Custom Search

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Powering up training in a recession


Cost and access issues
A New Zealand industry training organisation working with mechanical engineering, manufacturing, baking and food processing industries, Competenz, urged the New Zealand government to reduce the costs of industry training in a recent press release.

CEO John Blakey said that while trade training in New Zealand has been under-funded for decades, the recession has highlighted this problem. "We're taking the message to the Government that cost is the major barrier to employers taking on apprentices and upskilling staff - and this needs to be fixed now.”

Blakey went on to say that Competenz is working with Business New Zealand and the Industry Training Federation on long-term solutions to take to the Government.

The problems
Cost is only one part of the problem, in my view. Other brakes on training include:

  1. Fragmentation of the training delivery industry leading to challenges finding the right training/courses

  2. Lack of clear career pathways, despite a hefty national framework of possible units to study

  3. Challenges with acceptable assessment forcing training providers to produce prescribed documentary evidence of every PC and every minuscule part of the range

  4. Lack of innovative (cheap and ‘safe’) solutions to accessing online training resources

  5. Companies’ headaches around rostering employees off on courses for more than a day


Solutions could come from:

  1. NZQA maintaining up-to-date lists of currently available face-to-face/e-learning/distance learning courses instead of just a list of registered providers

  2. NZQA and/or ITOs having easily accessible recommended career pathways for industry careers

  3. A review of the prescriptive model of assessment to allow integrated projects to act as evidence

  4. Better access to online training, and not just in IT or computing. The Government is moving toward broadband solutions, so companies now have to get over their distrust of employee online intent and give them Internet access (even if only in a controlled IT environment)

  5. Partnerships between deliverers and developers of off-site, on-site, and online training material – no one option is best but the best will come from combining them


Subtle brakes
Then there are more subtle brakes on performance improvement:

  • The company culture sees training as a ‘perk for employees’ and not as a valuable tool to advance company performance

  • Training ends with the employee’s attendance/qualification and no systems exist within the organisation to spread the gain

  • Skills training is seen as a one-way process, like feeding hungry fledglings, instead of as a partnership of development

  • Understanding business economics is a closely guarded secret that employees must not know about



Integrated improvements
There are many ways of improving performance and giving employees skills improvement training is only one way. Performance can also be enhanced by changing the culture so that every employee understands their vital part in the process of company evolution. That culture change rests mainly on management and, to a lesser extent, the partnership between management and unions.

By educating employees on the way of the market, managers gain 100s of sets of eyes to look for market opportunities and threats. After all, employees are:

  • Consumers or customers and can feedback information on market demand

  • Observers of the process and can identify bottlenecks and better ways

  • Potential markets for competitor products because they know what they like

  • Researchers/surfers of the Net so they keep up with trends


Trainers need to rebrand themselves as facilitators of learning and enlarge their own self-beliefs. They don’t have to know it all, they can use hundreds of existing learning resources, and even rely on their trainees to find the answers. Research should be seen as a legitimate and sanctioned use of their time. Let learners learn by experiencing the power of one … or one hundred.

Many of the above options can be accomplished without large amounts of money being thrown at them. They do, however, need a shift in thinking from micro-managing training in a silo to integrating training into a company-wide activity.

1 comment:

  1. Good stuff Heather-especially "...They do, however, need a shift in thinking from micro-managing training in a silo to integrating training into a company-wide activity."

    A 'Living Organisation' approach is the way to go, finding the juncture of personal, team and organisation needs and focussing on performance not qualifications.

    ReplyDelete