Visualizzazione post con etichetta network professionale. Mostra tutti i post
Visualizzazione post con etichetta network professionale. Mostra tutti i post

giovedì 8 agosto 2013

Perchè far parte di MACSE Italia


Quest’anno sono Manager Assistant esattamente da 20 anni.

In venti anni e molte esperienze in aziende diversissime tra loro ho avuto rare opportunità di trovare e seguire corsi di formazione progettati e studiati in modo specifico per il ruolo, non parliamo di programmi di mentoring e incontri di networking.

Mi sono sempre sentita molto sola e in una specie di isolamento ovattato di cui nessuno parlava, spesso tenuta a distanza per via degli stretti contatti con il capo a volte “ricercata” come via facilitatrice alla sua benevolenza. Cominciavo a sentirmi una sorta di “isola” lontana da tutti.

Quando questa situazione diventò intollerabile, cominciai a cercare altre colleghe. Con mia grande sorpresa e sgomento trovarle era quasi impossibile ed anche se era evidente che c’erano molte altre "isole” là fuori, stava solo a me trovarle.

In breve diventò la mia missione trovare e mettere in contatto queste persone speciali e fornire loro un mezzo tramite cui potessero sostenersi a vicenda e lavorare insieme per diventare eccellenti nel loro ruolo cruciale di assistenti.

MACSE Italia è nata nei primi mesi del 2010 e continua a crescere ogni anno con nuove associate.

In più abbiamo un network di “followers” di circa 2500 assistenti che ricevono la nostra newsletter e fanno parte del nostro gruppo su LinkedIn – Manager Assistant Career & Skills Empowerment.

Questo grande successo è dovuto ai valori fondamentali che sono alla base dell’associazione e alla promessa di costruire finalmente qualcosa di speciale - un'organizzazione dedicata alle esigenze e alle necessità delle Manager Assistant basata sulla condivisione, sul rispetto e sull’integrità, qualità che fanno la differenza, lasciando inevitabilmente un'impronta su ognuna delle associate.

Questa visione è stata realizzata con il supporto e grazie alla convinzione di un gruppo di colleghe davvero notevoli. La nostra vision & mission è una responsabilità, un onore e un privilegio che vogliamo far conoscere a tutte le colleghe, ma anche se MACSE Italia è aperta a tutte le assistenti, non è adatta a tutte.

MACSE Italia è un’associazione esclusiva e siamo fiere di avere tra di noi le assistenti più motivati e dotate di curiosità intellettuale, oltre che di una fortissima voglia di crescere ed evolversi nel ruolo.
Il nostro obiettivo finale è quello di essere il centro di interesse e di ispirazione per chi è già è assistente e per chi vuole diventarlo.

Vogliamo migliorare la qualità delle performance e aumentare il valore del ruolo di tutte le assistenti italiane attraverso il rafforzamento delle competenze e lo sviluppo delle relazioni raggiungendo l'eccellenza delle prestazioni professionali.

Raggiungiamo costantemente questo obiettivo, fornendo programmi di formazione, incontri serali di networking e studio, un Programma di Mentoring e Coaching e il Programma di Knowledge Sharing – unico nel suo genere.

Oltre ad avere accesso a un gruppo eccezionale di colleghe tramite la rete, durante tutto l'anno i nostri membri hanno numerose occasioni per riunirsi, conoscersi personalmente, ispirandosi e eccellendo nel ruolo.

E non dimentichiamo il Congresso Nazionale che ogni anno offre l’opportunità a tutte le associate di incontrarsi e approfondire lo scambio e la conoscenza.

MACSE Italia alle partecipanti l'accesso esclusivo a documenti di best practice e strumenti di sviluppo personale. Preparatevi a immergervi in un’intensa attività di continuo miglioramento attraverso seminari, laboratori interattivi, dibattiti interessanti che vi aiuteranno a migliorare considerevolmente la vostra routine quotidiana.

Un gruppo di assistenti di livello senior è sempre disponibile ad affrontare i temi più pressanti, affiancando chi ne ha necessità nelle prove più difficili, preparandole alle sfide future.

Infine da quest’anno abbiamo lanciato M.A.C. – Manager Assistant Certificata.
Il percorso M.A.C. facilita e supporta la Manager Assistant nell'apprendimento di best practice e protocolli così da poter lavorare sia nel settore privato che nel pubblico offrendo un elevata qualità di servizio.

