Using Role Play In Change Management Training

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Summary

Using role play in change management training involves simulating real-life scenarios to help participants practice and develop skills necessary for navigating organizational changes effectively. By creating a safe and dynamic environment, role-playing allows individuals to learn, adapt, and gain confidence in handling challenges.

  • Create realistic scenarios: Design role-play exercises that mimic real-world challenges specific to your organization or industry to ensure participants can practice relevant skills.
  • Encourage collaborative feedback: Foster a supportive environment where participants self-evaluate and receive constructive input from peers to identify strengths and areas for improvement.
  • Keep sessions focused: Limit role-play exercises to a few minutes and concentrate on practicing one specific behavior or skill to maintain engagement and ensure meaningful learning.
Summarized by AI based on LinkedIn member posts
  • View profile for Marcus Chan
    Marcus Chan Marcus Chan is an Influencer

    Most B2B sales orgs lose millions in hidden revenue. We help CROs & Sales VPs leading $10M–$100M sales orgs uncover & fix the leaks | Ex-Fortune 500 $195M Org Leader • WSJ Author • Salesforce Advisor • Forbes & CNBC

    98,236 followers

    One team I worked with increased their discovery to demo conversion by 40% in just 30 days with consistent role playing. But… Before I started working with them, they used to HATE it! Here’s what their sales leader said: "Marcus, my team hates it. It feels awkward and forced. Plus, my top performers don't need it." Here's the exact framework I implemented that transformed their performance (and changed their minds): 1️⃣ Make it unexpected Don't announce who's going next in your meetings This keeps EVERYONE engaged and prepared Your reps should be slightly uncomfortable (that's where growth happens) 2️⃣ Include your stars: Make sure to also pick your top performers This shows the team that EVERYONE needs practice It creates psychological safety for less experienced reps It prevents the "I'm-too-good-for-this" mentality 3️⃣ Make it specific: Don't use generic scenarios ("sell me this pen") Focus on REAL objections your team faces daily Target specific stages of your sales process Address actual deals they're working on 4️⃣ Keep it brief: 3-5 minutes per role-play Immediate, actionable feedback Recognize what they did well and then.. One or two specific improvements to focus on 5️⃣ Create a feedback culture: Have peers provide feedback too Focus on what could be improved, not what was "wrong" Document common challenges for future training Celebrate improvement openly This worked so well that even their top performer came to me and said: "I honestly thought I was too good for this, but you caught me off guard in that role-play and I realized I was leaving money on the table." The reality is simple: every professional athlete still practices fundamentals daily. Every world class musician still practices scales. Your sales team needs the same discipline. One sales leader told me: "I was shocked at how quickly our conversations improved. My team went from dreading role-plays to actually requesting them before big meetings." — Hey sales leaders… want to top this off with a 3 step blueprint to running the PERFECT sales meeting? Go here: https://lnkd.in/gtkFi9CK

  • View profile for Adam Spacht

    Strategic learning to drive real business results 🔊 Enable excellence & align organizations 🔊 Teach trainers to design, develop and deliver sessions that don’t suck

    6,134 followers

    What is a training activity people don't like but nearly all agree is super effective? Sitting in a training session what is one activity most people hope isn't on the agenda but deep down inside agree is very helpful? Role Plays. Back in my sales & sales manager days, role plays were a powerful way to apply skills in a dynamic setting while challenging your recall of information in real time. We didn't like them at all but agreed they helped us improve. They can be used for training of all sorts of disciplines, not just sales people. Role plays are outstanding to apply information in real time and have to adjust based off what the other person. And (assuming you built a safe environment) the "pressure" of performing really shows what they did or didn't retain from the session. Tips to make role plays more effective: ✅ Prepare scenario ahead of time focused on practicing specific skills ✅ Build scenario around real situations for the industry ✅ Build scenario that guides participant to practice specific skills ✅ Consider what is great/good/needs improvement outcomes ✅ Give the audience a job - ex: observe and listen for ____________ ✅ Prompt them to self evaluate: what was good & you want to repeat, what is ONE thing you'd improve for next time What one question can I answer about using role plays to improve your training programs?

  • View profile for Alicia Avrach

    Revenue Enablement Leader at DevRev | Experience conversational AI at work

    6,601 followers

    Role Plays ... We both love them and hate them. At their best, they're a great way to build new muscles. At worst, just a chance for people to goof off in a breakout room. Now you can do them with AI, which is great for more at bats, or when you need to role play a first meeting with an industry SME or a specific ICP. But there's great value in having your team do these live to build shared experience and get them coaching eachother. How have you made them productive and useful for your team? Some things I've been incorporating: 1. Kick it off by creating a safe space for learning together 2. Ideally a role play should be done on a real, current Opportunity. If that's not possible, on a current Lead for a real Account. If that's not possible, on a fictional scenario, but it better be very realistic. Otherwise it's too contrived. 3. Role plays should be short. Ideally you're practicing just one behavior (how to open a call, a common objection, or introducing one differentiator) If they go on longer than a few minutes, you lose people. 4. Your best coaches are more experienced sellers currently or recently in the same role. So create your breakout room groupings with intention. 5. After the role play, start the feedback portion by having the person self assess on how they did and what they would change. Then ask for feedback from their peers. 6. Remove friction that keeps people from focusing on what you want them to practice, by: * Having them write possible questions, proof points, examples, etc. in a conversation planner before they start * If you're trying to change a behavior, and a sales scenario is too complex, can they practice in a different context? (i.e. "Tell me about your pet." as a prompt to practice listening and keeping the focus on the prospect) * Giving the "prospect" and "seller" a set of questions and answers they can use, if what you're doing is completely new to the team. Just let them go back and forth with those the first time to build muscle memory. * Providing an "out" - by letting them phone a friend if they have no idea what comes next * Have a couple people do an example role play before you go into breakout rooms. (Let them prep for it ahead of time, so you can be sure it will be a good example) 7. Finish by having the team share their key takeaways Role plays don't have to be painful. And ideally they make the real thing easier and more fun. #roleplay #saassales #enablement #salesenablement

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