Unit-based team co-lead

Team Leadership for Co-Leads (classroom)

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Mon, 01/29/2018 - 17:13
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Request Number
LSR-1983
Long Teaser

This course provides 360 feedback and teaches coaching best practices to improve the performance of unit-based teams.

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Laureen Lazarovici
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
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Get the Tools

Moving teams higher and higher up the Path to Performance sometimes takes some coaching. These tools can help. 

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Team Leadership for Co-Leads (classroom)
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Course description

Team Leadership for Co-leads is designed to bring labor, management and physician co-leads together to facilitate conversations about the performance of their unit-based teams. The co-leads receive information about high-performing unit-based teams at Kaiser Permanente and then review a 360 feedback tool to use with their teams after the course. Participants will learn a basic coaching model and practice role playing UBT coaching scenarios. Participants also will learn the fundamentals of how people adapt to change, review a change management model for leaders, and make agreements on how to manage change in their role with their unit-based teams. In addition, participants will learn the fundamentals of Emotional Intelligence and how to use “EQ” when leading change.

Path to Performance

Level 3, 4, 5

Duration

8 hours

Who should attend

This course is intended for participants who are experienced co-leads of unit-based teams. Job categories who should attend union, management and physician co-leads.

Course requirements

 

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Leading With Emotional Intelligence (classroom)

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Mon, 01/29/2018 - 16:46
Request Number
LSR-1983
Long Teaser

This course teaches leaders specific competencies for managing their own emotions and the emotions of others, dealing with difficult conversations and facilitating difficult team issues that come with change.

Communicator (reporters)
Laureen Lazarovici
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
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Developing
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Leading With Emotional Intelligence (classroom)
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Course description

This course recognizes emotional intelligence as a key skill to help lead teams through change and improvement. It teaches leaders specific competencies for managing their own emotions and the emotions of others, dealing with difficult conversations and facilitating difficult team issues that come with change.  

Path to Performance

Level 3, 4, 5

Duration

2 hours

 

Who should attend

This course is intended for unit-based team co-leads and members

Course requirements

Labor Management Partnership Orientation (LMPO)

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A Dose of Fun

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Tue, 09/05/2017 - 15:38
Region
Keywords
Topics
Hank
Request Number
ED-1146
Long Teaser

Co-leads administering a dose of fun helps shake up a department that had low morale. 

Communicator (reporters)
Jennifer Gladwell
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
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Keep Your Team Going Strong

Your team is tight. You plan, do, study and act with one hand tied behind your back. But sustaining success can be a challenge even for the best of teams. Keep your UBT going strong with these proven tools. 

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A Dose of Fun
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Co-leads use laughter to help their team—and themselves
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When Terri Imbach, Family Practice manager at Mt. Scott Medical Office in the Northwest region, and labor co-lead Christina English, a licensed practical nurse and a member of SEIU Local 49, began to work together as UBT co-leads several years ago, they knew they needed to shake things up with the department’s unit-based team. 

The staff worked hard to meet the demanding needs of the fast-paced medical office, but morale wasn’t great—and team members weren’t taking ownership of improvement work. UBT meetings were poorly attended and often turned into complaining sessions.  

The co-leads’ first move was to go to UBT training classes together. That experience gave them an idea for their next move—which was to shake things up between the two of them by stepping away from work and getting to know each other outside the office. 

“Getting out of the work environment is a good way to get away from the stress of the department,” explains English. This mindset set the tone for how they would operate together and helped them sustain a good relationship over time.

The co-leads also adopted “fun” as part of their regular UBT agenda, and meetings now are attended by nearly 100 percent of the staff.  

“We think of fun ways to get to know each other in and out of the office, and we work to include fun elements in all of our meetings,” Imbach says. During the holidays, team members played relay games at their UBT meeting, and they participated in a fundraiser for a local youth organization that included playing basketball on donkeys. 

The creative energy of the co-leads has helped engage all 40 members of the Level 5 team, who are juggling more than a dozen quality projects. 

“Team members step up to take on projects now,” English says, “and there are friendly competitions to meet our goals.”

 

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How-To Guide: UBT Successful Practices

Use the posters and tools at right in presentations or meetings to help your teams overcome barriers, compare results and reach high performance.

 

The PowerPoint slides ("These Results Prove It's Working") show examples of unit-based teams from every region making a difference for KP members and patients.

 

Borrow from the ideas on this page to inspire your team, convince doubters to come on board, and identify projects and practices that have worked for others.

Co-Lead Action Planning Worksheet

Submitted by Kristi on Mon, 11/07/2016 - 15:12
Tool Type
Format
Running Your Team
Topics
Taxonomy upgrade extras
worksheet_co-lead action planning

A worksheet for capturing working agreements between co-leads, and a step-by-step checklist for planning a successful UBT kickoff meeting.

Non-LMP
Tyra Ferlatte
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
Co-Lead Action Planning Worksheet

Format:
Word DOC

Size:
6 pages, 8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
Frontline employees, managers and physicians

Best used:
Co-leads can learn to work together and successfully kick off their unit-based teams by consulting this checklist.

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Unit-based Teams
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PDF
lmpartnership.org
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Team Vision

Submitted by Vaughn.R.Zeitzwolfe on Sun, 10/09/2016 - 23:35
Tool Type
Format
Topics
Content Section

This worksheet provides unit-based team members an opportunity to look at their feelings about their own level of commitment when preparing to establish their team’s vision.

