Assertiveness:
As the facilitator you need to have
the ability and courage to speak the hard truth when necessary.
If you are afraid to say what needs to be said when it needs
to be said, you will not be as effective or credible. The challenge
of assertiveness is knowing when to push and when to pull back.
You need to know when to intervene to help keep the group on
track and when to let things work themselves out. Just a reminder:
There is a big difference between assertiveness and aggressiveness.
Intuition:
Facilitation is not a skill that rests on applying
a simple formula to get the "right answer." You need
to work at finding it on your own by identifying what is best
for each situation. Intuition comes from experience, but also
includes the ability to act on a hunch.
Creativity:
Each time you facilitate you need to put together traditional,
new, and creative ways to conduct the meeting. This is as important
for the first meeting with a group or the hundredth. The meeting
agenda reflects different theories, ideas and experiences integrated
holistically.
Flexibility:
As the facilitator, you must think on your feet, stay
on your feet, and accept new and better ideas from others, to
change or modify the course as needed. The facilitator who is
attached to his or her first idea, or to his or her ideas in
general, will encounter difficulty.
Confidence
and enthusiasm: A key to success is the ability to
appear credible, articulate and knowledgeable in front of the
participants from the start and to sustain a level of energy
and enthusiasm that lasts until all the participants have left.
Team player:
One way to incorporate teamwork and commitment among
the participants is to use alternate facilitators. As the main
facilitator you are the moderator, interpreter, and timekeeper,
not the star. Your recognition comes from the work you allow
others to accomplish and the successes you help to build.
High self-esteem:
If a situation is not going well, the facilitator may
be blamed, whether the facilitator was the cause of the problem
or not. Even if an individual or group takes their frustration
out on you, you cannot take it personally. Make sure you separate
your skill, experience, and job from your worth as a human being.
Sincerity:
You, as the facilitator, must truly care about your
group and its success and you need to practice what you preach.
Dedicated
to learning: Good facilitators are dedicated to continuous
improvement of their skills. The more tools you have available
to use, the less likely you will panic when a certain technique
doesn't work the way you planned.
Reference
Butler, A.S. Team
Think. (1996). The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.