Leading from Your Upper Brain: A Neuroscience Approach to Driving Performance

 

The registration rate includes the price of an assessment that will be used in the seminar.

Recent research in neuroscience suggests individual leadership behavior is the singular most important predictor to a team’s performance, more so than technical skill and intellect. These findings are fundamentally shifting learning and development strategies related to leadership and organizational performance. This seminar will redefine the strengths leaders must possess to succeed in a behavior-centered approach to performance and the technical skills they need to know to drive performance to the highest level. 

Explore findings from the Health Administration Press best-seller, Influential Leadership: Change Your Behavior, Change Your Organization, Change Health Care, and learn about a systematic and integrated leadership development approach that focuses on self-awareness, collaboration and performance sustainability. Adopt a dynamic thinking model that will enhance your personal focus, boost productivity, build teamwork and improve problem-solving skills. Expert faculty will give you the tools to leverage your personal performance to engage your team members, achieve strategic objectives and navigating risk and uncertainty.

Seminar Objectives:

  • Discuss the three domains of influential leadership
  • Identify why these domains create a culture of performance excellence
  • Discover why individual leader behavior is the key predictor to organizational performance.

Presented by:

Continuing Education Credit

In addition to the ACHE In-Person Education or Virtual Interactive Education credits assigned to this seminar, ACHE is accredited by other organizations to provide continuing education credit. View complete information about these organizations.

 

All Choice seminars can be offered as Virtual Interactive programs or live In-Person programs.

For more information about this seminar and Choice programs, contact Martijn van Oort, director, business development, at (312) 288-1872 or choice@ache.org.