Universally, companies with fewer that 500 employees are
pretty poor at training employees.
The reasons for this are understandable and many, starting with flat
organizations, populated by doers and a mindset that people are hired to add
value.
The reasons that training becomes more important to a
company as it grows from 15 to 50 10 120 employees are just as universal:
employees stop providing as much value if they are not challenged and
developed; self-learners are extremely rare; companies whose employees,
processes and systems don’t improve get stuck/complacent at points in their
growth.
So, what’s a CEO/Company to do? Here are a few options that reduce risk, improve sustainable
growth and provide size appropriate focus to the training that is needed: Recognize training is important and
that training is something you model; no what your company can train and what
training it may not be able to provide.
If you are an executive or business owner without a coach,
then you don’t yet recognize that training is important or that it is something
you model. I know of no
professional athlete who is without a trainer/coach. Maybe they know something you don’t know? If you are getting coaching ask
yourself how much you are communicating its value to your team/employees? Do you have goals for the coaching you
receive and do you share those goals/KPI’s? Do you include your key reports in the coaching
process?
As to training others… I have found that in most companies
of the 15 and 50 employee size, that they are best at
technical training, next best at operational training and usually weakest in
training leadership, management and supervisory skills (soft skills: communication, professional
improvement, etc.). These are
important roles/skills and tools.
They should be a part of employees professional improvement plan and
there should be some budget attached to the training involved.
Back to the technical training…. If you make something,
provide a service or distribute something, the knowledge base and tools to do
it and do it better are likely to be within your and your employees
wheelhouse. Meaning that you have
best practices, skills and tools that can be taught. The companies that do this the best focus on three aspects
of training: the provide training in very narrow areas and cross train; they
train people to train and make the training a constant part of employee’s jobs.
So, what works in your company? How did you initiate training? How did you make sure that training was a part of what
everyone does?
No comments:
Post a Comment