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How to Measure the Business Impact of Your Workforce Training Programs

March 4, 2020 | By Asha Pandey

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How to Measure the Business Impact of Your Workforce Training Programs

Introduction

Measuring the business impact of workforce training programs is a tall order. In this article, I share several practical approaches that you can use to gain actionable insights and measure the impact of training on your business.

Background

Given the significant investment on time and money organizations make on workforce training programs, there is an intrinsic need to ascertain its impact on business. Not only does this have a bearing on approvals on further investment, it can serve as a great cue to determine which programs are delivering impact and tweak or update the ones that aren’t.

Challenges in measuring the business impact of your workforce training programs

However, there are challenges associated with this exercise of determining the impact of the workforce training on business. Without the supporting analytics (that can help confirm the business impact), L&D teams often find it difficult to showcase the impact on business and justify the ROI. I typically see the following two reasons given by L&D teams on why this is a challenging task:

  1. Standard reports from LMS do not provide the required perspective or actionable insights.
  2. Limited manpower and resources (tools) to collect data, analysis, and validation with business.

As a result, this area is often neglected, or the exercise takes so much time that it may now be too late to apply the actionable insights. As a result, the business finds that the training investment of a given financial year will not really help them see the impact of the workforce training on the business goals for the year.

What Will Help You Measure the Business Impact of Your Workforce Training Programs?

Focus on L&D Metrics is Not Enough

I believe that the L&D teams need to look beyond the basic assessment of training impact, which typically includes:

  1. The number of training registrations.
  2. The training completion rates.
  3. Learner reaction/feedback on the training.
  4. Learner reaction/feedback on the trainer.
  5. Assessment scores.

Need of the Hour

What is required is to map the evaluation of the L&D parameters to the parameters the business wants to see. Essentially, you need to couple the L&D Metrics with the Business Metrics.

Let me illustrate how you can work with the combined view (L&D and Business) with an example.

Training Need: A Sales team needs to undergo training for the new CRM tool (as the organization moves from multiple tools or Excel based trackers to a single, enterprise wide tool).

Audience Profiles

Set 1: Sales Executives, Sales Managers, and Head of Sales – Maps to acquiring three levels of tool proficiency.

Set 2: CEO and COO – Only Dashboard review – with a focus on actionable insights.

The TNA would lead L&D teams to create a training that would help the Sales team achieve the required proficiency levels. This would be duly validated through assessments.

However, the focus is only on the L&D Metrics and the Business Metrics is currently missing.

For instance, the expected gain from the Sales Manager was that with the new CRM tool, the individuals spend less time on creating reports and more time on prospecting and customer engagement. This should translate to 12.5% increase in time spent on prospecting and customer engagement (basically, additional 1 hour/executive/day). This should have a proportional impact on leads conversion.

You see how the two teams are looking at very different pictures!

The Way Forward

Unless, the L&D teams work with the Sales team to identify how the business impact of the training will be measured, the desired gain will not be demonstrated. This exercise (to couple the L&D Metrics with the Business Metrics) needs the following:

  • There must be a strong collaboration between the L&D teams and the Business teams from TNA to training deployment, collation, and interpretation of data that will help determine the impact of training on the business.
  • During the Training Needs Analysis (TNA) phase, the two teams must clearly identify the parameters that will be used to illustrate the direct impact of training on business.
  • All through the journey, a strong communication link must exist between the two teams so that both teams indeed look at the same picture (L&D teams speak the language the business wants to hear).

How Can You Accomplish the Mandate to Measure the Business Impact of Your Workforce Training Programs?

There are several models that can be used to ascertain the business impact of the workforce training programs.

At EI, we use a custom approach – an adaptation of the Kirkpatrick’s model of training evaluation.

For each level,

  • We first identify exactly what is being measured.
  • Then, we look at the outcome of this evaluation and see how we can use it to enhance the business impact of the given workforce training program.

 

 

Level 1: Reaction

Objective: As a first step, we need to validate the learners’ reaction – did they find the training to be useful, was it relevant, will the acquired learning be easy to apply on the job, and so on.

From an evaluation perspective, this feedback allows L&D teams to get the basic insights if the training was relevant and useful. Furthermore, would it help the learners apply the learning on the job. If there are any gaps, they can fix them through remediation or reinforcements.

Level 2: Learning

Objective: The TNA provides the L&D teams to arrive at the learning objectives of the training. The second level helps them validate if these learning objectives were met.

From an evaluation perspective, this feedback allows L&D teams to measure if they met the required learning mandate (this could range from knowledge gain or triggering a behavioral change).

Level 3: Behavior

Objective: The third level is used to evaluate if there is a change in the learner behavior that is directly attributable to the training.

From an evaluation perspective, we are moving up to validate the application of the acquired learning leading to behavioral change.

Level 4: Impact

Objective: The fourth level is used to evaluate the gain or the impact of the training.

From an evaluation perspective, this should validate if the goal of the desired gain that the business had sought (that is, the Business Metrics) was met.

EI’s approach – To assess the business impact of the workforce training

At EI, we use the following approach to assess the business impact of the workforce training and we leverage the Kirkpatrick’s model of training evaluation. We overlay this on a Learning and Performance Ecosystem to deliver the training and ascertain its impact.

Step 1: Training Needs Analysis (TNA) + Methodology to measure the training impact: As I had highlighted in my example, besides identifying the learning outcomes, we focus on collating the improvement areas – the key parameters where the business wishes to see a tangible improvement.

We also identify how this training impact will be measured. This needs a methodology to be defined that encompasses:

  1. What would be measured.
  2. How will this data be collated.
  3. How will the data be analyzed.
  4. Who (manpower) would be responsible to pool, collate, and analyze, and so on.
  5. Additionally, to present the impact, we also secure the baseline data (current state) and quantify the anticipated gain (desired state).

Step 2: Select the right training delivery format: The next step is to select the learning format (ranging from online, blended, or facilitated) that will resonate with the audience (for instance, should it be on the go, available within their workflow, or facilitated or a blend) and help them meet the learning objectives.

Sometimes, we recommend other supporting measures to achieve the business mandate (for instance, coaching or mentoring).

Step 3: Identify the learning strategy: The right learning strategy helps engage the learners, acquire the learning, and apply it on the job.

Besides formal training, there must be room for just-in-time learning aids. These nuggets are available within the learners’ workflow and go a long way in supporting both learning and business mandates.

Additionally, we support the program through teasers (before the training), reinforcements, and challenges (post the training) to offset the “Forgetting Curve” and ensure learners are well equipped to learn, apply, practice, and gain the required proficiency and behavioral change.

Step 4: Validate the learners’ gain: This focuses on assessments to determine if the learning acquisition was in line with the learning mandate.

We integrate additional measures to facilitate the application of learning (business mandate).

Step 5: Assess and measure the business impact: This crucial step entails looping back to the TNA phase and seeing if the identified parameters show the required improvement.

If not, we assess what reinforcements or remediations would help the business see the desired impact. This may impact the selections made in Step 2 (training format) or Step 3 (learning strategy) or Step 4 (validating the learners’ gain).

While there is no single approach that can help you measure the business impact of workforce training, I hope my article gives you several practical cues you can use to measure the business impact of your workforce training programs.

Meanwhile, if you have any specific queries, do contact me or leave a comment below.

 

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Asha Pandey
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