Monday, August 26, 2013

3 Nuevos Programas Ejecutivos y 1 Nuevo Taller
(en UTN é IN COMPANY)


Estimados Colegas y Amigos

Nos place informarles que hemos terminado los Contenidos correspondientes a los Programas Ejecutivos en:
  1. PENSAMIENTO ESTRATÉGICO
  2. MANAGEMENT ESTRATÉGICO
  3. GESTIÓN DEL CAMBIO
y al Taller:
  1. ESTRATEGIAS EFECTIVAS PARA ESCENARIOS TURBULENTOS
que serán dictados en Modalidad Presencial:
  • en UTN, Universidad Tecnológica Nacional (Buenos Aires, Argentina, Octubre 2013, 1º Edición).
  • IN COMPANY, adecuando sus contenidos, extensión, etc. a las necesidades puntuales de cada Empresa, local o regionalmente (LatAm - América Latina).

Cada uno de los 3 Programas Ejecutivos y el Taller tendrá una duración de 27 horas presenciales, y podrán ser cursados por separado, y sin orden preestablecido, otorgando créditos acumulativos para MEyGC - CEU EN MANAGEMENT ESTRATÉGICO y GESTIÓN DEL CAMBIO.

En breve hallarán los Contenidos detallados por este medio.

Hasta entonces, si tienen consultas, por favor dirigirse a:

Dr. Miguel Angel Medina Casabella, MSM, MBA, SMHS
CEO at MANAGEMENT SOLUTIONS GROUP LatAm
Postgraduate Career Director & Professor
Universidad Tecnológica Nacional
Founder & ViceChairman, GWAA LatAm Chapter
Former Coordinator & Professor, HSML Program for LatAm
The George Washington University
Work Phone: ( 0054) 11 - 3532 - 0510
Mobile Phone (Domestic): ( 011 ) 15 - 4420 - 5103
Mobile Phone (Int´l): ( 0054) 911 - 4420 - 5103
Skype: medinacasabella

Saludos cordiales para todos !!!


IMPORTANTE:
MEyGC (Posgrado en Management Estratégico y Gestión del Cambio, ver Blog), GOSyF (Posgrado en Gestión de Organizaciones de Salud y Farma, ver Blog), así como los 3 Nuevos Programas Ejecutivos y el Taller pueden ser dictados "IN COMPANY", adecuando sus contenidos, extensión, etc. a las necesidades puntuales de cada Empresa, local o regionalmente (LatAm - América Latina)


© Copyright Miguel Ángel Medina Casabella

© Copyright MANAGEMENT SOLUTIONS GROUP LatAm

Inversiones Globales: ¿qué pasa si China se cae?


El crecimiento descomunal del Gigante Asiático parece haber llegado a su fin. O por lo menos, ese es el temor en los mercados globales por estos días.

Tal como sucedió en Estados Unidos en 2008, muchos temen que el sector financiero de China se vea afectado por el crecimiento desmesurado de este sector de la economía, acompañado con altos niveles de crédito y endeudamiento.

En las últimas dos semanas, las noticias en torno a las proyecciones de crecimiento económico a la baja que llegaron desde la segunda potencia económica mundial ayudaron a empujar el derrumbe generalizado de las Bolsas mundiales, ya sensibilizadas por la posibilidad de que la Reserva Federal se decidiera a retirar los estímulos de su política monetaria expansiva que beneficiaron tanto a la economía estadounidense como a los inversores globales en estos últimos años.

Sucede que el banco central chino había pedido a las entidades comerciales que realizaran una sintonía fina respecto del nivel de créditos que otorgaban, ante un contexto que se agravaba en cuanto a los riesgos para el conjunto del sistema.

Y aunque la entidad tomó medidas para garantizar a los mercados que proveerá efectivo a las instituciones financieras que lo requieran, mejorando la liquidez, la tensión se mantiene. Se rumorea que el Banco Popular de China le pidió a los grandes bancos que atesoren más liquidez  pero las entidades son reticentes a entregar más billetes antes del fin del trimestre, afirmó el analista Jiang Chao, en una entrevista a The Wall Street Journal.

