Place Working, we could continue to pursue our work, but enjoy the end of the day and weekends together – just like before.

Reality Check – Third Workplace
Can you really work from anywhere?

A perfect plan, right? But before I dare to try Workation outside of Austria, I did a trial run and nestled myself in my family’s home in Upper Austria for a few days to work. My sister and I have done home office together before and it worked out wonderfully.

This time, however, I was on my own and it turned out to be quite a bit more difficult to maintain the boundaries that had been set up with respect to those who were not at work. It turned out to be very tempting to go down to the garden or stop by for a coffee after all.

My experience

As much as I enjoyed being with my family for a few days, I found for me that I can concentrate better when I work together with others – location independent.

Note: Third Place Working is not possible for every position in a company, so offering Workation adds a bit more planning for the individual and the possibility of an imbalance in the team.

What serves you next?

MDI’s Leadership Lab: Unlocking the Future of Leadership Training

by Florian Biedermann | 25. March 2025 | Leadership and AI, Leadership in the digital transformation, MDI Inside | 0 Comments

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Self-reflection for leaders – the L&D Daily

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by Mag. Eva Ayberk | Jul 25, 2022 | Best Practice, Leadership Tips | 0 comments

Self-reflection for leaders – the L&D Daily

An important form of learning for leaders is self-reflection in order to be in tune with yourself and function well as a pillar of support for the team. However, what if as a leader you just can’t find time in your calendar to take a break just for you?

That’s exactly what the L&D Daily is for.

At the end of each day, you take a structured look back at what happened with the help of a few questions (Inspect). From this you then derive a course of action for your further leadership (Adapt), which contributes to self-improvement.

 

Your L&D Daily can look like this:

Iteration

Rapid change actions and the review afterwards create the iteration, triggering an ongoing L&D process.

This is useful for learning from leadership practice to leadership practice.

Want to learn more?

In our book

“Agile Leadership Development” (German Edition)

you will find some more useful articles, Tips and tools. 

… or join our LinkedIn Leadership Community:

What serves you next?

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or maybe this?

Dubai, Madrid and soon Bangkok – around the world with MDI

Dubai, Madrid and soon Bangkok – around the world with MDI

by Alina Helmlinger, Marina Begic, Nicole Altenberger | Jul 7, 2022 | Best Practice, International leadership development, Training Insights | 0 comments

Turbulent camel rides in Dubai, a heated scavenger hunt at the Madrid Palace and an exciting business rally

our L&D Consultants Marina Begic, Nicole Altenberger and Alina Helmlinger have experienced quite a bit over the past few months. Here they describe how it all came about, what exactly they did there, and what’s awaiting next for them…

Dubai, Madrid and soon Bangkok – around the world with MDI

Pitch 

In late November 2021, we were invited by a client to participate in an RFP for 4 regional meetings – an event of sales executives. Since this was a newly acquired company that we hadn’t worked with before, we didn’t think our chances were particularly high. In most tenders there is time pressure, we know that. Despite the end of the year, the high implementation risk (first major f2f events after Corona) and the usual pre-Christmas stress, we accepted the challenge. After all, this is exactly our playground 😉

At the pitch, we were able to convince them with an innovative presentation using an e-learning tool and a concept based on the 70-20-10 model, where the focus is on maximum practical benefit and integrated transfer assurance.

Here our agile mdi mindset was really beneficial. After receiving the confirmation that we won the project,  we were asked to start the planning right before Christmas – which was also new for us 😉 

Scope clarification

The detailed program was developed in close coordination with an internal project team and adapted to the current needs of the Western Europe+Canada and Africa+Middle East regions. The conference program was developed around the following guiding themes:

Leadership

High Performing Teams

Coaching

Here we were able to apply our experience from years of international rollouts and demonstrate our leadership development expertise. It was important for us and the international project team to always keep the key themes in mind, while at the same time considering the needs of the regions. To this end, regular project meetings were held with international and regional working groups during the cocreation phase, which lasted approximately 4-5 months. A quick response, high passion and motivation of all participants characterized the cooperation.