Si tratta di una importante qualifica che fornisce le competenze necessarie per accedere ad un percorso professionale di alto livello preparando la Manager Assistant a lavorare in ambienti di ogni genere.



lunedì 27 agosto 2012

Master Part Time - Manager Assistant - Advanced program - Il Sole 24 ORE FORMAZIONE

MACSE Italia rinnova per la 3° volta la parteneship con Il Sole 24 Ore

A una associata di MACSE Italia è riservata una borsa di studio del 50%

OBIETTIVO
Manager Assistant - Advanced program è un percorso di specializzazione pensato per chi, all'interno di realtà aziendali, studi professionali o nella Pubblica amministrazione, ricopra il ruolo di Assistente di Direzione o di Office Manager da almeno quattro anni.
Si tratta in effetti di un profilo professionale sempre più evoluto dal punto di vista delle competenze richieste e delle mansioni ad esso affidate.
Il Master si pone come obiettivo l'approfondimento teorico e pratico delle competenze-chiave legate al ruolo: il miglioramento delle abilità relazionali e di negoziazione, la specializzazione in tema di Time management e gestione dello stress, la presa in esame di temi cruciali come l'organizzazione aziendale, la suddivisione delle cariche e responsabilità nel consiglio direttivo e di amministrazione.

PROGRAMMA
I Modulo: l'assistente di direzione: caratteristiche e competenze di un ruolo in evoluzione
II Modulo: organi,funzioni responsabilità in azienda. elementi di corporate governance
III Modulo: la comunicazione efficace
IV Modulo: leadership, negoziazione e personal branding
V Modulo: la gestione del tempo e dello stress organizzare e pianificare in modo efficace l'attività lavorativa
VI Modulo: organizzare un evento aziendale: dagli aspetti pratici al cerimoniale
VII Modulo: l'assistente di direzione nelle aziende multiculturali
VIII Modulo: testimonianze a confronto


DESTINATARI
Assitenti di Direzione e Office Manager che abbiano maturato un'esperienza lavorativa almeno quadriennale che intendano acquisire una specializzazione mirata per accrescere le proprie competenze in vista di opportunità di crescita professionale.

ASSEGNAZIONE BORSA DI STUDIO
24 ORE Formazione ed Eventi mette a disposizione una borsa di studio a copertura totale del costo di partecipazione per un/una giovane interessato/a a svolgere durante il Master di Specializzazione incarichi di tutorship ( gestione operativa dell'aula e monitoraggio sull'andamento delle lezioni ).
Il candidato ideale è un/una laureato/a, in possesso di buone capacità organizzative e doti relazionali. Costituirà titolo preferenziale l'avere maturato esperienze nel settore. Gli interessati possono inviare entro il 31/07/2012 il proprio Curriculum Vitae, completo di lettera di motivazione e fotografia, all'indirizzo e-mail ext.serena.mola@ilsole24ore.com.
In aggiunta a una associata di MACSE Italia è riservata una borsa di studio del 50%


SEDE
Il Master si terrà a Milano, presso la sede de Il sole 24 Ore, in Via Monte Rosa, 91

CONTATTI
Per ulteriori informazioni sul Master, contattare la referente, Serena Mola al numero, 02.3022.3229, oppure all'indirizo email: ext.serena.mola@ilsole24ore.com (segnalare se siete associate MACSE Italia).

mercoledì 1 agosto 2012

Executive Secretary LIVE - Friday, 22 March 2013 at 14:00 - Sunday, 24 March 2013 at 18:00 - London, United Kingdom

If you only attend one event this year, then this is the event you should attend.
Your favourite Executive Secretary authors, together in London for one weekend only.
Featuring the following world class trainers

Friday 22nd March
The exceptional Julie Perrine presents “Become a Procedure Pro: Creating an Effective Administrative Procedures Manual for Ongoing Use” - a half day practical session
During Julie’s session, you will learn how to:
  • Make it easy for others to successfully fill in and cover for you when you’re out of the office!
  • Create a tool that serves as an all-inclusive reference tool for you each and every day
  • Quickly and efficiently document what you do each and every day at the office
  • Make procedures documentation a regular part of your routine
  • Demonstrate the value you add to the team and ALL of the responsibilities you handle (especially important for annual performance review time)
  • Use your procedures manual as an administrative training guide for the person taking your place, should you pursue a promotion or another job
  • Showcase your documentation and organisational skills

Saturday 23rd March
The Email Masterclass - The two best selling authors in the world on the topic, together on stage for the first time EVER - Marsha Egan and Dr Monica Seeley present a two hour session on email productivity and etiquette.

Plus Eth Lloyd on Learning and Development - truly inspirational, Eth holds a Master’s in Education where her research looked at the professional development opportunities and career pathways of administrative professionals from their perspective. She works specifically with administrative professionals to support them in successfully gaining New Zealand national qualifications in Business Administration and First Line Management and enhancing their career opportunities.