El banco central intervino para mantener a raya a las tasas de interés para préstamos, que se habían disparado niveles del  14%. Gracias a una inyección de 8.000 millones de dólares, las tasas lograron bajar al 9%.

Sin embargo inversores chinos se mostraron muy preocupados de quedar atrapados en una posible crisis bancaria. De hecho, el domingo pasado unos 18.000 cajeros automáticos del ICBC, el mayor banco del país dejaron de funcionar durante dos horas, lo que hizo explotar los comentarios en las redes sociales y dio lugar a los rumores más extremos respecto de una inminente contracción del crédito. Finalmente la entidad un comunicado indicando que se trataba de una actualización de sus sistemas informáticos, pero igual quedó la sensación de que cualquier cosa podría pasar en los próximos meses.

Según publicó el diario argentino El Cronista Comercial, el sector informal es el gran problema del sector financiero chino, que alcanza al 16% del total de depósitos  que andan dando vueltas en el sistema financiero chino, y cuyo monto global equivale a 2 billones de dólares, cuando cinco meses atrás era de sólo US$ 81.000 millones.

“Este segmento incluye empresas estatales que tienen un acceso privilegiado al crédito público y que, en lugar de invertir, les resulta más rentable prestar esos fondos a otras empresas o pymes. Además, estos prestamistas que cobran tasas usurarias son financiados en gran parte por colocaciones de particulares, atraídos por las mayores tasas que pagan (en comparación con los bancos públicos). Esto hizo que a fines del año pasado, el Banco Central declarara que este mercado paralelo generaba enormes riesgos para el país”, dice el diario argentino.

“Hasta ahora, la noticia de la contracción crediticia no pasó de un rumor, desmentido por el sistema de medios oficiales. Pero igual resulta difícil para las autoridades evitar que fluyan los comentarios en internet, principalmente respecto del temor de que se repita un “momento Lehman” entre los bancos chinos. A pesar de ello, según dijo el gran inversor Warren Buffett, “la marea está bajando y el sector bancario está nadando sin ropa”, por lo que al gobierno no le va a quedar más remedio que enfrentar la situación”, continúa.

En momentos en que la economía crece su tasa más baja de los últimos 13 años, por debajo del 8% anual, una contracción del crédito implicaría enfriar aún más la economía.

Esto podría ser un gran problema tanto para la reactivación de Estados Unidos y Europa como para todas las Bolsas a nivel global.

Fuente: Inversor Global

MANAGEMENT, according to Dilbert

GERENCIA, según Dilbert




Created by Scott Adams, Dilbert is about the world's most famous -- and funny -- dysfunctional office



Haciendo click en el link de abajo, accederás a los Contenidos del

Programa Ejecutivo en PENSAMIENTO ESTRATÉGICO

http://msg-latam-meic.blogspot.com.ar/2014/03/programa-ejecutivo-en-pensamiento.html

INICIA Lunes 21 de Abril de 2014 en UTN, Universidad Tecnológica Nacional

Consultar por opción IN COMPANY a: msg.latam@gmail.com


Tuesday, August 20, 2013

Your Personal Brand is More Than just Your Job
by Liz Ryan
A decade ago it was easy to manage your personal brand. Back then, a personal brand was no more complicated than “I’m an Inventory Analyst for Sears”.

When LinkedIn (LNKD) launched in 2003, I’d use that as my job title on the site without thinking twice about it. Nowadays, personal branding is more complicated.

We have a brand that’s separate from the one our employer has designated for us—that is, different from our job title. Whether we reflect it on our LinkedIn profile or not, we’ve got a brand, a network, and, in the best case, a plan for our career that is distinct from our employer’s plan for us. (Begging the question: Does your employer have a plan for your career?).