In the end, we had an exciting 2-day program filled with keynotes, panel discussions and goal-oriented activities- in addition to content inputs, there was also an experience factor.

Empowerment 

In the course of working with up to a total of 100 people, we were not only able to get to know the needs of the clients very well, but also the corporate culture. Thus, content and activities were created with and by all project members. The goal was to involve the target group as much as possible, both in the cocreation phase and then on stage itself.

The overall concept was developed with three levels of impact in mind:

Head

Hands

Heart

The interaction of these three levels of impact can be seen in this graphic.

The guiding themes of all events were identical, but based on cultural, corporate and situational backgrounds, the agenda was customized and tailored to the group of people on site.

Learning Objectives

The project was designed to address the following leadership learning objectives:

  • Leaders who think strategically and lead their companies with strong business acumen
  • Leaders who manage their company through their people and develop high-performing teams
  • Leaders who are flexible in their approach to inspire, coach and bring out the best in each member of their team

Agenda

A varied agenda with a mix of diverse methods provided the framework for exciting exchanges and experiential values:

  • Key Notes: Plenary on stage in front of all participants. A mixture of theoretical content and company-specific context. The goal is to inspire and creatively engage the audience.
  • Involvement of the audience in the plenary: to get audience input, participants were invited to share their assessment & opinion via “Slido” – in this case it was supported via the project’s own created app and QR code.
  • Activities: participants were actively involved in the implementation and experienced the impact/ content first hand.
  • Panel discussions: with key players within the company to facilitate translation into the company’s internal context. An interactive discussion to facilitate reflection and learning after the content and activities targeting key insights for the audience.

Individualization: Where were the differences ?

Although, it was the same client and there was a common theme and goal, it was exciting for us to observe the importance of individualization for the two regions Western Europe+Canada and Middle East+Africa. To achieve maximum impact, the “Heart” impact level was addressed more in Dubai and “Head” in Madrid. Both had a lot of “Hand” in common.

 

Dubai: (Midde East+Africa)

  • Target group: first Head of Sales, then changed to Crossfunctional teams (Finance, Marketing, Sales, Legal, HR, etc) and General Managers
  • Needs: new leadership, new composition of regions, networking between countries and functions in focus
  • Way of working: more agile, fast paced, short preparation time, no prework, longer transfer period
  • Social program: desert safari, saxophonist, gala dinner in the desert, camel riding, falcons, drumming workshop

Madrid: (Western Europe+ Canada)

  • Target group: Head of Sales, General Managers
  • Needs: to stay on the road to success, to strengthen the sales leadership force
  • Way of working: meticulous, longer preparation, extensive prework with thematic newsletters and tasks.
  • social program: scavenger hunt at the palace, evening event with exquisite dinner in an exclusive vineyard. Here we had our crowd favorite Gia Helena with us as Master of Ceremonies, who kept the audience of around 100 people in good spirits.

High competition factor

What was even more striking with the target group of sales executives was the competition factor. Not only did the content of the event have to be perfectly aligned with the current needs of the respective region under the global guiding themes, but it also had to be entertaining and produce clear winners. For this target group, we not only added competition components to the activities, but also designed a business rally

Here is a brief summary of our main activities:

Trust Walk

An interactive and entertaining activity that makes aspects of “high performance teams” tangible (in the sense of: own experience beats theory). It bridges the gap between “knowing” (logic) and “feeling” (emotional understanding), so that the inspiration to act (practical relevance) makes sense in the upcoming event elements (panel discussion, leadership camp). The focus is on generating experience, as a course has to be completed in different roles (leader, follower, observer) – with varying degrees of difficulty.

Coaching Game

This activity focused on learning the purpose of coaching and the benefits of coaching conversations. To raise awareness of coaching as a leadership tool and peer-to-peer empowerment and to get a “hands-on mindset” by having the opportunity to coach yourself in a small setting of 4 people, with the support of self-created card sets, with appropriate, challenging and pointed coaching questions. Participants are given the opportunity and the right framework for self-reflection as a leader.

