Personnel Today
  • Home
    • All PT content
  • Email sign-up
  • Topics
    • HR Practice
    • Employee relations
    • Learning & training
    • Pay & benefits
    • Recruitment & retention
    • Wellbeing
    • Occupational Health
    • HR strategy
    • HR Tech
    • The HR profession
    • Global
    • All HR topics
  • Legal
    • Case law
    • Commentary
    • Flexible working
    • Legal timetable
    • Maternity & paternity
    • Shared parental leave
    • Redundancy
    • TUPE
    • Disciplinary and grievances
    • Employer’s guides
  • AWARDS
    • Personnel Today Awards
    • The RAD Awards
  • Jobs
    • Find a job
    • Jobs by email
    • Careers advice
    • Post a job
  • Brightmine
    • Learn more
    • Products
    • Free trial
    • Request a quote
  • Webinars
  • Advertise

Personnel Today

Register
Log in
Personnel Today
  • Home
    • All PT content
  • Email sign-up
  • Topics
    • HR Practice
    • Employee relations
    • Learning & training
    • Pay & benefits
    • Recruitment & retention
    • Wellbeing
    • Occupational Health
    • HR strategy
    • HR Tech
    • The HR profession
    • Global
    • All HR topics
  • Legal
    • Case law
    • Commentary
    • Flexible working
    • Legal timetable
    • Maternity & paternity
    • Shared parental leave
    • Redundancy
    • TUPE
    • Disciplinary and grievances
    • Employer’s guides
  • AWARDS
    • Personnel Today Awards
    • The RAD Awards
  • Jobs
    • Find a job
    • Jobs by email
    • Careers advice
    • Post a job
  • Brightmine
    • Learn more
    • Products
    • Free trial
    • Request a quote
  • Webinars
  • Advertise

ApprenticeshipsLearning & developmentTraining deliveryTraining evaluationTraining management

Training is an investment, so treat it like one

by Jane Massey 19 Oct 2010
by Jane Massey 19 Oct 2010

 

Register now to view more training content on Smart Buyer…

Personnel Today Smart Buyer

TRAINING

Contents
Overview
Planning your training, learning and development
Supplier selection
Payment, ownership and major UK suppliers
Staff buy-in for training
Was training effective and well delivered?
Face-to-face or e-learning?
Getting performance management to work for you (VIDEO)
Managing people’s performance – fact or fiction?
Case study: Working Sm@rt at Pepsi QTG
   

Related Smart Buyer training content

There are numerous calls for greater investment in learning and development schemes, but all too often training proposals are made blindly. Jane Massey provides five ways to improve your organisation’s approach to developing its staff.

1 Training is an investment, so treat it like one

Stop talking in terms of training programmes and start using the language of the board: investment. Training needs to be aligned to the business, helping it to move forwards and achieve agreed goals. If it is not linked to specific business needs it will always be treated as a cost, not an investment.

There needs to be meticulous results planning prior to a programme’s implementation and scrupulous collection of data afterwards.

You wouldn’t make other investments without considering the full implications, so why should training be any different?

2 You need to be 100% serious about evaluation

We are starting to see a new level of professionalism and discipline when it comes to evaluating training, but it is far from widespread.

Post-training assessment is not taken seriously enough and is usually so rudimentary that the data collected is useless in drawing conclusions and making improved investment decisions.

Evaluation is often retrospective, yet outcome indicators need to be set from the start to gain useful results. Unless you’re going to be rigorous, there’s no point. Serious evaluation is not for amateurs.

3 Is leadership training right for your business?

While I agree with the Chartered Insitute of Personnel and Development’s recent acknowledgement that line managers need to discuss training needs with their staff, its call for huge investment in leadership training needs to be questioned.

As an employer, you need to ask yourself: what is the business case for leadership development and what specific measures will it deliver to drive the company forward? If you don’t know the answer, the chances are you’re wasting time and money.

What you may need instead is better management of resources, people and teams. Leadership training won’t make you manage better, it’s an additional domain of competence and should be driving more than the achievement of core business targets.