Employment is over, and the sooner we accept that knowledge, the better for us, whether we’re employees or CEOs. The social contract that HR people like me worried about in the 1980s is shredded. The corporate ladder lies in sawdust at our feet. A career today is a series of assignments, whether with one employer or many; long tenure in one shop doesn’t guarantee continued employment with that firm, for 20 years or 20 minutes. When we talk about a solid company, we’re saying that the entity has been around a long time; we’re not saying the same people have been there for a long time, or that anyone employed in that organization will necessarily be working there tomorrow.

I worked for a great company in Chicago called U.S. Robotics, which was sold in 1997 to another firm called 3Com. A few years later, 3Com sold off the name U.S. Robotics to another outfit that had zero connection to the original firm, but which claimed to be a trusted name in data communications for decades. Trusted name? No doubt. Same people, same vision, same mojo; that’s anybody’s guess?

These days we’re all independent contractors, although some of us are paid via W-2. The distinction between “inside” and “outside” people—a cultural divide 15 years ago—is a payroll detail now. Each of us is responsible for our own career. We are CEOs of small businesses, even if we’re full-time salaried employees. This is one of the reasons personal branding has become a sensitive topic. Employers want to control their employees’ branding, and they try to exercise that control via social media usage policies, but is that fair? Any employee could be looking for a new job tomorrow. An employee needs a network and a reputation (for thought leadership, for instance) as badly as the employer needs those assets on its own balance sheet.

The ramifications of this monumental shift are big, but employers have been slow to change their thinking about leadership and HR practices. If we want to hire and keep smart and savvy people—the ones who can best burnish a corporation’s brand—we have to work harder at managing in this ecosystem. The sharpest people know that their personal brands, their résumés, and their networks are their most valuable assets. They aren’t willing to turn over those gems to a large employer in exchange for just a paycheck.

They demand plum assignments (aka résumé fodder), varied responsibilities (ditto), and life/work flexibility. The employers who get the memo first will snag and keep the brightest lights in the talent ecosystem, which is to say the people with the most (and most appealing) alternatives. That’s how supply and demand works.
Is your organization tuned in to the 2013 talent marketplace? If so, by now you’ve likely shed hidebound performance-review systems and pointless forced-ranking exercises.

You’ve probably burned the policy manual and shifted closer to a results-only culture. How could it be otherwise? Those employers who cling to past practices will lag their competitors. If you’re in one of those organizations—or, even more unfortunately, running one—consider this a memo from the future. Employment is over, and so is the superstructure of tedious, overbearing, fear-based management practices that kept employees quiet, complacent, and disconnected from the world outside their corporate walls for so long.

Will your firm stride into this new world fearlessly? Or pretend that nothing has changed?
Fuente: THE MANAGEMENT BLOG, Bloomberg Businessweek

Haciendo click en el link de abajo, accederás a los Contenidos del

Programa Ejecutivo en PENSAMIENTO ESTRATÉGICO

http://msg-latam-meic.blogspot.com.ar/2014/03/programa-ejecutivo-en-pensamiento.html

INICIA Lunes 21 de Abril de 2014 en UTN, Universidad Tecnológica Nacional

Consultar por opción IN COMPANY a: msg.latam@gmail.com

DEADLINE, according to Dilbert

PLAZO DE ENTREGA, según Dilbert




Created by Scott Adams, Dilbert is about the world's most famous -- and funny -- dysfunctional office



Haciendo click en el link de abajo, accederás a los Contenidos del

Programa Ejecutivo en PENSAMIENTO ESTRATÉGICO

http://msg-latam-meic.blogspot.com.ar/2014/03/programa-ejecutivo-en-pensamiento.html

INICIA Lunes 21 de Abril de 2014 en UTN, Universidad Tecnológica Nacional

Consultar por opción IN COMPANY a: msg.latam@gmail.com

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Tendencias Globales: ¿qué se debe tener en cuenta para Hacer Negocios en LatAm?