Bonnie Low-Kramen presents 'Admins can Change our World' - how to change the global workplace in positive ways. Those of you that have read Bonnie's articles in Executive Secretary will know how inspirational and controversial she can be. This presentation will be a challenging and personal insight into Bonnie's vision for the administrative profession.

Top leadership author, Doug Dickerson will be exploring how you become a 'Centre of Excellence' within your business. Doug Dickerson understands leadership. Most important, he knows that leaders are "grown" in those day-to-day moments where they make decisions that can change the course of people's lives - and the life of their organisations. Doug also has the ability to show us something old in a whole new way, with a thought-provoking question or different perspective. In doing so, he makes us think - and feel, and come to the conclusion that, yes, maybe we can be the leaders we always wanted to be.

Plus options on Sunday to take part in a full day London FAM trip, a trip to a country pub with traditional English Sunday lunch or a luxury Spa Day.
http://executivesecretarylive-es2.eventbrite.co.uk/?rank=1&ebtv=CExecutive Secretary Live - London 2013

domenica 8 luglio 2012

III Congresso Nazionale di MACSE Italia - Quote rosa? Ci siamo anche noi!

logo MACSE Italia
III Congresso Nazionale di MACSE Italia
29 Settembre 2012
Quote rosa? Ci siamo anche noi!
MACSE Italia è l'unica associazione di categoria italiana attiva sul territorio nazionale, dedicata alla figura dell'Assistente di Direzione.
Siamo nate nel 2010 e ogni anno organizziamo il nostro Congresso.
Il tema di discussione che abbiamo scelto per il Congresso 2012 è: "Quote rosa? ci siamo anche noi!"
La scelta è stata dettata dal fatto che, da qualche anno, si discute della necessità di garantire una maggior presenza di donne in ruoli di rilievo, ma mai è stato evidenziato che la maggioranza delle donne che lavorano, non ricopre ruoli dirigenziali.
Le Manager Assistant sono moltissime in Italia e raramente sono dirigenti.
Noi siamo convinte che se non si crea una vera cultura al femminile nelle aziende italiane, che sono ancora territorio governato da regole maschili, le donne manager faranno di sicuro molta più fatica a raggiungere e poi mantenere certe posizioni, senza perdere la loro identità femminile.
Questa cultura siamo noi stesse che dobbiamo diffonderla e dato che lo possiamo e lo dobbiamo fare tutte, auspichiamo che questi progetti coinvolgano anche le figure professionali al di sotto della dirigenza.
I relatori che abbiamo invitato parleranno di questi temi portando le loro personali e professionali esperienze di vita vissuta.
Iscriviti entro il 3 Settembre - info e iscrizioni: congresso2012@macseitalia.it
Hotel Milano Scala - Via dell'Orso 7, Milano
Hotel Milano Scala
Sabato 29 Settembre - 14.30-17.00
Panel Relatori:
Maurizio Bottari - Amministratore Delegato di Ambire
Lucia Fracassi - Membro della Fondazione Bellisario
Gianna Detoni - Amministratore Delegato di Panta Ray
Calendario corsi Autunno 2012
