How Soft Skills Make an Organisation Effective

The drive for organisations to be more productive is a never-ending challenge, and here we will show you why soft skills are vital in making any organisation more efficient.

Having technical skills are no doubt important but equally what employers need are the interpersonal and people abilities too.

Soft skills are the people and interpersonal skills required in most jobs. Both technical and soft skills are necessary, but they are quite different. Technical skills are easy to measure and can be learnt, the softer skills can also be developed but require practice and are not as easy to measure – but matter hugely.

Improved Communication

An employee may have the most incredible technical abilities and knowledge, but if they cannot communicate effectively then their company will struggle to succeed. We all communicate slightly differently. Being able to adapt your style of communication to different people so that your message is clearly understood by all, will help you to influence and persuade others, improve the sense of team engagement, and lead to higher performance.

Team Building

Creating a cohesive team comes from great open communication, explaining and getting buy in from people about how their role fits into the grander scheme is essential and hugely important. It often releases discretionary effort and sense of direction and pride. An effective team resolves disputes with speed, fairness, and trust. Effective teams are far more accountable and understand a business’s priorities, this can all come from a good leader and/or from qualities of the team itself.

Change

Any organisation that wants to successfully thrive through change will need people with interpersonal skills to help navigate to the end goal. Leaders and staff who are able to communicate regularly and honestly with their employees is imperative; especially as many handle the complexities and disturbance of change in very different ways. Celebrating and recognising successful milestones in a change journey and the efforts of people is just one way to make the journey smoother.

 

 

Improved Decision Making

Having the ability and skills to make efficient and effective decisions some find easy, whilst others with training, experience, confidence and sometimes bravery can learn. Without these skills decisions are often either not made or made in haste. Learning how to problem solve, using intuition, leadership and assertiveness all play a part in decision making. Also as with many observed positive behaviours, others see our decisiveness and therefore often become more confident decision makers themselves – Behaviour breeds behaviour!

 

Reduced turnover of staff

Hiring staff takes time and is an expensive process, keeping great staff is what most businesses strive for. The skills of motivation, staff development, praise, encouragement, emotional intelligence, leadership, conflict management, compassion, collaboration and managing staff welfare all count hugely to people. Those who possess and have learnt excellent interpersonal skills will find that navigating these subjects and issues well will not go unnoticed by others. The morale of those working in a supported and challenging environment is clearly a bonus to all resulting in productive, motivated, and valued people who stay.

Final thoughts

We hope you have found that these attributes of soft skills can help your organisation be more effective. It’s all about people – our most valuable asset.

As Richard Branson said, “Train people well enough so they can leave, treat them well enough so they don’t want to.”

 

3 Ways to Challenge Imposter Syndrome and Feel Confident

Nearly 70% of people experience Impostor Syndrome. And it is particularly common among women and people from minority populations – so how can we overcome it?

Group of People Standing Indoors

What is imposter syndrome?

“The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, and wiser people so full of doubts”
Bertrand Russell – Philosopher

The term was defined by clinical psychologists Pauline Clance and Suzanne Imes in 1978, when they found that despite having adequate external evidence of accomplishments, people with imposter syndrome remained convinced that they didn’t deserve the success that they had. They felt like an imposter by not being qualified and/or capable of performing efficiently in that role.

Building up self-confidence and self-esteem can help, however the source of feeling like an imposter could come more from the way we are conditioned to think about how things are supposed to be.

If you feel that you don’t “look like” the person who should do that role, you are more likely to feel like an imposter. It is a real feeling based on shared perceptions that we have about what something or someone is “supposed” to look like – it can come from our early conditioning, our assumptions and our biases.

Watch this TED talk to learn more about Imposter Syndrome:

What is imposter syndrome and how can you combat it? - Elizabeth Cox

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3 Ways to Challenge Imposter Syndrome

Know how you respond to stress

People can respond to the anxiety of imposter syndrome in one of two ways: either through striving for perfectionism by overworking; or by taking avoiding action to keep themselves safe, rarely speaking up or seeking out new challenges.

Get a sense of how you respond to stress. Are you an over-worker or an avoider? If you over-work, learn to be more assertive and state what your needs are rather than saying yes to everything. If you are an avoider and you want to start voicing your opinion more, make a promise to yourself to speak up in the first 15 minutes of a meeting so that you short-circuit your natural tendency to hold back.

At STL we run several training sessions that can help with these skills, including Building Confidence and Assertiveness, Stress Management and Presentation Skills.

Put your emotions into words
Learning to cope with difficult emotions like self-doubt will help you increase your mental strength. Studies show that people who ignore negative emotions experience more distress and can engage in destructive behaviours.

Identifying and labelling feelings will combat the stressful feelings that arise with impostor syndrome. Expand your emotional vocabulary so that you can better deal with anxiety and worry when it arises. Simply labelling your inner experience is a powerful way to keep insecurity from ruling you.

Listen to your inner dialogue & change it!
We can be our own worst critic, putting ourselves down, not acknowledging our accomplishments and criticising what we are capable of doing.

For one week, try writing down your thoughts and noting your inner dialogue. How are you judging yourself? Are you putting yourself down internally?

Try to start using positive words and positive-yet-realistic phrases. It’s not easy to admit out loud that you feel insecure, so begin by changing the words, and the mental approach will follow.

Conclusion
Don’t forget that many smart, successful and competent people feel like imposters in their jobs. The most limiting part of imposter syndrome is that it can curtail our courage to go after new opportunities, explore new interests or put ourselves forward for new exciting opportunities.

Try implementing the 3 tips above to start you on the path to conquering imposter syndrome and reaching your full potential.