Training is
essential for success—always has been, always will be. But like everything
else, not all training is created equally. Nor is there one-size fits
all when it comes to employee training (leadership, technical, interpersonal,
whatever). Some things to consider…

  1. Don’t dump
    into training. In the short term, an employee will only rise as high as his or
    her trainer. Put an idiot in charge of training, and don’t be surprised when
    you’ve got intellectually challenged drones rolling off the assembly-line.
  2. Segment or
    modularize training. It’s true that “the brain can only absorb what the butt
    can endure.” Thinking you can sit a plebe in a classroom setting (or technical
    training scenario) for five straight days and them actuallylearn
    anything, well, that evensounds stupid. Create useable, absorbable
    chunks of homogeneous learning. Send ‘em out, and let them try it on for size.
    Bring ‘em back and try some more…
  3. Don’t train on
    anything unless you’re certain it’s a training opportunity. If an employee’s
    job is to press the big red button when the big black dial reaches “10,” and
    they don’t, it’s likely not a training challenge. We frequently confuse
    training needs with corrective actions, and sometimes even discipline. They are
    neither. Training is for—and only for—demonstrated skills shortfalls.

Olympic athletes
need training; professional actors and musicians need training. Even the best
professional sports players in the world need training. It’s only in business
where we think, “…nah, she’ll be ok. She can just learn by watching Bob.”

Dumb, dumb, dumb.

But that’s just me…

KB

At C-Level Newsletter

Join our mailing list to receive our newsletter jam-packed with info, leadership tips, and fun musings.

You have successfully subscribed!