15-Set-2012I incontro del programma di Knowledge Sharing anno 2012
Knowledge sharingRiservato alle Associate MACSE Italia
Presso SpaziPer dalle 10.00 alle 17.00
Per iscrizione: info@macseitalia.it
linea divisoria
22-Set-2012II seminario di approfondimento sulla Contrattualistica
ContrattualisticaPresso SpaziPer dalle 9.30 alle 13.30
Docente: Egon Caputo
Per informazioni: formazione@macse.it
linea divisoria
26-Set-2012ApeMACSE – Assistant on stage: L'enneagramma (link)
EnneagrammaPresso Wood Bar in Via Tiziano 19, Milano, dalle 19.00 alle 22.00
Costo: 10 euro per iscritte MACSE Italia, 15 euro per ospiti
Docente: Mariachiara Novati
Per informazioni: iscrizione.aperitivo@macseitalia.it
linea divisoria
29-Set-2012
III Congresso Nazionale di MACSE Italia
Hotel Milano Scala
Quote Rosa? Ci siamo anche noi!
linea divisoria
06-Ott-2012Budget e consuntivo di un progetto (link)
Budget di un progettoPresso SpaziPer dalle 10.00 alle 17.00
Docente: Gianluigi Noris Chiorda
Per informazioni: formazione@macse.it
linea divisoria
10-Ott-2012ApeMACSE – Assistant on stage: Yoga della risata (link)
Yoga della risata
Presso Wood Bar - Via Tiziano 19, Milano, dalle 19.00 alle 22.00
Costo: 10 euro per iscritte MACSE Italia, 15 euro per ospiti
Docente: Anita Ferraro
Per iscrizione: iscrizione.aperitivo@macseitalia.it
linea divisoria
20-Ott-2012Prevenzione e Crisis Management (link)
Crisis managementPresso SpaziPer dalle 9.00 alle 13.30
Docente: Gianna Detoni
Per informazioni: formazione@macse.it
linea divisoria
24-Ott-2012ApeMACSE: La sicurezza pratica in Internet (link)
Sicurezza in internetPresso Wood Bar in Via Tiziano 19, Milano, dalle 19.00 alle 22.00
Costo: 15 euro per iscritte MACSE Italia, 25 euro per ospiti
Docente: Luciano Brenna
Per informazioni: iscrizione.aperitivo@macseitalia.it
linea divisoria
10-Nov-2012La gestione del tempo e la capacità di organizzarsi
Time managementPresso SpaziPer dalle 9.30 alle 18.00
Docente: Marco Odescalchi
Per informazioni: formazione@macse.it
linea divisoria
14-Nov-2012ApeMACSE: Il travel management
Travel managementPresso Wood Bar in Via Tiziano 19, Milano, dalle 19.00 alle 22.00
Costo: 10 euro per iscritte MACSE Italia, 15 euro per ospiti
Per informazioni: iscrizione.aperitivo@macseitalia.it
linea divisoria
17-Nov-2012La scrittura efficace in azienda (link)
Scrittura EfficacePresso SpaziPer dalle 9.30 alle 18.00
Docente: Davide Giansoldati
Per iscrizione: formazione@macse.it
linea divisoria
24-Nov-2012Manager Assistant: la leadership nel ruolo (link)
LeadershipPresso SpaziPer dalle 9.30 alle 13.00
Docenti: Cristina Deaniella e Mariachiara Novati
Per informazioni: formazione@macse.it
linea divisoria
12-Dic-2012ApeMACSE – Assistant on stage: Affrontare il ruolo con ironia
IroniaPresso Wood Bar in Via Tiziano 19, Milano, dalle 19.00 alle 22.00
Docente: Cristina Deaniella
Per informazioni:iscrizione.aperitivo@macseitalia.it
linea divisoria
Per informazioni sui costi: formazione@macse.it
linea divisoria
Se non vuoi più ricevere questa newsletter, invia una mail con oggetto "cancellami" a newsletter.macseitalia.it