Business Rally

Based on a scavenger hunt, company-relevant content was transformed into an entertaining and fast-paced business rally. The leader supports their groups to apply skills to address leadership challenges (behaviors from the CDF supported by experiential learning). The fun factor is supported with the help of a fictional frame story and with a competitive situation, ambition came out in all participants.

Leadership Camp

This activity is about deriving the content into actionable and concrete action steps (action steps in the areas of leadership, coaching and high performing teams). The goal is to achieve a definition of actions and key results for the next few months within a region. This 2-hour workation is used intensively and the results are presented in plenary – which are quite impressive. With this last activity all participants are motivated to start the implementation in their respective countries.

Our learnings 

  • Match the right people with the right skills to the project parts
  • Stick to the time and the project plan
  • Be flexible with the content and react to the audience´s needs
  • Always celebrate the milestones and the successes

81% NPS

We are highly motivated after these energetic events and thankful that face-to-face events are possible again. Looking back, “Teamwork makes the dream work” – and the intensive preparation time more than paid off. It was great to see how the thread of content ran through both regions – we took individual wishes into account and can therefore look back on two successful events. The cooperation of all participants as well as the co-creation with the content experts made a state-of-the-art event possible.

From the Team MDI we were actively supported by: Helena Gia Gutierrez, (Moderation Madrid), Peter Grabuschnig (Activity Manager Dubai & Madrid), Alina Olar (Project Management), Marilena Maris (Key-Notes), Ursula Weixlbaumer-Norz (Business Rally)

This is also reflected in a Net Promoter Score, a recommendation rate of 81%.

We thank you for your trust and are already looking forward to the roll-out in the regions – Bangkok, here we come 🙂

Marina Begic

Marina Begic

Digital Business Development Expertin und Senior L&D Consultant

Marina has been working on new, effective learning methods and the future of corporate learning for over 15 years. In her current role, she is responsible for Digital Business Development at MDI, where her focus is not driven by the current buzzwords, but primarily on the feasibility of digital transformation for clients such as Erste Group, Lenzing, Semperit, Deutsche Bahn, Andritz AG, Uniqa, Mayr-Melnhof, Frequentis, RHIM. Her greatest strength is bringing loose ends together, which she impressively demonstrates time and time again with her big picture view and multi-dimensional approach. Her greatest passion is to provide learners not only with an experience, but also with real, lasting value for their real challenges.

  • LinkedIn
Nicole Altenberger, BA

Nicole Altenberger, BA

Senior L&D Consultant

Since 2020 Nicole has been accompanying leaders and companies from all over the world on their journey and supports them in the creation and tailoring of suitable training and development measures. This highly diversified work has resulted in numerous different settings, in which she has had the opportunity to learn the most effective and target-oriented methods. In doing so, the personal learning experience has not been neglected either. Her clients include companies such as Agrana, Albelli, Coca-Cola, Erste Group, Frequentis, Migros, OMV, Rewe, RHI Magnesita, Swarovski, Voestalpine, Wienerberger. Her interest in the area of Learning & Development was deepened during her studies in “Business Consultancy International” and substantiated by relevant work experience within an internationally active group. Already at a young age Nicole Altenberger is one of the top Learning & Development Consultants at MDI and runs her own team.

  • LinkedIn
Alina Helmlinger, MA

Alina Helmlinger, MA

L&D Consultant

Since 2021, Alina has been working as an L&D Consultant at MDI and supports clients from various industries in the customized design of various management development programs and trainings. In addition to her practical knowledge and the experience she has already gained in the field of development, she can draw on sound theoretical knowledge from her Bachelor’s degree in Human Resources Management and her Master’s degree in Organizational and Personnel Development, which she successfully completed in June 2022. Alina maintains her balance, especially in challenging situations, and manages to reconcile the interests of different stakeholders in complex projects, enabling her to design tailor-made HR solutions that are aligned with the needs of her customers.

  • LinkedIn

What serves you next?

Digital training formats for leadership development

We help make leadership development more agile with our digital training formats:

  • E-learnings
  • e-consulting
  • Blended Learning Journeys
  • Virtual Leadership
  • virtual reality
  • digital learning transfer

– we have just the right thing for your needs!

