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by Connirae and Steve Andreas
Seminars and training are a way to gain many skills, abilities, and attitudes
well worth learning. Since training is a significant investment of your
time and money, it's important to know how to identify excellent training
as soon as possible, and to spot mediocre training in advance. We suggest
being an "active consumer," and investigate seminar possibilities just
as you might carefully investigate the purchase of a home or a car.
Some "trainings" merely present ideas, rather than actually train you
in new skills and abilities. Since most ideas can be presented as well
in a book or article, a training of this kind can be a more expensive
and time-consuming way to get the same information.
Other seminars provide participants with confidence and motivation, but
without the behavioral competence to support it. Some seminars are enjoyable,
but participants don't leave the training with new skills they can use.
Like a concert or a party, they can be worthwhile experiences, as long
as they aren't confused with training.
How can you be sure you get the most for your training dollars? Here are
some of the things we check for when we think about attending a particular
training. We hope these guidelines are useful in finding the best training
for you.
A. Before Committing to a Training:
1. Sensory-based evidence: Find a way to get a first-hand experience
of the training before you commit to spending a lot of money. Rely on
your own experience of the training. A live experience, such as a free
preview, is best. A videotape is next best. If that's not available, an
audiotape will give you at least an auditory experience of the trainer.
If you can't get any of these, at the very least ask for the names and
phone numbers of several people who have completed the training you are
considering. If they liked the training, ask "What specifically did you
like?" and "What specifically can you do now as a result of the training
that you couldn't do before?" Some trainers act like an expert or make
you feel good in the seminar, but do not teach you skills or abilities
that you can apply immediately and automatically in your life.
2. Trainers: When you consider a program, check, who the trainers
are, and for how many days. Some trainings are advertised without any
names, or with the name of a well-known trainer. It may turn out that
the "big name" will only teach a small portion of the training, and less-skilled
trainers or apprentices will teach the rest.
3. Recommendations: Trust your own impressions of a trainer first,
and recommendations from people you know who have experience with the
trainer next. Be cautious about brochure quotes, even from famous people.
Some sponsors and trainers make up quotes from other people and/or use
quotes without permission or quotes that are outdated. Occasionally "big
names" give endorsements based on a monetary relationship, rather than
on the trainer's skill.
4. Degrees and Certificates: Trust your own experience of the trainer
over a certificate or degree. The meaning of a certification or degree
varies as widely as the grantor. A degree may be a good measure of academic
record (the ability to take tests and do homework), but usually has little
to do with training ability. B. What to check for when you're in a training:
We've emphasized the importance of getting an experience of the trainer.
When you attend a free preview or short seminar, how can you determine
whether this seminar trainer is delivering maximum value for you?
5. Demonstrations versus Information: Do you get live demonstrations
of the methods being taught, or do you only get a long string of words,
a "core-dump" of information that would be much cheaper to read in a book?
Research repeatedly demonstrates that over 80% of the impact of communication
is nonverbal. This means you'll get a much more complete understanding
of any method if you observe a demonstration than if the trainer only
tells you what to do. We once went to an expensive training taught by
a well-known author who essentially read his book aloud to the audience
(for a fee of $6,000 per day!). There are many ways in which the trainer
can demonstrate methods to you. The trainer can ask for a volunteer from
the audience with whom to demonstrate or role-play. The trainer can bring
in a "naive client" or can invite the entire group to participate in an
experiential process that provides a demonstration of what she is teaching.
6. Exercises: After demonstrating, does the trainer provide ways
for you to make the new skills a part of your behavior? It's usually easiest
to learn skills when the trainer sets up a series of carefully-designed
supervised exercises or tasks that allow you to practice new skills in
a comfortable and safe manner. A good training begins by training you
in smaller component skills, and then assists you in easily putting these
skills together to work for maximum impact in a real context. Understanding
alone won't get you results in your life. You should leave a good seminar
able to do more than when you walked in.
7. Evidence: After attending the seminar and learning new communication
(or other) skills, do you know what specific evidence you can use to verify
whether what you have learned is working? Is it getting you better results
than you would have gotten anyway? In a good training, you'll know what
kind of evidence to check for. Make sure you experience the kinds of results
you want. Some trainers are flashy and charismatic, but don't train you
in a way that gives you results.
8. Nonverbal presuppositions: What beliefs or attitudes are presupposed
in the trainer's nonverbal behavior; and are they the ones you want? Does
the trainer talk about the importance of flexibility, but respond rigidly?
Does he communicate that he wants you to learn, or that he just wants
to razzle-dazzle you? Does the trainer treat you as a peer who can learn
the same skills the trainer has, or does the trainer act like a superior
"guru" whom you can admire but can't hope to emulate? A good trainer will
presuppose that anyone can learn--it's a matter of finding a way for each
person to learn most easily.
9. Questions: A good trainer will welcome questions, and will respond
to questions and challenges by demonstrating a greater depth of understanding
of the material. Does the trainer respond respectfully, or nonverbally
discourage or eliminate questions, provide weak answers or a "smokescreen,"
or promise to "get to it later" and then fail to do so?
10. Response to nonverbal cues: Since nonverbal communication is
so important, a good trainer will notice nonverbal cues from the audience
or the demonstration subject, and vary her behavior accordingly. Does
the trainer notice what this group needs, and vary the training plan in
response? Is he aware when the audience is getting restless and needs
a break?
11. Self-accolades: Does the trainer spend lots of time (which you
are paying for) telling you about the miraculous things he has done? When
a trainer is effective, he doesn't need to tell you how wonderful he is,
he can demonstrate it. If he gives you examples of his previous successes,
does he tell you how he got the results, so that you can learn to get
the same results, or does he just say, "I achieved X, Y and Z" in order
to impress you?
12. Quality Control: Does the trainer provide ways to verify that
participants are actually learning the skills he is teaching? Capable
assistants, closely-supervised exercises, and individual task assignments
can all serve this function.
13. Promises: A good trainer will follow through on what he promises
to deliver.
14. Excuses: Since every training can be improved, a good trainer
can easily admit a mistake, and will welcome suggestions to improve the
training. Does the trainer try to cover up his lack of ability or a poorly-organized
training, or does he blame participants when things don't go well?
15. Humor: The best single aid to learning is humor--the kind that
is infectious, laughing with others, or at the human condition, but not
at anyone's expense. If you find a trainer who has this, along with the
other qualities we've listed, you've found someone you're likely to be
pleased with.
You may have additional criteria for trainings that meet your professional
needs and personal desires. With so much to be gained from a good training
or seminar, we think you'll find it worthwhile to sift carefully through
the available trainers to find the ones who provide what you need and
want. You can learn skills that help you to be more successful in your
professional life; you can also learn how to get more of what you want
in your personal relationships while making those around you happy. By
attending high quality trainings, you can also expose yourself to wonderful
models, an important next step to getting where you want to go in your
life.
© 1998 NLP Comprehensive.
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