sabato 14 gennaio 2012

Calendario corsi I semestre 2012

MACSE e MACSE Italia
Gli argomenti di questa newsletter:
- Calendario corsi I semestre 2012
- PDA - Personal Development Analysis: - fai il test gratuitamente con MACSE Italia
Calendario corsi I semestre 2012
15-Feb-2012ApeMACSE - Presentazione dell'attività del prossimo semestre
Relatrice: C. Deaniella
Coaching
Presentazione di un nuovo Servizio di Coaching
Relatrice: M. Galli
Durante la serata verranno estratte a sorte 3 partecipanti per un coaching gratuito
Presso Wood Bar in Via Tiziano 19, Milano, dalle 19.00 alle 22.00
Costo: 10 euro per iscritte MACSE Italia, 15 euro per ospiti
Per registrazione: iscrizione.aperitivo@macseitalia.it
25-Feb-2012Powerpoint avanzato (link)
Powerpoint
Presso SpaziPer dalle 9.30 alle 18.00
Docente: G. Noris Chiorda
Per informazioni e iscrizioni: formazione@macse.it
10-Mar-2012I Incontro Gruppi Programma Knowledge Sharing (link)
Knowledge Sharing
Riservato alle associate MACSE Italia
Presso SpaziPer dalle 9.30 alle 18.00
Per informazioni e iscrizioni: formazione@macse.it
14-Mar-2012ApeMACSE - Il Public Speaking
Public Speaking
Presso Wood Bar in Via Tiziano 19, Milano, dalle 19.00 alle 22.00
Docente: D. Kirkman
Costo: 10 euro per iscritte MACSE Italia, 25 euro per ospiti
Per registrazione: iscrizione.aperitivo@macse.it
31-Mar-2012La MA del XXI sec. Evoluzione del ruolo e skill richieste per essere adeguate (link)
Evoluzione del ruolo
Presso SpaziPer dalle 9.30 alle 18.00
Docente: E. Zurviello Nigri
Per informazioni e iscrizioni: formazione@macse.it
21-Apr-2012La comunicazione efficace (link)
Comunicazione efficace
Presso SpaziPer dalle 9.30 alle 18.00
Docente: M. Odescalchi
Per informazioni e iscrizioni: formazione@macse.it
05-Mag-2012Le relazioni interculturali in azienda
Relazioni Interculturali
Presso SpaziPer dalle 9.30 alle 18.00
Docente: da confermare
Per informazioni e iscrizioni: formazione@macse.it
12-Mag-2012La contrattualistica
Contratto
Presso SpaziPer dalle 9.30 alle 12.30
Docente: E. Caputo
Per informazioni e iscrizioni: formazione@macse.it
16-Mag-2012ApeMACSE - Assistant on Stage: Il Project Management semplice (link)
Project Management
Presso Wood Bar in Via Tiziano 19, Milano, dalle 19.00 alle 22.00
Costo: 10 euro per iscritte MACSE Italia, 15 euro per ospiti
Relatrice: C. Deaniella
Per registrazione: iscrizione.aperitivo@macseitalia.it
09-Giu-2012Incontro di chiusura lavori Gruppi Programma Knowledge Sharing (link)
Knowledge Sharing
Riservato alle associate MACSE Italia
Presso SpaziPer dalle 9.30 alle 18.00
Per informazioni e iscrizioni: formazione@macse.it
13-Giu-2012ApeMACSE - Chiusura della stagione
Aperitivo
Presso Wood Bar in Via Tiziano 19, Milano, dalle 19.00 alle 22.00
Costo: da definire
Per registrazione: iscrizione.aperitivo@macseitalia.it
23-Giu-2012Chiusura del II ciclo del Programma di Mentoring anno 2012 (link)
Mentoring
Riservato alle associate MACSE Italia
Presso SpaziPer dalle 9.30 alle 18.00
Per informazioni: mentoring@macseitalia.it
linea divisoria
PDA - Personal Development Analysis: fai il test gratuitamente con MACSE Italia
MACSE Italia offre a tutte le iscritte al network la possibilità di effettuare gratuitamente il primo step del test psicometrico PDA.

Il PDA (Personal Development Analysis) è un test psicometrico che, attraverso una metodologia semplice, precisa e scientificamente avallata, permette di descrivere e analizzare il Profilo Comportamentale delle persone. Analogamente permette la valutazione delle necessità comportamentali di una mansione e genera le compatibilità dettagliate applicabili ai diversi processi di Risorse Umane.

La Prova PDA non qualifica profili comportamentali come "buoni o cattivi", ma descrive le caratteristiche comportamentali della persona valutata. Genera un Report di Compatibilità tra una persona e una mansione, semplicemente descrivendo ed elencando i punti di forza ed eventuali punti di miglioramento.

Al raggiungimento di 5 richieste di report completo le associate MACSE Italia potranno ottenerlo ad un prezzo speciale.

Per poter effettuare il test o ricevere ulteriori informazioni scrivere a info@macseitalia.it
logo PDA International IDexpansive