Explore now!

or even …

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Learning in the agile age: waterfall or cycle?

Learning in the agile age: waterfall or cycle?

by Dominik Etzl | Jun 28, 2022 | Agile Leadership, Best Practice, MDI Inside | 0 comments

What is the reality of learning in large companies today?

We often see in a wide variety of companies that there is a department that is single-handedly responsible for designing training programs, then planning them through from A to Z in advance, with a strong focus on teaching abstract models.

What’s the problem with that? Firstly, the work context is too complex for any department to know what the employees’ real-world challenges are. Secondly, the pace of change is now too fast for training to be valid over time. And thirdly: Us humans are not purely rational beings who learn on the basis of theoretical models, but also need “heart” and “hand” to change.

About the author

​Dominik Etzl is Solution Development Manager and Trainer at MDI Management Development GmbH and Managing Director of Metaforum International. His focus is on topics of digital transformation, as well as OKR (Objectives & Key Results), agile leadership and lateral leadership. His goal is to support managers in leading a valuable contribution to their environment: on an individual, corporate and societal level.

Waterfall vs. cycle

It seems obvious: If employees are inefficient somewhere, we choose an expert on learning who is qualified by his long-time expertise to create the perfect learning program with the appropriate content.

Although this seems very obvious at first glance, this approach belongs to the outdated mindset of taylorism. This sees people as machines working on an assembly line, for which all that is needed is an engineer who knows which update will increase efficiency. Learning here resembles a waterfall, where from start to finish one thing leads causally to the next.

In theory, it looks like this:

  1. Pre-reading X leads to
  2. Aha-experience, leads to
  3. Interest in more, leads to
  4. Active involvement in the seminar, leads to
  5. Trying out in everyday life, leads to
  6. Better business results, …

Is learning even plannable?

This approach cannot be dismissed completely. After all, looking back on a learning experience, correlations can be seen! Entire models and companies have specialized in optimizing this approach. For example, Dr. Donald Kirkpatrick has made the valuable contributions with the “New World Model” that a training program must be designed “back to front”. One must derive the necessary behaviors etc. from the desired goal and not vice versa.

This has its merits. Nevertheless, these approaches are built on an assumption: Learning could be planned.

Thought exercise

But is it? Please think of one thing in which you have achieved mastery. Would your personal path to mastery, as it happened, have been predictable? Could an expert have given you a coherent chain of experiences that you just had to follow blindly to get really good at? Of course not. Nevertheless, in practice we see far too often that people compulsively try to understand learning as a complicated, i.e. mechanically transparent problem.

Learning is a profoundly complex problem

However, it is true that learning is a deeply complex problem and thus cannot be planned. Whenever we deal with people, especially knowledge workers, we find ourselves in the complex cynefin quadrant. Thus, the expert loses its validity. There are no more “good practices” to follow, only “emergent practices.” This means it takes an iterative, collaborative, and holistic approach to learning. So the metaphor for learning – especially in the digitized 21st century – is not the waterfall, but the circle.

The 3×3 Rule

In what follows, we don’t invent anything new, but let the effective laws of learning work for themselves. What we are doing is bringing 3 elements of agile learning, which have mostly been seen separately, into a coherent picture.

Element 1: 3 process steps

Agile has defined – in complex situations – iteration as the most efficient way to reach the goal. The mantra is: long planning is a waste of time because the context is in flux. It is more efficient to take small steps and to refocus on the goal at regular intervals. This applies to project management (e.g., SCRUM) or product development (e.g., design thinking) just as it does to learning: “What small learning iteration do I need right now to master tomorrow’s deadline better than yesterdays?”

Big Picture

At the same time, it’s important not to lose sight of the big picture in learning either. Similar to business strategies, there needs to be some sort of vision or north star to follow. This can also be questioned at regular intervals. In this way, short-term and long-term goals form a symbiosis that optimally supports the learner in the learning journey.