4 Evaluate the advantages of apprenticeships

Employers need to look carefully at the business benefits of apprentices, as outlined by Lord Sugar in the House of Lords last week. This means looking far beyond the direct costs of employing them and facilitating their ongoing development.

Using low cost as justification for the decision to recruit apprentices is insufficient. Their performance needs to be measured at every level and the data used to encourage further improvement as early as possible.

It is not unreasonable to expect an apprentice to deliver the appropriate level of productivity almost from the outset. This should be tracked alongside learning and job performance standards.

Giving apprentices evidence of the benefit they bring to the business is also likely to help drive their motivation and commitment.

5 You can’t do anything without good data

When implementing training, learning and development schemes, data is your best friend. The board will not accept anecdotal evidence and neither should you.

Collect data along the way and share it. Do you know what made a difference and why? Do the board and the finance director know? Which training changed staff behaviour for the better and which contributed to business goals?

Often, when training is designed to address a particular risk, for example health and safety or money laundering, there is no liaison between risk managers and those responsible for personnel development. However, these compliance issues are ones that training is supposed to address.

Sign up to our weekly round-up of HR news and guidance

Receive the Personnel Today Direct e-newsletter every Wednesday

OptOut
This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Credible data, collected and analysed in a disciplined way, should be disseminated throughout the organisation and used to support further financial decisions to ensure that a return is made.

Jane Massey is chief executive of training evaluation consultancy Abdi.

Jane Massey

previous post
Bullhorn UK Hits the Century Mark
next post
Spending cuts will make UK ‘a more unequal, more squalid and nastier country’, claims TUC

You may also like

AI in learning still ‘potential not reality’, according...

15 Aug 2025

Skills England: Demand for ‘priority skills’ to accelerate

13 Aug 2025

AI adoption being hampered by skills gaps –...

13 Aug 2025

Quarter of A Level students looking to apprenticeships...

12 Aug 2025

Nurse and midwife ‘graduate guarantee’ launched

11 Aug 2025

Return to office: the looming battle over where...

11 Aug 2025

Elevate your L&D strategy at the World of...

8 Aug 2025

Doctors call for training reform to beat burnout

8 Aug 2025

Empower and engage for the future: A revolution...

7 Aug 2025

‘Knowledge gap’ fuelling stress about workers’ finances

6 Aug 2025

  • Elevate your L&D strategy at the World of Learning 2025 SPONSORED | This October...Read more
  • How to employ a global workforce from the UK (webinar) WEBINAR | With an unpredictable...Read more

Personnel Today Jobs
 

Search Jobs

PERSONNEL TODAY

About us
Contact us
Browse all HR topics
Email newsletters
Content feeds
Cookies policy
Privacy policy
Terms and conditions

JOBS

Personnel Today Jobs
Post a job
Why advertise with us?

EVENTS & PRODUCTS

The Personnel Today Awards
The RAD Awards
Employee Benefits
Forum for Expatriate Management
Whatmedia

ADVERTISING & PR

Advertising opportunities
Features list 2025

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Linkedin


© 2011 - 2025 DVV Media International Ltd

Personnel Today
  • Home
    • All PT content
  • Email sign-up
  • Topics
    • HR Practice
    • Employee relations
    • Learning & training
    • Pay & benefits
    • Recruitment & retention
    • Wellbeing
    • Occupational Health
    • HR strategy
    • HR Tech
    • The HR profession
    • Global
    • All HR topics
  • Legal
    • Case law
    • Commentary
    • Flexible working
    • Legal timetable
    • Maternity & paternity
    • Shared parental leave
    • Redundancy
    • TUPE
    • Disciplinary and grievances
    • Employer’s guides
  • AWARDS
    • Personnel Today Awards
    • The RAD Awards
  • Jobs
    • Find a job
    • Jobs by email
    • Careers advice
    • Post a job
  • Brightmine
    • Learn more
    • Products
    • Free trial
    • Request a quote
  • Webinars
  • Advertise