martedì 28 giugno 2011

Special offer! Subscribe to the Executive Secretary Magazine

Dear
We are pleased to be giving away a free title either written by one of our authors or recommended by your peers with each new subscription next week. There will be a different free book available each day when you subscribe - just choose which one you would like.
To subscribe visit www.executivesecretary.com/subscribe or email me at lbrazier@executivesecretary.com and I will send you an invoice. 
So here is the complete list of books for you to choose from:
Buy on Friday 24th and receive 'Become an 
Inner Circle
 Assistant' by Joan Burge
The words 
Inner Circle
 conjure up visions of an exclusive group of people whose achievements are admired and rewarded. The Inner Circle Assistant title doesn't show up on any organizational chart but she's the woman or, the man, who knows how to make things happen and supports the movers and shakers in the orgaization. BECOME AN INNER CIRCLE ASSISTANT outlines the steps to earn theInner Circle status as well as thrive in the position. It is a book of strategy and workplace philosophy that will help administrative profesionals become top performers in work and in their careers. The book presents the competencies that characterize successful office professionals and is based on the author's popular training program, the Star Achievement Series, which is delivered to thousands of administrative professionals nationwide. Assistants who learn these competencies and incorporate them into their work will be successful. They will increase their impact on the company's results, be visible and recognized as a star performer, prepare for future positions, increase self-esteem and levels of confidence, and ultimately achieve 
Inner Circle
 status.
Buy on Saturday 25th and receive 'Successful Minute Taking - Meeting the Challenge; How to Prepare, Write and Organise Agendas and Minutes of Meetings' By Heather Baker
'This is a superb book. I wish it had read it before I started organising meetings, writing agendas and taking minutes years ago! It is full of really good tips and is very clear and easy to read. This will really help with coaching and mentoring junior members of staff.' Amazon
Buy on Sunday 26th and receive 'Who Moved My Cheese: An
Amazing Way
to Deal with Change in Your Work and in Your Life' By Spencer Johnson
A short story about 2 mice and 2 'little people' in a maze looking for cheese.
Of course 'cheese' is just a metaphor for what you want in life (such as money, the ideal job), and the 'maze' represents where you are looking for what you want (such as your family, an organization). As the story goes, one of the characters (Haw) learns to deal with change successfully and writes what he has learned on the maze wall. In this way, the reader gets the main points in the book and can learn too how to deal with life's changes.
A little book that is big on wisdom, many should find it entertaining and useful.
Buy on Monday 27th and receive 'Inbox Detox' by Marsha Egan
A cure for the "Email Blues". Egan asks readers to cast a critical eye on their own email habits, provides a model, 12-Step Program Style, for dealing with those habits, and then details newer, more productive ones. Egan breaks down the email issue into its most basic problem: email misuse is a constant drain on productivity, and therefore a constant drain on the bank account. If you need to tame your email inbox, this book is the answer.
Buy on Tuesday 28th and receive 'Successful NLP: Quick and Easy Ways to Use Neuro-Linguistic Programming to Get Ahead in Life' by Jeremy Lazerus
'I'm an NLP Master Practitioner. I think this book hits the nail on the head on many levels: practically for the NLP Practitioner and Master Practitioner, and for the complete novice...well this was the book I was looking for 5 years ago when I was trying to find out more about NLP. Practical, easy to read and easy to understand and put into practice.' Amazon
Buy on Wednesday 29th and receive ' Walking Tall: Key Steps to Total Image Impact' by Lesley Everett.
This book is a must have for you to understand how your image effects the way people treat you initially and, more importantly, how it effects your business success. Over 90% of a person's first impression of you is based upon your image, how you dress and look and how you present yourself.
Buy on Thursday 30th and receive 'Whack Around the Head: Purpose Passion and Power at Work Right Now!' by Sharon Eden
'Sharon Eden is a brilliant author, an initiator and master of internal change. I dived straight into the book and I wasn't disappointed. Sharon uses positive language and engages the reader from the outset. The book is for everyone who wishes to 'live' their life and to celebrate their uniqueness and their 'own' great story! Every demon, excuse, voice, negative memory calling, is revisited and you really do run out of excuses to stay within 'your box' once you've finished the first few chapters! Sharon 's writing style is fun, dynamic and punchy. I never knew 'self improvement' could be this 'HOT'....Sharon Eden works 'magic'. The book is SENSATIONAL, Do you dare to to change your life?' Amazon 
Buy on Friday 1st and receive 'The New Executive Assistant: Advice for Succeeding in Your Career' by Melba Duncan
'"The New Executive Assistant" is a must-read for aspiring or seasoned executive assistants, their bosses, and everyone in between.
Ms. Duncan doesn't just advise you to develop a proactive rather than a reactive approach to your administrative career, she guides you to discovering both what you want out of life and what your career can provide. She covers all the important bases for surviving in today's fast-paced world: learning to adapt to change (technical and cultural); mastering the fundamentals of communicating what you really mean; tapping into your management and leadership potential; handling both yourself and others in conflict situations; promoting yourself, your boss, and your company; and regaining your spiritual "center". Most importantly, however, Ms. Duncan asks wether or not you are cut out to be an executive assistant. Life is too short to just have a job; whatever it may be, find a career that works for you, challenges you, and fits your personality.' Amazon
Packed with objective insights, advice, and enjoyable witticisms, "The New Executive Assistant" delivers. I found in this one book what countless seminars and 50-minute training series have not been able to provide; I found truely usable, relevant insights and information. Ms. Duncan has created a mentoring master piece for executive assistants (and anyone who wants to understand them)! 
To subscribe and receive your choice of free book please visit www.executivesecretary.com/subscribe or email me atlbrazier@executivesecretary.com and I will send you an invoice.