SKILLS, according to Dilbert

HABILIDADES, según Dilbert



Created by Scott Adams, Dilbert is about the world's most famous -- and funny -- dysfunctional office

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

10 Things Leaders Should Never Do

What causes executives and business leaders with great potential to self-destruct? Their own behavior
by Steve Tobak

If you ask 10 CEOs, board directors, and VCs about the most preventable causes of failure for executives and business leaders, you'll probably get 10 different answers. Most will focus on lack of skills, capabilities, or experience.

In reality, the answer has nothing to do with abilities or experience. It's all about behavior.

Now, I'm not talking about the kind of failure we all experience over the course of our careers. In competitive markets, failure is inevitable. It comes with the territory. We gain confidence from success, but we gain wisdom from failure. It's a good thing.
I'm talking about failure that's preventable, that never had to happen, that's intrinsic to the individual, not a result of outside forces.

These are behaviors that executives and business leaders should always avoid. They don't just diminish your leadership ability, your presence, your credibility, your reputation.

They will come back to haunt you and, ultimately, be your undoing.
  1. Kowtow to the status quo. Granted, there are examples where the status quo works fine. If you're in the candy bar business and you've got a successful brand like Reese's Peanut Butter Cups, you're probably good for a few decades. If not, inertia is your enemy. If you find yourself saying, "That's how we do it here," you're in trouble.
  2. Whine. Few behaviors are less leader-like than whining, making excuses, pointing fingers, or playing the blame game. It shows a serious lack of maturity, self-confidence, respect, and accountability. And it's a very bad sign.
  3. Deceive. The more comfortable you are being genuine, speaking your mind, and being straight with people, the better. Strive to be the best version of you, not someone or something you're not. Deceit is a slippery slope, and once you start down that path, sooner or later, it will come back to bite you.
  4. Act like a dictator. I don't care how high up the ladder you are, you are not the boss. We all serve others. CEOs are appointed by their boards. Business owners have customers. The minute you start behaving like some sort of supreme leader, you can kiss your success goodbye.
  5. Make empty threats. Confident, competent, mature leaders never make empty threats. It's tantamount to a child throwing a tempter tantrum. It destroys your credibility. Be decisive. Do what you say your going to do or don't say it in the first place.
  6. Crave power. I'm always surprised when people who should know better talk about power like it's something to strive for. It's not. It's healthy to seek achievement and wealth. That's how we measure success. It's also how we grow companies and take care of our families. Power is for politicians and bureaucrats. In the business world, if you crave power, it will end badly.
  7. Ignore the truth. There will always be weak-minded yes-men who sugar-coat the truth and tell you what you want to hear. But if you hire and listen to them, that's the same as looking in the mirror and seeing what you want to see. It's living in denial. And it's one of the most common causes of leadership failure.
  8. Make commitments you don't intend to keep. Executives and business leaders who say what they mean and mean what they say usually have a bright future. And while some may achieve some measure of success by blowing smoke up people's you-know-what's, in my experience, it never lasts.
  9. Be grandiose. I've seen and known lots of CEOs with grand visions for their companies that were not supported by anything remotely credible or logical and had no chance of succeeding. Their egos are so overinflated they think their magnificence alone can make it happen. Funny thing is, it never does.
  10. Do what you know is wrong. Whether it's sacrificing principles for greed, cutting corners, or failing to do the right thing out of fear of repercussions, as with deceit, it's a slippery sloop. You might get away with it once or twice, but it will catch up with you. John Lennon called it "Instant Karma." I've seen it in action. It's real; believe me.
Fuente: Inc.


Haciendo click en el link de abajo, accederás a los Contenidos del

Programa Ejecutivo en PENSAMIENTO ESTRATÉGICO

http://msg-latam-meic.blogspot.com.ar/2014/03/programa-ejecutivo-en-pensamiento.html

INICIA Lunes 21 de Abril de 2014 en UTN, Universidad Tecnológica Nacional

Consultar por opción IN COMPANY a: msg.latam@gmail.com

SMART EMPLOYEES, according to Dilbert

EMPLEADOS INTELIGENTES, según Dilbert



Created by Scott Adams, Dilbert is about the world's most famous -- and funny -- dysfunctional office

Monday, August 5, 2013

10 Things Leaders Must Learn to Do

by Steve Tobak
You can get away with a lot and still make it in this world, but there are some corners you simply can't cut


Business leaders don't exist in a vacuum. Success is always relative to the competition. You may have a great product, service, concept, strategy, team, whatever, but if it doesn't rise above your competitors in a way that's meaningful to your customers, you will ultimately lose.

