5 Steps To Creating Effective Training Programs
5 Steps To Creating Effective Training Programs
Programs
November 29, 2013 -Filed Under: Business, Consulting, Corporate Training-
1Share
3Share
Tweet
4Share
The results of a training needs analysis provides the employer with answers to the
following questions:
At this step in the process, employers should identify the desired critical competencies,
i.e., behaviors and associated knowledge, skills, abilities and personal characteristics
that are linked to desired business outcomes. This is usually done through collecting
information from subject matter experts.
Data collection may take the form of interviews, focus groups or surveys. Regardless of
the method used, the data should result in a clear understanding of how important each
competency is to achieving the desired business goal.
A rating scale example to assess the importance is one like the following:
How Important Is This for Successful Job Performance?
1 = Not at all
2 = A little
3 = Somewhat
4 = Considerable
5 = Extremely
To ensure that only the competencies that are deemed critical should be considered for
inclusion in other training needs analysis steps, rating averages should be at least a 4.0
on the five-point rating scale.
Step 3: Identify Trainable Competencies
Not every competency can be improved through training. For example, a sales job may
require sales people to be outgoing and initiate conversations with total strangers. It is
more effective, then, for an employer to hire people that are already extroverts than to
attempt to train introverts to be more outgoing. Similarly, it may be more effective to hire
people with specialized knowledge than to educate and train them.
Employers should evaluate each critical competency from Step 2 and determine if each
one is something they expect employees to possess prior to job entry. Taken together,
this should provide employers with a list of critical competencies that are amenable to
training.
Step 4: Evaluate Competencies
With a targeted list of competencies in hand, employers should determine the extent to
which their employees possess these. The most often used methods are:
Performance evaluation surveys are best used to evaluate observable behaviors. This
can be easily accomplished by taking the critical competencies from Steps 2 and 3 and
having knowledgeable people rate the targeted employees' behaviors. Most often,
supervisors perform this function.
However, multiple raters, including peers, subordinates and customers, are often used
to evaluate the performance of supervisors and executives. This approach is generally
known as 360 degree surveys.
Performance evaluation surveys become less effective the more raters have to infer
unobservable competencies such as ability, skills and personality. Evaluation of these
competencies is better accomplished through the use of professional tests and
assessments. There are many tests available on the market to measure specific skills,
abilities and personality characteristics. However, choosing the right test should be
done in coordination with a testing professional, e.g., an organizational psychologist.
Care should be taken in selecting tests that are valid measures of the targeted
competency.
Custom-designed assessments are also appropriate, especially if the employer desires
to measure specialized knowledge or effectiveness in a major segment of the work.
These can range from multiple choice job knowledge tests to elaborate job simulations.
For example, a very effective approach to measuring the training needs of supervisors
and leaders is using an assessment center, which is comprised of different role-play
exercises that parallel managerial situations.
Step 5: Determine Performance Gaps
Regardless of the methods used to evaluate competencies, individual employee results
are then combined to assess how many employees are in need of improvement in
particular competencies.
To do this, the employer first needs to establish what constitutes a performance gap.
That standard will vary from employer to employer. Some employers will set higher
standards than others.
Setting that standard will provide the employer with an understanding of how many
employees fall above or below that standard. Those falling below would be considered
to be in need of training.
Step 6: Prioritize Training Needs
Employers should aggregate the data in Step 6 with information on the performance
gap pervasiveness. That is, employers should total how many, or what percentage, of
the targeted workforce needs the training.
Employers should also consider the importance of the competency (see Step 2). Taken
together, pervasiveness and importance should result in a list of training priorities.
Step 7: Determine How to Train
Using the training priority list from Step 6, employers should now consider how best to
train their workforce. Typical training methods include:
Reading, 10 percent;
Audio-visual, 20 percent;
Demonstration, 30 percent; and
Discussion group, 50 percent.
Employers should keep this in mind and strive for the training method that will not only
be suitable for the material, but also have the best chance for retention by employees.
Step 8: Conduct a Cost Benefit Analysis
At this point, employers need to consider the costs associated with a particular training
method and the extent to which performance gaps can be combined into the same
training experience.
Cost factors include:
On the benefit side, different training methods will have varying degrees of effectiveness
(see Step 7). For example, while web-based training may be the least costly, this may
not be the best way for employees to develop a particular skill. Employers need to strike
a balance between the cost of a particular training method and its ability to achieve the
desired results.
Step 9: Plan for Training Evaluation
The last step in this process is for employers to decide how they will know whether the
training worked. Training is only effective if the material is retained and used on the job.
This step should include an evaluation component similar to how the needs were
assessed in Step 4.
Questions the evaluation process should answer are:
How much did the training improve the competencies targeted in the training?
How much did the training improve employees' actual job performance?
How much did the training improve the meeting of business objectives?
How much did the training result in a positive return on its investment?
The questions employers want answers to will determine the method and components
of the evaluation process.