| ASME held the First Annual
Leadership Training Conference (LTC) in Houston, Texas on March
3 - 5, 2006.
More than 220 unit
volunteer leaders attended the conference. These delegates represented
100 sections, 32 technical divisions, the International Gas Turbine Institute,
the International Petroleum Technology Institute, the Center for Reserarch
and Technology Develolpment, the Young Engineers Correspondents, the
Centers Sector, the Codes and Standards Sector, the Strategic Management Sector and 3 student sections
The LTC has replaced the Technology Executives Conference (TEC) and the
regionally based Management Training Seminars (MTS) as the primary venue
for volunteer leadership training.
The primary purpose of the LTC was to provide the unit leaders with a
comprehensive view of the Society’s organization, activities and
resources to help them succeed in leading their ASME units. Great emphasis
was made in creating opportunities for the delegates to network with each
other, the ASME leaders in attendance as well as the ASME staff. The intent
was to better enable the interchange of ideas that may lead to changes
in Society operations consistent with ongoing changes in the engineering
workplace.
President Gene
Feigel opened the conference by providing the delegates with
an update on the current status of ASME and an overview of the Society’s
main strategic objectives. President Feigel was joined by President-Elect
Terry Shoup and ASME Executive Director Virgil Carter in welcoming the
delegates and kicking off the conference.
During the conference, delegates had the opportunity to attend a series
of workshops on leadership tools as well as applications. The delegates
also particpated in a series of exercise scenarios that were designed
to provide real-life situatiuons that could be encountered as unit leaders.
The intent of these exercises was for leaders to gain practical operational
and planning expereince that could be applied to the development and execution
of actual unit programs.
A highlight of
the conference was the “Networking by Design”
exercise that enabled the delegates to develop new contacts and relationships
and identify opportinuites for collaboration on future projects. Delegates
used posters from the divisions and districts, that described major products
and services, to facilitate the interchange and networking.
The conference closed with a series of workshops that provided global
and technical community leaders with a forum to summarize the topics discussed
at the LTC, review challenges remaining and to develop action plans to
put all of the new ideas into operation.
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