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 Is CRI Training Better Than Conventional Technical and Management Training? With a Focus on "Criterion-Referenced Instruction" In today’s fast-changing business environment, organisations are rethinking how they develop capability. Traditional technical and management training—focused on knowledge transfer—has long been the default. But effective approaches, such as Criterion-Referenced Instruction (CRI), are gaining attention for their emphasis on measurable competence and real-world performance . So, is CRI training actually better? The answer lies in understanding what each approach is designed to achieve. What Is Conventional Training? Conventional training typically includes: Classroom sessions Slide-based learning E-learning modules Standardised management programmes Its primary goal is knowledge acquisition. Learners are exposed to concepts, frameworks, and procedures, often assessed through tests or course completion. This approach works well when: The objective is...
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 Running an Effective Continuous Professional Development (CPD) Programme: Clarifying the Role of Training and Coaching I n many organisations, Continuous Professional Development (CPD) is no longer optional. Regulatory bodies, professional associations, and competitive pressures all demand that employees continuously update and refine their skills. Yet despite this urgency, many CPD programmes fall short—not because of a lack of intent, but because of confusion around how development should happen. Is CPD about training, coaching, or both? Training vs Coaching: Understanding the Difference Training and coaching are often used interchangeably, but they serve fundamentally different purposes. Training is the structured transfer of knowledge and skills. It is typically: Delivered by an expert Focused on specific competencies Conducted in groups or formal sessions Designed to address immediate skill gaps When an employee needs to learn a new system, comply with regulations, or master ...
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Why Most Experts Struggle to Train Others I In many organisations, the people who know the work best are asked to train others.  Engineers train junior engineers. Managers guide new staff. Technical specialists explain systems to colleagues. But there is one problem. Most experts have never been trained to train. Knowing how to do the work and knowing how to teach someone else to do the work are two very different skills. Without a structured approach, training often becomes informal conversations about past experience rather than a deliberate process that builds competence. One of the most practical approaches to solving this challenge is Criterion-Referenced Instruction . A Proven Method for Training and Coaching Criterion-Referenced Instruction was developed by Robert F. Mager and Peter Pipe , during the previous century as a systematic way to design effective training. during the previous century as a systematic way to design effective training. The core idea is simple b...
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 " Continuous Professional Development (CPD): From compliance to capability" Continuous Professional Development (CPD) is essential for professionals who must maintain licensure and demonstrate ongoing competence—particularly in regulated fields such as healthcare, engineering, education, and allied professions. Across the world, CPD frameworks ensure that practitioners remain current, competent, ethical, and responsive to evolving professional standards. Today, CPD is not a “nice-to-have”; it is a formal requirement in many jurisdictions and a cornerstone of professional credibility and public trust. Global Adoption of CPD Frameworks CPD systems are well established across multiple regions, with professional bodies requiring practitioners to accumulate a defined number of learning hours or points over a fixed renewal cycle—typically two to three years. Well-established CPD frameworks exist across multiple regions: Africa: Ghana, Kenya, Nigeria, South Africa , Rwanda, Eswat...
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 Why It Is Essential for Executives to Master Conditions of Chaos Executives today are no longer leading in stable, predictable environments. Volatility, uncertainty, complexity, and ambiguity—often described as VUCA —have become the permanent backdrop of leadership. Market disruptions , geopolitical shifts , technological acceleration , organisational change , and human complexity collide daily. In this reality, the ability to master conditions of chaos is no longer a “nice to have”; it is a core executive capability. . Chaos Is the New Normal Many leaders were developed in environments where planning, forecasting, and linear problem-solving worked well. Today, those tools still matter—but they are insufficient on their own. Chaos shows up when: Strategies become obsolete faster than they can be implemented Teams are anxious, fatigued, or resistant to change Information is incomplete or contradictory Decisions must be made before certainty is available Executives who wait for s...
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 “Leading with Emotional Intelligence: Practical Tools Executives Can Apply Immediately” In today’s complex and fast-paced business environment, technical expertise and strategic thinking are no longer enough. Executives are increasingly evaluated not only on what they achieve, but “how” they lead. Emotional Intelligence (EI) has emerged as one of the most powerful differentiators between competent leaders and exceptional ones. Emotional Intelligence is not a “soft skill.” It is a measurable leadership capability that directly impacts decision-making, performance, trust, and culture. The good news is that EI can be developed—and coaching plays a critical role in turning awareness into action. This article explores what emotionally intelligent leadership looks like in practice and provides simple tools executives can apply immediately. What Is Emotional Intelligence in Leadership? Emotional Intelligence refers to the ability to recognise, understand, and manage your own emotions, wh...
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 The Mindset Shift from Managing to Leading: Coaching Strategies That Drive Growth In today’s fast-moving business environment, the gap between “managing” and “leading” has never been more visible. Many professionals rise into leadership roles because they are strong at managing tasks, processes, and outcomes—but growth happens only when they shift from directing work to developing people. This mindset shift is at the heart of modern leadership , and coaching has become one of the most effective ways to help leaders make it. Managing vs. Leading: What’s the Real Difference? Management focuses on control, coordination, and output. Leadership focuses on vision, empowerment , and growth. Managers typically: Give instructions Solve problems Focus on efficiency Rely on authority Leaders, in contrast: Inspire and guide Coach others to solve problems Build capacity and capability Influence through trust, not position Great organisations need both. But when leaders stay stuck in “ managem...