As a subscriber you also receive:
- 6 issues a year
- Containg no advertising
- Just 48 pages of essential training and business information per issue
- Access to executivesecretary.com including international jobs, training and events
- Access to the Executive Secretary LinkedIn group
- Expert advice from our editorial board

If you would like your company to subscribe on your behalf, we can email you a letter to take to the person responsible for purchasing training. Please email us on lbrazier@executivesecretary.com for more details.
Subscriptions purchased between now and July 25th can choose whether to begin the subscription from May or July's edition. The subscription will commence from the chosen month and run for 12 months.
£120/E145/$190 + p&p
Discounts available to members of many associations. Please contact us for more details.
Corporate subscription rates also available.
The website will automatically generate an invoice and email it to you when you pay online by credit/debit card
I look forward to hearing from you
Kind regards
Lucy 
Lucy Brazier
Publisher/Editor
Executive Secretary - relaunched March 25th 2011
PS: All the above books are also available from the Executive Secretary bookstore at www.executivesecretary.com/books
T: + 44 1932 560974 or + 44 7875 477165
For a free PDF sample copy of the sample edition please visit our website at www.executivesecretary.com
For Executive Secretary LinkedIn Group click here
Follow me on Twitter @lucybrazier or Skype me on lucy-brazier

lunedì 27 giugno 2011

The case of Executive Assistants by Melba Duncan (the full article)

Harvard Business Review
The Case for Executive Assistants, by Melba J. Duncan.
Among the most striking details of the corporate era depicted in the AMC series Mad Men, along with constant smoking and mid-day drinking, is the army of secretaries who populate Sterling Cooper, the 1960s ad agency featured in the show. The secretary of those days has gone the way of the carbon copy and been replaced by the executive assistant, now typically reserved for senior management. Technologies like e-mail, voice mail, mobile devices, and online calendars have allowed managers at all levels to operate with a greater degree of self-sufficiency. At the same time, companies have faced enormous pressure to cut costs, reduce head count, and flatten organizational structures. As a result, the numbers of assistants at lower corporate levels have dwindled in most corporations. That’s unfortunate, because effective assistants can make enormous contributions to productivity at all levels of the organization.
At very senior levels, the return on investment from a skilled assistant can be substantial. Consider a senior executive whose total compensation package is $1 million annually, who works with an assistant who earns $80,000. For the organization to break even, the assistant must make the executive 8% more productive than he or she would be working solo—for instance, the assistant needs to save the executive roughly five hours in a 60-hour workweek. In reality, good assistants save their bosses much more than that. They ensure that meetings begin on time with prep material delivered in advance. They optimize travel schedules and enable remote decision making, keeping projects on track. And they filter the distractions that can turn a manager into a reactive type who spends all day answering e-mail instead of a leader who proactively sets the organization’s agenda. As Robert Pozen writes in this issue: A top-notch assistant “is crucial to being productive.”
That’s true not only for top executives. In their zeal to cut administrative expenses, many companies have gone too far, leaving countless highly paid middle and upper managers to arrange their own travel, file expense reports, and schedule meetings. Some companies may be drawn to the notion of egalitarianism they believe this assistant-less structure represents—when workers see the boss loading paper into the copy machine, the theory goes, a “we’re all in this together” spirit is created. But as a management practice, the structure rarely makes economic sense. Generally speaking, work should be delegated to the lowest-cost employee who can do it well. Although companies have embraced this logic by outsourcing work to vendors or to operations abroad, back at headquarters they ignore it, forcing top talent to misuse their time. As a longtime recruiter for executive assistants, I’ve worked with many organizations suffering from the same problem: There’s too much administrative work and too few assistants to whom it can be assigned.
Granting middle managers access to an assistant—or shared resources—can give a quick boost to productivity even at lean, well-run companies. Firms should also think about the broader developmental benefits of providing assistants for up-and-coming managers. The real payoff may come when the manager arrives in a job a few levels up better prepared and habitually more productive. An experienced assistant can be particularly helpful if the manager is a new hire. The assistant becomes a crucial on-boarding resource, helping the manager read and understand the organizational culture, guiding him or her through its different (and difficult) personalities, and serving as a sounding board during the crucial acclimation. In this way, knowledgeable assistants are more than a productivity asset: They’re reverse mentors, using their experience to teach new executives how people are expected to behave at that level in the organization.
Getting the Most from Assistants
Two critical factors determine how well a manager utilizes an assistant. The first is the executive’s willingness to delegate pieces of his or her workload to the assistant. The second is the assistant’s willingness to stretch beyond his or her comfort zone to assume new responsibilities.
Delegating wisely.
The most effective executives think deeply about the pieces of their workload that can be taken on—or restructured to be partially taken on—by the assistant. Triaging and drafting replies to e-mails is a central task for virtually all assistants. Some executives have assistants listen in on phone calls in order to organize and follow up on action items. Today many assistants are taking on more-supervisory roles: They’re managing information flow, dealing with basic financial management, attending meetings, and doing more planning and organizing. Executives can help empower their assistants by making it clear to the organization that the assistant has real authority. The message the executive should convey is, “I trust this person to represent me and make decisions.”
Not every executive is well-suited for this type of delegating. Younger managers in particular have grown up with technology that encourages self-sufficiency. Some have become so accustomed to doing their own administrative tasks that they don’t communicate well with assistants. These managers should think of assistants as strategic assets and realize that part of their job is managing the relationship to get the highest possible return.

