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ISSUE 6: April 2007 In This Issue:
CURRENT ISSUE FROM THE ARCHIVES JOIN US |
GUEST OPINION By Reesa Abrams, Founder and Principal, TECHNO*COACH Outsourcing in Corporate Training Training has many functions it can deliver to a corporation. The successful results of training services can integrate a company with its customers and partners, resulting in increased revenues, lowered costs and higher customer satisfaction. The question is how to gain those results in the best manner. To take advantage of training’s potential, it is important to know when to outsource its development. Hiring a professional contractor who has “done it before” can save a lot of wrong turns. In the initial stages of setting up the training operation, a contractor can be very useful in planning the training, and in identifying and selecting training vendors. He or she can also assist in the development of standards, forms and return-on-investment measures. It is now possible to manage global assessment and training using local resources. Professional organizations, institutions, and outsourcing agencies can leverage their large networks to run organizational assessment projects worldwide on most standard topics, such as compliance training, soft skills training and operations training. The local contractors visit the customer locations, and then the contractors collaborate on the web to integrate the results and make the recommendations. This process is cheaper and more productive than having a single person do the work, not to mention the increased mindshare and local cultural knowledge leveraged. What one employee can accomplish in a year can be accomplished in one-half the elapsed time using a team of contractors. Let’s take a look at the different types of training that a company may be implementing with an eye for whether outsourcing can offer an advantage. Compliance training is a common training need in this age of Sarbanes-Oxley, HIPAA, and other government-imposed regulations. The outsourcing task for compliance training primarily revolves around finding a certified vendor for the content, and administratively using your training infrastructure to run reports and work with management to ensure compliance. For most professional certifications, the governing professional organization usually provides training or access to certified training vendors. This can also apply to custom training requirements, such as when a company wants to train all of its employees on its code of conduct, which might include topics such as harassment, discrimination and retaliation. Soft skills training should be considered for outsourcing. Psychology research suggests that people need private space to change and that change is not always a simple process. Contract soft-skills trainers can provide an environment of objectivity and confidentiality that people need to make the required changes. The Silicon Valley South Bay Organizational Development Network monthly meetings are a healthy discussion on the success and failure of soft skills programs (www.sbodn.com). Operations training can be broken down into product training, process training, and enterprise technology training.
In summary, there are many kinds of training required by a corporation. If a strong relationship is made with an outsourcing company, the right person to do the job is just a phone call away and the training manager is the hero who meets all the needs of the corporate users. Oak Hill Corporation has a wide stable of professionals who can meet your needs. I am proud to be one of them. ______________________________________________ Reesa Abrams is a training professional who can leverage strategic, technical and eLearning skills to improve operations and service or sell product. She offers a unique strategic-technical-quality focus that integrates business units by creating partnerships, cost savings, new products and better operations. |