Non-LMP
Tyra Ferlatte
For Team Process 2-3,
Team Member Engagement 1-3,
Use of Tools 1-2
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
Team Vision

Format:
PDF or Word DOC

Size:
8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
Co-leads of unit-based teams or UBT consultants

Best used:
Use this activity when your team needs to look at their feelings about commitment and formulate a vision of why it exists, or needs to revisit that vision.

 

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UBT Roles

Submitted by Vaughn.R.Zeitzwolfe on Sun, 10/09/2016 - 23:02
Tool Type
Format
Topics
Content Section

This chart provides UBT co-leads and members with information regarding the different UBT roles and their responsibilities.

Non-LMP
Tyra Ferlatte
For Team Process 1-3
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
UBT Roles

Format:
PDF (color and black and white)

Size:
8.5" x 11"

Intended audience:
UBT co-leads and members

Best used:
This worksheet can help you prepare for your first co-lead meeting and the first UBT meeting to clarify team members' roles and responsibilities.

 

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Seven Tips for Building a Culture of Workplace Safety

Submitted by Paul Cohen on Tue, 10/27/2015 - 15:31
Tool Type
Format
tips_workplacesafety_engagement.pdf

An EVS department got everyone thinking and talking about safety every day--and got results. Here's how.

Non-LMP
Tyra Ferlatte
Tool landing page copy (reporters)

Format:
PDF

Size:
1 page, 8.5" x 11"

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

Best used:
Seven steps that helped one EVS team change the culture and reduce workplace injuries. Use to encourage workplace safety conversations and practices that have worked elsewhere.

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Workplace Safety
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tips (checklist, etc.)
PDF
Northern California
lmpartnership.org
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Lead From Where You Stand

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Tue, 10/06/2015 - 17:42
Region
Topics
Request Number
sty_Hank45_Lead Stand
Long Teaser

To reach high performance, teams need to make sense of their data. And Union Partnership Representative Ed Vrooman does that deftly.

Communicator (reporters)
Jennifer Gladwell
Editor (if known, reporters)
Tyra Ferlatte
Photos & Artwork (reporters)
Ed Vrooman, a union partnership representative from SEIU Local 49, helps teams demystify the data so numbers can be a portal to improved performance instead of a source of stress. Kate Webb, project coordinator, lends a hand.
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Lead From Where You Stand
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Helping teams make sense of their data
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When it comes to metrics, even the best teams can get muddled.

At such times, a good team realizes it needs help—that it’s time to ask for assistance from someone with specialized skills. In the Northwest region, teams can turn to Ed Vrooman.

His enviable strength? An ability to crunch numbers, connect the dots and break down the complexity of the data so that unit-based teams get the information they need to do their work.

“It’s easy for teams to fall into analysis paralysis, where they dissect every data point. I work with them to know the why and the what,” says Vrooman, who started as a part-time phlebotomist 18 years ago at Portland’s now-long-gone Bess Kaiser Hospital. Today, he does double duty as a union partnership representative (UPR) for the Coalition of Kaiser Permanente Unions—he’s a member of SEIU Local 49—and as an improvement advisor.

A broad perspective

His atypical career path has given him an unusual outlook. In 2003, Vrooman took an extended leave of absence to work for Local 49, helping organize KP employees and other health care workers. After returning to KP, he became a labor partner and brought the coalition’s interests to the building of the new Westside hospital and other major regional projects.

“Partnership has allowed me to touch nearly every function within this organization,” Vrooman says. Working on the large initiatives got him more intrigued with the data side of the house—and led to his current position, which gives him an opportunity to use his skill with data and analytics. 

When he heard from the region’s UBT consultants that teams didn’t have the data they needed to work on projects, Vrooman became—along with the data analytics department and health plan leaders—a driving force in the creation of the region’s scorecards for teams. The STATIT scorecards (named after the electronic system that hosts them) enable teams to see their goals online and how they line up with the regional and PSP goals.

Co-leads’ gathering

Every year, Vrooman, along with the other two UPRs in the region—Bruce Corkum, RN, an OFNHP/ONA member, and Mariah Rouse of UFCW Local 555—present information on regional goals and budgets in one of the quarterly Steward Councils, which bring together the region’s UBT union co-leads and representatives from its four partnership unions. For the meeting on regional goals, the management co-leads are invited as well, providing a chance for team leaders to learn together how their teams can have an impact.

When he’s working directly with a team, Vrooman mentors and coaches its members on using improvement tools, from understanding the fundamentals such as SMART goals and entering projects into UBT Tracker to more advanced tools like process mapping. He asks his team members what they need to be successful.

“You don’t need a title to be a leader,” Vrooman tells them. “You lead from where you stand.”

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Total Health Presentation—Instant Recess

Submitted by Laureen Lazarovici on Tue, 06/24/2014 - 17:47
Tool Type
Format
Topics
ppt_virtualUBTfair_totalhealth_instantrecess

The virtual Instant Recess from the virtual UBT fair on Total Health. Use it at your next meeting!

Laureen Lazarovici
Tool landing page copy (reporters)
Total Health - Instant Recess

Format:
PDF

Size:
10-slide deck

Intended audience:
Total Health champions; UBT sponsors, consultants and co-leads

Best used:
This is the Instant Recess used during the virtual UBT fair on Total Health. Use for a three-minute Instant Recess, either virtually or in person.

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