Thought Exercise

Join in: What’s a skill you’re proud of? How did you learn it? – Think through the process: Whatever you learned, at some early point you had at least a rough idea of what you wanted to learn next (planning). Then you jumped into the more or less deep end (acting). Finally, you were either happy because you managed one more pace in the water, or you pulled yourself out of the water exhausted and analyzed what could be better (evaluating). Then the cycle starts all over again.

Let’s take a figurative look at this – indeed, deeply human – movement: These 3 process steps form the outer framework of the MDI learning circle: plan, act & evaluate. They are the skeleton that gives the learning process its shape:

Element 2: 3 levels of action

Running in circles does not automatically make you better. Us humans are living beings and need stimulation on 3 levels, which only as a coherent whole results in change.

Mostly unconscious, but nevertheless present in every learning process, are these 3 effect levels of learning:

  1. Brain: understanding why and how something works
  2. Heart: feeling that the current situation is not good, or that another one would be better
  3. Hand: trying – only by doing the world changes

Learning can start at any point

Tip: The 3 levels of impact are not chronological, but learning can start at any point. What is important is not when, but that all 3 are stimulated. Think of a 3-legged stool: If one leg is missing – no matter which one – the stool tilts. Three of them create stability.

What happens if one of the three “legs” is missing?

  • A learner without “brain” (cognitive insight) is at best a “blind benefactor” – and at worst wasted potential because he does not see when, how and why action should be taken.
  • A learner without “heart” (emotional responsiveness) is at best a “rational optimizer” and at worst a narcissistic manipulator.
  • A learner without “hand” (practical experience) is at best a “benevolent theorist” and at worst an “aloof know-it-all”.

These three types are extreme expressions to illustrate the co-dependency of the 3 levels of effectiveness. In practice you will find these types in a weakened and mixed form. Do you recognize someone?

Example

But let’s also look at a positive example. For example, on the topic of giving feedback:
Giving critical feedback in such a way that the other person receives it as a gift is an art. It has to be learned. Are you good at it? If so, please recall a specific feedback situation. (If not: Choose another skill you have mastered.) – If you are a master of feedback, you have certainly given and received critical feedback frequently (hand). – You’ve felt at several moments how it works, how good authentic feedback feels, and how painful hidden or unfair criticism is (heart). And you cognitively understood that critical feedback is a value-add that moves you and your colleagues forward, even if it’s not always pleasant (brain).

Note: Often it’s not stand-alone learning moments, but many small “AHAs” that lead to the big “eureka.”

Element 3: 3 Stakeholders

The third part of the 3×3 rule is about stakeholders. Why? Learning success in business is proven to be a collaborative success. It takes several to pull together and make their respective contributions. Who is that specifically? Learning research clearly shows that 3 stakeholders in organizations are crucial for learning to actually work (cf. Weinbauer-Heidel, Ibeschitz-Manderbach):

  1. Learner
  2. Organization (especially HR & leadership)
  3. Trainer

The learner
he learner naturally bears a main responsibility for the interplay of learning and applying. What matters most is the learner’s own will and confidence to apply the content in the short and long term.

The organization
The organization’s learning lever lies primarily in providing a system for defining and evaluating short- and long-term learning objectives that learners can use as a guide.

The Trainer
The biggest levers to learning success on the trainer side are clearly communicating expectations, teaching relevant content, allowing active practice in the seminar and conducting implementation planning for applying what is learned in the work context.

Similar to the 3 levels of impact, all 3 stakeholders play essential roles in the success of learning in continuing education. If one of the 3 stakeholders does not fulfill his task, potentials remain unused and in the worst case the learning construct collapses like a house of cards.

The MDI Learning Circle

Finally, let’s take a step back and widen our view again from the individual element to the big picture. What does the 3×3 rule tell us? It sums up how learning works in an agile environment. Here you can find everything summarized in one picture:

  • The 3 process steps: plan, act, evaluate.
  • The 3 levels of action: Brain, Heart, Hand
  • The 3 stakeholders: Learner, Organization, Trainer

Take all 3 elements into account and you can be sure that the learning success in your organization will increase!  Note: This article addresses almost exclusively your brain – not your heart or your hand! ? So consider: what concrete next steps can you take to establish a more agile learning culture in your organization?

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