Stretching the limits.

Great assistants proactively look for ways to improve their skills. When I was the assistant to Pete Peterson, the former U.S. commerce secretary and head of Lehman Brothers, I took night classes in law, marketing, and presentations to burnish my skills. Today I see executive assistants learning new languages and technologies to improve their performance working for global corporations.
In my work, I frequently encounter world-class executive assistants. Loretta Sophocleous is the executive assistant to Roger Ferguson, the president and CEO of TIAA-CREF; her title is Director, Executive Office Operations. She manages teams. She leads meetings. Roger says that he runs many decisions past Loretta before he weighs in.
Another example is Noreen Denihan, whom I placed over 13 years ago as the executive assistant to Donald J. Gogel, the president and CEO of Clayton, Dubilier & Rice, LLC. According to Don, Noreen fills an informal leadership role, has an unparalleled ability to read complex settings, and can recognize and respond to challenging people and circumstances. “A spectacular executive assistant can defy the laws of the physical world,” Gogel says. “She [or he] can see around corners.”
Trudy Vitti is the executive assistant to Kevin Roberts, the CEO Worldwide of Saatchi & Saatchi. Often when you ask him a question, he’ll say, “Ask Trudy.” He travels for weeks at a time and says that he has utter confidence in Trudy to run the office in his absence.
Compared with managers in other countries, those in the United States do a better job of delegating important work to their assistants—and of treating them as a real part of the management team. Outside the United States, educational requirements for assistants are less intensive, salaries are lower, and the role is more typically described as personal assistant.
You can often tell a lot about an executive’s management style—and effectiveness—from the way he interacts with his assistant. Can the executive trust and delegate, or does he micromanage? Do assistants like working for her, or does she have a history of many assistants leaving quickly or being fired? Not every boss–assistant relationship is made in heaven, but an executive’s ability to manage conflicts with an assistant can be an important indicator of his overall ability to manage people.

Finding the Right Fit

Hiring the right assistant can be a challenge. In some ways, it’s trickier than filling traditional management positions, because personal chemistry and the one-on-one dynamic are so important—sometimes more so than skills or experience.
Expert assistants understand the unspoken needs and characteristics of the people with whom they work.
They have high levels of emotional intelligence:
They respond to subtle cues and react with situational appropriateness.
They pay close attention to shifts in an executive’s behavior and temperament and understand that timing and judgment are the foundation of a smooth working relationship.
A good assistant quickly learns what an executive needs, what his or her strengths and weaknesses are, what might trigger anger or stress, and how to best accommodate his or her personal style.
Good matches are hard to come by: That’s the reason so many good assistants follow an executive from job to job.
After many years of debriefing assistants who’ve been fired, I’ve identified several factors that make for bad relationships. The most common missteps an assistant makes are misreading the corporate culture, failing to build bridges with other assistants, failing to ask enough questions about tasks, agreeing to take on too much work, and speaking to external parties without authorization. Bosses usually contribute to these deteriorating relationships by not being open in their communications or not being clear about expectations.
There’s an assistant I placed recently who’s having trouble developing the right relationship with her boss. The executive called me and said, “Melba, I expected her to read through these memos and then get them out very quickly to my managers. But she left them on my desk, didn’t call me over the weekend, and didn’t send them out.” I asked the assistant about it, and she said, “He didn’t tell me it was important—I can’t read someone’s mind.” But in fact, in this job you’re supposed to be able to read minds—or, at the very least, you’re supposed to ask questions.

Simply put, the best executive assistants are indispensable. Microsoft will never develop software that can calm a hysterical sales manager, avert a crisis by redrafting a poorly worded e-mail, smooth a customer’s ruffled feathers, and solve a looming HR issue—all within a single hour, and all without interrupting the manager to whom such problems might otherwise have proven a distraction.
Executive assistants give companies and managers a human face.
They’re troubleshooters, translators, help desk attendants, diplomats, human databases, travel consultants, amateur psychologists, and ambassadors to the inside and outside world.
After years of cutting back, companies can boost productivity by arming more managers with this kind of help—and executives who are fortunate enough to have a skilled assistant can benefit by finding ways to delegate higher-level work to him or her.
Executive–assistant relationships are business partnerships: Strong ones are win-wins between smart people. In fact, they’re win-win-wins because ultimately the companies reap the benefits.