That's rule number one in business: There are no absolutes; everything is relative to the competition.

You can get away with a lot and still make it in this world, but if you want to be a successful entrepreneur, executive, or business leader, there are certain things you simply must learn to do.
  1. The first is to Stay on top of the competition. Here are nine more. Try to cut corners if you like, but I'm telling you, it won't work.
  2. Learn from experience. Experience is the best teacher, hands down. Not just your own experience, but insights others share from theirs, as well. Former Intel chief Andy Grove was a mentor to Steve Jobs. Jobs, in turn, advised Google founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin. Experience is like an enormous cascading waterfall, an endless source of wisdom and knowledge.
  3. Prioritize and delegate. According to VC Fred Wilson of Union Square Ventures, a CEO should focus on doing just three things and delegate the rest: "Set and communicate the overall vision and strategy of the company; recruit, hire and retain the best talent; and make sure there's always enough cash in the bank." Your three things will differ, but still, the fewer things you focus on, the better your chances of getting them done.
  4. Act on smart decisions. This may sound simple, but strangely, it's where even successful leaders are most likely to fall down. They get lazy, take shortcuts, listen to yes-men, fall for BS, overreact to a single data-point, or fail to act at all. It's the single most preventable cause of leadership failure.
  5. Engage key stakeholders. A CEO's key stakeholders are customers, employees, and investors. Yours are probably different. No matter. You must engage them on a regular basis. Tell them what they need to know and give it to them straight. Ask leading questions and really listen to what they say. Motivate them. Yes, I know it isn't easy to do all that, but that's what it takes to be the boss.
  6. Promote the winners and fire the losers. Every organization has employees you can't afford to lose and those you can't afford to keep. Learn to identify them. Promote and motivate the former and get rid of the latter. It's called weeding and feeding. The result is a beautiful organization.
  7. Pay attention to the numbers. If your customers love your products and services, your employees are effective and engaged, and you're doing a good job running the business, it will show up in the numbers. Income statements and balance sheets provide key metrics on the health of your business, especially year-to-year comparisons.
  8. Troubleshoot tough problems. Business life is full of really tough problems and difficult tradeoffs. There are product issues, technical issues, organizational issues, customer issues, the list goes on and on. You don't have to be Socrates, but it helps if you're a critical thinker who gets deductive reasoning.
  9. Never give up; never surrender. Courage in the face of adversity, perseverance, stick-with-it-ness, these are qualities that every great leader I've ever known had. They never quit. Granted, there are times when they probably should have and didn't, but on balance, they still came out ahead.
  10. Negotiate effectively. I've heard loads of people say they hate to negotiate, but I've never heard a CEO say it. It's one of the most fundamental aspects of business. Think of it as a challenging game of strategy. Personally, I find it to be surprisingly invigorating and fulfilling.
Fuente: Inc.


Haciendo click en el link de abajo, accederás a los Contenidos del

Programa Ejecutivo en PENSAMIENTO ESTRATÉGICO

http://msg-latam-meic.blogspot.com.ar/2014/03/programa-ejecutivo-en-pensamiento.html

INICIA Lunes 21 de Abril de 2014 en UTN, Universidad Tecnológica Nacional

Consultar por opción IN COMPANY a: msg.latam@gmail.com

LEADING BY EXAMPLE, according to Dilbert

LIDERANDO CON EL EJEMPLO, según Dilbert



Created by Scott Adams, Dilbert is about the world's most famous -- and funny -- dysfunctional office