- What types of training and development do organizations offer their employees?
To ensure that both new and experienced employees have the knowledge and skills to perform their jobs successfully, organizations invest in training and development activities. Training and development involves learning situations in which the employee acquires additional knowledge or skills to increase job performance. Training objectives specify performance improvements, reductions in errors, job knowledge to be gained, and/or other positive organizational results. The process of creating and implementing training and development activities is shown in (Figure). Training is done either on the job or off the job.
On-the-Job Training
New-employee training is essential and usually begins with orientation, which entails getting the new employee ready to perform on the job. Formal orientation (often a half-day classroom program) provides information about the company history, company values and expectations, policies, and the customers the company serves, as well as an overview of products and services. More important, however, is the specific job orientation by the new employee’s supervisor concerning work rules, equipment, and performance expectations. This second briefing tends to be more informal and may last for several days or even weeks.
Beyond employee orientation, job training takes place at the job site or workstation and is directly related to the job. This training involves specific job instruction, coaching (guidance given to new employees by experienced ones), special project assignments, or job rotation. Job rotation is the reassignment of workers to several different jobs over time. At Walmart, management trainees rotate through three or more merchandizing departments, customer service, credit, and even the human resource department during the first year or two on the job.
Two other forms of on-the-job training are apprenticeship and mentoring. An apprenticeship usually combines specific on-the-job instruction with classroom training. It may last as long as four years and can be found in the skilled trades of carpentry, plumbing, and electrical work. Mentoring involves a senior manager or other experienced employee providing job- and career-related information to a mentee. Inexpensive and providing instantaneous feedback, mentoring is becoming increasingly popular with many firms, including FedEx, Merrill Lynch, Dow Chemical, and Bank of America. Whereas mentoring is typically conducted through ongoing face-to-face interactions between mentor and mentee, technology now allows for a long-distance mentoring relationship. Dow Chemical uses e-mail and video conferencing to facilitate long-distance mentoring between persons who are working in different countries. For a mentee whose second language is English, writing e-mail messages in English helps the individual become fluent in English, which is a requirement of all Dow Chemical employees regardless of location and country of origin.[1]
expanding around the globe
Employees on the (International) Move
Off-the-Job Training
Even with the advantages of on-the-job training, many firms recognize that it is often necessary to train employees away from the workplace. With off-the-job training, employees learn the job away from the job. There are numerous popular methods of off-the-job training. It frequently takes place in a classroom, where cases, role-play exercises, films, videos, lectures, and computer demonstrations are used to develop workplace skills.
Web-based technology is increasingly being used along with more traditional off-the-job training methods. E-learning and e-training involve online computer presentation of information for learning new job tasks. Union Pacific Railroad has tens of thousands of its employees widely dispersed across much of the United States, so it delivers training materials online to save time and travel costs. Technical and safety training at Union Pacific are made available as programmed instruction, an online, self-paced, and highly structured training method that presents trainees with concepts and problems using a modular format. Software provided can make sure that employees receive, undergo, and complete, as well as sign off on, various training modules.[2]
Web-based training can also be done using a simulation, for example, a scaled-down version of a manufacturing process or even a mock cockpit of a jet airplane. American Airlines uses a training simulator for pilots to practice hazardous flight maneuvers or learn the controls of a new aircraft in a safe, controlled environment with no passengers. The simulator allows for more direct transfer of learning to the job.
concept check
- Describe several types of on-the-job training.
- What are the advantages of simulation training?
- How is technology impacting off-the-job training?
Summary of Learning Outcomes
4. What types of training and development do organizations offer their employees?
Training and development programs are designed to increase employees’ knowledge, skills, and abilities in order to foster job performance improvements. Formal training (usually classroom in nature and off-the-job) takes place shortly after being hired. Development programs prepare employees to assume positions of increasing authority and responsibility. Job rotation, executive education programs, mentoring, and special-project assignments are examples of employee development programs.
Glossary
- apprenticeship
- A form of on-the-job training that combines specific job instruction with classroom instruction.
- job rotation
- Reassignment of workers to several different jobs over time so that they can learn the basics of each job.
- mentoring
- A form of on-the-job training in which a senior manager or other experienced employee provides job- and career-related information to a mentee.
- orientation
- Presentation to get the new employee ready to perform his or her job.
- programmed instruction
- A form of computer-assisted off-the-job training.
- simulation
- A scaled-down version or mock-up of equipment, processes, or a work environment.
- training and development
- Activities that provide learning situations in which an employee acquires additional knowledge or skills to increase job performance.
- “Work, Environment & Culture,” https://www.dow.com, accessed February 8, 2018; Stephanie Oferman, “Mentors without Borders,” HR Magazine, vol. 49 (March 2004), pp. 83–86. ↵
- “How America’s Top Railroad Learns to Fly,” https://www.up.com, December 5, 2017; Eric Krell, “Budding Relationships,” HR Magazine, vol. 50 (June 2005), pp. 114–118. ↵