Path to Performance Dimensions

Six Ways to Keep Your Skills Sharp

Submitted by Paul Cohen on Thu, 11/16/2017 - 16:47
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Take four national leaders and practioners of workforce development trends and strategies. Add 200 Kaiser Permanente managers and union representatives committed to keeping KP and its workforce strong and resilient. Get the results: Six strategies for building the workforce of the future.

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Learn More About Skills for the Future
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Kaiser Permanente, union members prepare for the workforce of the future
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Looking to stay current in the fast-changing world of health care? You’re not alone.

Kaiser Permanente leaders, labor representatives and industry experts offered insights at November’s Workforce of the Future Conference in Berkeley, California.

“We’ve made a lot of progress over the last few years,” said Monica Morris, director of National Workforce Planning and Development, who welcomed the audience of 200 labor and management representatives tasked with advancing the Labor Management Partnership’s Workforce of the Future initiative. “Now it’s time to do even more.”

Here are six strategies you can follow to prepare for the workforce of the future.

Learn new ways to work. During the Industrial Revolution, cobblers and weavers had to adapt or get left behind. This process continues today—only now, it’s happening faster, said keynote speaker Art Bilger, founder and CEO of WorkingNation, a nonprofit group seeking solutions for economic change.

“The solutions are local,” he said. “Communication of these issues and solutions is critical.”

Become lifelong learners. Skills used to last a lifetime and career paths were clear. Now there’s a new development every 18 months. Get on the cutting edge and imagine the opportunities technology provides.

“Be deeply curious. We’re all newbies,” said keynote speaker John Seely Brown, an author, scholar and former director of the Xerox Palo Alto Research Center, who gives high marks to the innovative learning approach of the new Kaiser Permanente School of Medicine.

Keep developing your career. Age is not a barrier to lifelong learning, said keynote speaker Sandi Vito, executive director of 1199SEIU Training and Employment Funds, which partners with Montefiore Health System in New York.

“People tend to think that employees in their 50s can’t aspire to career advancement,” Vito said. “It just requires different approaches. Adults learn more by doing.”

Indeed, the average age of participants in the two LMP-supported educational trusts (Ben Hudnall Memorial Trust and SEIU UHW-West & Joint Employer Education Fund) is 44.

Use available resources. Kaiser Permanente employees have many resources to advance their careers, including targeted training programs for workers represented by the Coalition of KP Unions.

To start, learn four critical skills that will be essential to the future of health care. A digital fluency program launched in October, to be followed by programs in consumer focus, collaboration and process improvement.

“We don’t know what the jobs of the future will be,” said conference facilitator Tony Borba, Northern California regional director for The Permanente Medical Group. “We need to use our resources so we are ready for changes in the workforce.”

Tap the power of partnership. As Kaiser Permanente and the Coalition of KP Unions have successfully partnered, Montefiore and 1199SEIU have developed collaborative training programs, such as community health worker apprenticeships that benefit employees, the organization and the community, said keynote speaker Lynn Richmond, Montefiore’s chief strategy officer.

Get involved. The conference produced actionable ideas such as developing a communications strategy to show the value of continuous learning and generate more on-the-job training. Other ideas included apprenticeships and reverse mentoring.

“How do we leverage the power of preceptors, mentors and the educational trusts?” said conference speaker Jessica Butz, the union coalition’s national program coordinator for Workforce Planning and Development. “This is your chance to help shape what we do at Kaiser Permanente.”

 

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How-To Guide: Have Great Meetings

Well-run meetings keep members of unit-based teams connected. Employees, managers and physicians can share information and solve problems face to face.


Poorly planned or badly run meetings, on the other hand, waste participants' time and lead to frustration and cynicism.

 

This guide will help you plan and conduct meetings that build teamwork and help your UBT make improvements that benefit our members and patients. 

 

Meet Your National Agreement: Training for Everyone, Starting in the Middle

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Sun, 06/18/2017 - 12:09
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Consistent, joint training in core partnership skills for mid-level leaders—from both management and labor—supports the success of frontline teams. 

