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IDP Self-Assessment Worksheets
These worksheets will help you formulate some initial thoughts which you can use to have your IDP conversation with your
manager. Use them to generate ideas which can feed into agreed on specific goals and actions for your IDP plan for the year.
Part Professional Goals and Aspirations
As a first step, it can be helpful to identify where you are in relation to where you may want to move on your professional path.
Are you new in your role, or new to your organization, and needing to master essential competencies critical for your
success?
Are you thinking about preparing for a different role, which may require different skills, or developing existing skills
into significant strengths?
Are you experienced in your role, and looking to maintain full engagement and enthusiasm through taking on
additional challenge, or building competencies that are needed to meet changing work demands, or using strengths
more fully, or mentoring others?
Use the following questions to further refine your professional goals.
1. What gives me the greatest sense of satisfaction and reward?
2. What do I want to do that I am not currently doing?
3. What do I care most about in my work and life?
4. How will these goals and motives help me deliver results at Yale?
5. What is now, or will be of greatest need to Yale, or to my department, in the future? What are the necessary
competencies I’ll need to contribute?
6. Do I see myself changing roles? If so, when, and what does that next role look like?
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7. How might my role change in the future? What competencies will I need to be ready?
8. What work experiences do I need to have to develop professionally, to stay engaged?
9. Where do my professional goals and aspirations overlap and align most with the needs of the organization?
Part Strengths Development Opportunities
Now think about your current strengths and development opportunities. You will not necessarily have a strength and
development opportunity in every category below, but you may. The idea is to go with “top-of-mind” responses at this stage
of planning. As you continue to plan each year, you will find your areas of strengths and development opportunities will
change, so there is no need to identify or accomplish everything at once.
TECHNICAL KNOWLEDGE or EXPERTISE SKILL AREAS - Examples: Finance, process improvement, project management,
computer applications, strategic planning, consulting, etc.
Strength
Development opportunity
PERSONAL SKILL AREASExamples: Managing time, taking initiative, planning and organizing work, problem solving,
providing customer service, etc.
Strength
Development opportunity
INTERPERSONAL SKILL AREASExamples: Collaborating, working on teams, influencing, listening, resolving conflict, etc.
Strength
Development opportunity
MANAGEMENT AND LEADERSHIP SKILL AREAS Motivating others, delegating, coaching, giving feedback, setting clear goals
and expectations, strategic planning, communicating well, getting participation from others, etc.
Strength
Development opportunity
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Part
Passions
In our rational, pragmatic minds, we don’t often spend time thinking about what we simply love working at our passions.
However, if we would analyze when it seems that “time just flies,” or when we experience a healthy dose of satisfaction, we
would probably discover that we are applying skills or abilities that we love using. These are automatic motivators for us, and
we can leverage them to achieve great results, to build skills into strengths, and to keep us fresh and focused at work.
Check the areas below that fit the description of passions so you can factor them in when you are ready to create your IDP.
PASSIONS
CONTRIBUTING EXPERTISE AND RESULTS
___Providing information and expertise to others in the organization
___Producing work based on my own technical expertise
___Working with others on a team as an individual contributor
___Solving technical problems
___Teaching others the skills and knowledge in my area(s) of expertise
___Working directly with customers to resolve issues
___Other
SUPPORTING PEOPLE
___Communicating goals and expectations
___Recognizing people for high performance
___Overseeing team and individual efforts and providing timely feedback
___Delegating tasks to provide growth opportunities for others
___Discussing career development with direct reports
___Intervening and facilitating with teams and individuals to work through issues and problems
___Other
DESIGNING and ASSISTING with HOW WORK GETS DONE
___Establishing procedures for problem solving and decision making
___Designing and implementing systems and practices to support organizational objectives
___Cultivating relationships and networks to procure key resources and improve work flow
___Overseeing processes and metrics to ensure quality and identify targets for improvement
___Developing project plans and delivering project status updates
___Leading or facilitating teams to accomplish work
___Other
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DEVELOPING the FUTURE VISION, CULTURE and ARCHITECTURE OF THE ORGANIZATION
___Translating organizational goals and strategies into goals for my department
___Communicating change and strategy to my staff
___Holding strategic discussions to establish work priorities
___Developing a vision for the future for my part of the organization
___Scanning the environment for trends and assessing organizational challenges and opportunities
___Anticipating the cultural and other impact of different decisions or directions on the organization
___Other
Part Alignment
ALIGNMENT YOUR PROFESSIONAL GOALS AND THE ORGANIZATIONS GOALS
Now you’ve developed a clearer sense of yourself in terms of what you have to offer professionally, and what you want to have
to offer, now and in the future. It’s time to think about how this feeds into your current role and the directions you may have
in mind going forward. It’s also important to consider where your department is going and where the university is going, so
that you can connect with opportunities to grow and develop, both in your role now, and with an eye to the future. Answer
the items below to focus your thinking.
What will be important for me to perform at the maximum level in my current job?
Where is my department going and what do I need to grow with it?
What future roles or positions are exciting to me?
What skills and capabilities will be important to prepare for future roles?
YOU’RE READY TO PLAN!!
Use the information you’ve compiled here to zero in on two to three areas of importance for this year’s individual
development plan, and make some notes on the IDP Conversation Tool to prepare for your meeting. Visit
www.yale.edu/idp
to down load an IDP form, and find more tools, and resources to help you with the IDP process.