“Objectives are not fate; they are
direction. They are not commands; they are commitments. They do not determine
the future; they are means to mobilize the resources and energies of the
business for the making of the future.”
– Peter Drucker
Recently, I’ve
been working with a group in the LA area that wanted to reassess the way they
train their employees, particularly their management team. I asked what types
of training do they give their employees and the response was “we train them on
what they are supposed to do.” I asked to see any materials that they use, any
slides, modules or outline but none was present. I also asked the organization
if they believe their trainings were effective and they responded with mixed
results. I finally asked why they felt they needed additional training from me.
The company just thought more training meant more sales.
Depending
on where you work, there might be a negative or positive feeling when you hear
the word “training” or “company training.” For some companies the word “training”
is non-existent. Many times, we are asked to train other people either because
we’ve done a good job at work or we might be seen as an expert within our
company. Training is not easy though (Read Still Re-Training Your Employees? Is It A People Problem Or A TrainingProblem?). There are different learning styles the trainees have and different
methods of teaching from the facilitator. There is one element though that most
companies or managers forget to consider when training their employees.
What are your objectives?
Most
trainers are not trained to train. If you are put in a position to train and
have no training experience (or even if you do) you should focus on this one
key area: the objectives of your training. Brainstorming the objectives will
force you to think about what you’re trying to get out of your own training.
These are some questions you should be asking yourself:
What should the trainee(s) be able
to do, say, make, create, develop, use or see after the trainee(s) is done with
my training?
Have you
ever wondered why most trainings begin with the objectives and the objectives
typically begin with “by the end of this training you will…?” Put some thought
into the things you want to accomplish after the trainee(s) walk out of your
training at the end.
Is your training content aligned to
your objectives?
Telling
someone what to do is not a training. Showing someone what to do is not a training
either. Everything you do in a training must be correlated with your
objectives. Your goal as a trainer is to meet those objectives and have the
trainee(s) accomplish those objectives as well
How many objectives do you have?
If you
develop a training program for your staff and have 15 objectives for your
training, do you think the training will be a long training or a short
training? Most likely it will be a long training and with long trainings people
forget most of the content. Stick to 5 objectives but heavily focus on
mastering those objectives. If you need to cover more objectives then you
should consider splitting the training module so that it is not one long
training.
If you want
to put your brain to work and implement some of these ideas, think about
training a group of people to make a sandwich. If your goal is to make every
single trainee make the exact sandwich every single time, what objectives would
you develop? How can you make your content correlate with your objectives? Will
your objectives include the understanding of ingredients, speed, and quality
control? Focus on your objectives and you will have more consistent results
with your staff.
Don't forget to share this blog so you can encourage others: family, co-workers, friends. Give them something to get motivated! You never know what they might be going through. A few words of encouragement can go a long way.
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