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Tyra Ferlatte
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Take Action: Learn More About Learning

New partnership training programs will roll out to every KP region this year. To get a head start, visit the Learning Portal for a selection of online and classroom courses.

To learn what additional programs will be available, contact your regional training leader on the LMP website  (select "Regional Training Leaders"). 

If you’re interested in participating in a training pilot program still in development, contact Jo Alvarez or Cassandra Braun

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Meet Your National Agreement: Training for Everyone, Starting In The Middle
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Building skills among mid-level management and union leaders
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“The No. 1 reason for the success of our teams has been personal engagement,” says Alan Kroll, a primary care area administrator in Colorado who co-sponsors nine unit-based teams with his labor and physician partners. “Everyone needs to buy into the process to make partnership work.”

Building engagement and ensuring a consistent work experience have been goals of the Labor Management Partnership since the beginning. But, at the same time, there’s been a good deal of variation around these efforts from location to location across Kaiser Permanente, to the frustration of many managers, workers, and KP members and patients.

That’s why the 2015 National Agreement mandates partnership training for everyone, including the mid-level managers and union leaders who guide others. Early versions of the partnership training for mid-level leaders, which will be available this year, have gotten high marks from UBT sponsors and other leaders who have taken it. 

Consistency counts

The agreement calls for “a learning system that supports sustained behavior change, partnership and performance.” This includes joint training and refresher courses—delivered in-person
and/or online—to “achieve the same partnership and employment experience wherever one works in KP.” 

The new training for mid-level leaders will include segments on: interest-based problem solving examining the forces that support or undermine partnership core partnership behaviors and principles the strategic importance of the LMP 

Joint training is key 

The programs are designed to develop successful leaders who can model partnership and spread successful practices—and to ensure that the managers or union representatives helping teams have what they need to support those teams.

“It is very powerful for managers and union leaders to be in training together,” Kroll says. “It sends the message that everyone is important, and sets a foundation to work from when an issue gets stuck.”

The training served as a reminder that good partnership practices also are good leadership practices. 

“People want to hear from their leaders,” he says, and to “know what issues we are dealing with and that we can help remove obstacles.”

See the 2015 National Agreement, section 1.E, Education and Training (pages 31–33) for additional information.

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Word Scramble: Performance Improvement Savvy Beverly White Wed, 06/14/2017 - 16:18
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Word Scramble: Performance improvement savvy
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Format:
PDF

Size:
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Intended audience:
Frontline workers, managers and physicians

Best used:
When you need to mix it up in a meeting, work on this word scramble to test your performance improvement savvy.

hank51_word_scramble_performance_improvement_savvy

Use this word scramble in your UBT meeting  to test your team's performance improvement savvy.

Tracy Silveria
Tyra Ferlatte
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UBT Action Plan

Submitted by Paul Cohen on Fri, 03/17/2017 - 11:34
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UBT Action Plan 2016.doc

Identify the tools, information, coaching and training your team needs to progress on the Path to Performance and achieve your performance improvement goals. Implement the action steps recommened by your UBT consultant or union partnership representative--or do your own team assessment.

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Format:
Word document

Size:
Two pages, 8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
Unit-based team co-leads, sponsors and members

Best used:
Co-leads can use the action plan to identify the tools, information, coaching and training the team needs to progress on the Path to Performance.

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Partnership Shapes the Workforce of the Future

Submitted by Paul Cohen on Tue, 12/20/2016 - 17:05
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2016 WoF conference.pc.doc
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The Labor Management Partnership is preparing Kaiser Permanente and its 114,000 union coalition-represented workers for the changes coming to health care in the coming years. Highlights from a 2016 Work of the Future Conference show what's coming.

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Partnership Shapes the Workforce of the Future
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Previewing health care system changes at Kaiser Permanente
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Amazon. Facebook. Uber. Count the ways that technology has changed the way people shop, share information, get around—and the way work is done in those industries. Now add health care to that list.

That was the message of the 2016 Work of the Future Conference in November, where 200 Kaiser Permanente managers and workers looked at how health care is changing, and how management and labor can collaboratively shape those changes at KP.

Industry and union leaders shared emerging workforce trends and practices. They also praised KP and the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions’ approach to performance improvement, problem solving and workforce development.

“Kaiser and the union coalition have nailed it when it comes to workforce training, workforce planning and making sure we're preparing for the future,” said Liz Shuler, secretary-treasurer of the AFL-CIO. “The collaborative approach really shines when we talk about training, workforce development and finding ways to help workers ladder up in their careers.”

Shared wisdom

With the help of unit-based teams, health care innovation has brought patients better and faster treatment at KP, said Nirav Shah, MD, senior vice president of clinical operations for the Southern California region. For instance, KP hip replacement patients often walk off the operating table, go home without spending a night in the hospital and get nursing care and physical therapy at home. “Radical transparency, shared data and the wisdom of unit-based teams” are essential to making such changes work, he said.

Skills for success

KP and union workforce planners shared how workers can prepare for more changes coming to health care by mastering four critical skills:

  • consumer focus
  • digital fluency
  • collaboration
  • process improvement

These skills are among the new training programs, previewed at the conference, to be offered to coalition union-represented workers in 2017 (learn more). Digital fluency, for instance, covers mobile devices, applications and their impact on health care. Kaiser Permanente and the coalition unions, working in partnership, have given KP workers a head start in at least two of the other critical skills—collaboration and process improvement.

Learning from others

Conference participants also learned from the experience of other organizations. DTE Energy, a Detroit-based public utility, worked with its unions to avoid layoffs even during the Great Recession, said Diane Antishin, DTE Energy’s vice president of HR Operations.

Michael Langford, president of Utility Workers Union of America, described his union’s training and apprenticeship programs, which have helped his members nationally adapt to changes in their industry.

As with our work in the Labor Management Partnership, interest-based bargaining helped both parties achieve their goals.

“If you come in with positional arguments you’ll never get it done,” said Langford. “But if you can get to what the underlying problem is, you can solve it.”

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Critical Skills

Submitted by Paul Cohen on Mon, 12/12/2016 - 15:20
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WoF_Word match.pdf

Health care is changing. What critical job skills will be necessary for future success? Test your knowledge with this fun quiz.

Sherry Crosby
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Format:
PDF

Size:
One page, 8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
Frontline workers, managers, trainers, team co-leads and consultants

Best used:
Use this word match quiz to spark discussion and test your knowledge of the skills health care workers will need in the future.

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Hank Fall 2016

Submitted by tyra.l.ferlatte on Wed, 12/07/2016 - 19:42
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Creating a better workplace turns cynics into champions of unit-based teams. UBTs help workers, managers and physicians better serve Kaiser Permanente members and patients. Yet even though everyone in the unit belongs to the team, too many people don’t realize they do. Engaging with your team can change lives—including your own. Read on and see how. 

Plus: "Meet Your National Agreement," puzzles and games and great comics that will help everyone realize they are part of your UBT. 

Spread the Word: Tips to Keep Your Team Functioning

Submitted by Beverly White on Wed, 12/07/2016 - 13:05
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Running Your Team
Hank
hank49_tool_spread_the_word_tips_to_keep_team_functioning

Try these tips to keep your team running smoothly and communicating well. 

Tyra Ferlatte
Tyra Ferlatte
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Spread the Word

Format:
PDF

Size:
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Intended audience:
Frontline workers, managers and physicians

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When you need to improve how smoothly your team runs and improve communication, try these tips.

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Engage Your Entire Team

Submitted by Beverly White on Wed, 12/07/2016 - 12:52
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Running Your Team
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hank49_tool_engage_your_entire_team

Use these tips to engage your entire team.

Tyra Ferlatte
Tyra Ferlatte
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Engage Your Entire Team

Format:
PDF

Size:
8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
Frontline workers, managers and physicians

Best used:
When you want to engage your entire team, try these tips.

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