Vadim Liberman
The typical U.S. company spends nearly fifty times more to recruit a $100,000 executive than it will invest in his annual training.
Content: Quotation | Author: Vadim Liberman | Source: The Conference Board Review | Subjects: Human Resources, Training & Development
Aaron DeSmet, Monica McGurk, and Elizabeth Schwartz
Adults learn in predictable steps. Before employees can master a new skill effectively, for example, they must be convinced it will help improve their organization’s performance, recognize that their own performance is weak in that area, and then actually choose to learn. Yet most corporate training programs overlook these prerequisites and just assume that employees “get it.” This approach is a big mistake because it … [ Read more ]
Content: Quotation | Authors: Aaron De Smet, Elizabeth Schwartz, Monica McGurk | Source: McKinsey Quarterly | Subject: Training & Development
Amy C. Edmondson
An exclusive focus on execution-as-efficiency leads companies to delay, discourage, or understaff investments in areas where learning is critical. It’s a given that switching to a new approach can lower performance in the short run. The fastest hunt-and-peck typist must endure a short-term hit to performance while learning to touch-type, just as the tennis player suffers initially when shifting to a new, better serve. These … [ Read more ]
Content: Quotation | Author: Amy Edmondson | Source: Harvard Business Review | Subjects: Learning, Training & Development
Morgan McCall, Jr.
Leadership development is ensuring “that people in leadership roles have the competence to determine and to carry out the [company’s] strategic imperatives. If competence is acquired through experience, then it is the strategy of the business that determines which experiences are necessary to build it. The crucial links . . . are from the business strategy to the leadership challenges it suggests to the experiences … [ Read more ]
Content: Quotation | Author: Morgan W. McCall, Jr. | Source: Across the Board (ATB) | Subjects: Human Resources, Leadership, Organizational Behavior, Training & Development
John H. Fleming and Jim Asplund
In hiring and managing individual employees, it’s important to understand what is difficult to change (talent) and what is more easily changed or acquired (knowledge and skills). Once you hire someone, you are largely stuck with their talents, whereas you can still impart new skills and knowledge. Without a clear understanding of these two different aspects of ability, you will have an incomplete picture of … [ Read more ]
Content: Quotation | Authors: Jim Asplund, John Fleming | Source: Gallup Management Journal | Subjects: Human Resources, Knowledge, Management, Personal Development, Training & Development
Ellen M. Balaguer, Peter Cheese and Christian Marchetti
As the best professional investors know, it’s not how much you invest that helps you outperform the market, it’s where and how you invest. The same principle applies to workforce performance. By differentiating workforce investments, and by tailoring those investments to critical jobs and roles, high-performance organizations in both the public and private sectors get a bigger bang for their buck in the form of … [ Read more ]
Content: Quotation | Source: Outlook Journal (Accenture) | Subjects: Human Resources, Training & Development
Judith Martin, aka Miss Manners
I sincerely hope that we’re seeing the end of retreats. This personalization of business relationships is misguided. For one thing, it’s expensive to have people climb poles or shoot at one another with paint guns. But the more depressing thing is that it’s taken us half a century to realize that when you remove everybody’s inhibitions, you create more problems than you solve. Regrettably, the … [ Read more ]
Content: Quotation | Source: Harvard Business School (HBS) Working Knowledge | Subjects: Organizational Behavior, Training & Development
Charles Kettering
The biggest job we have is to teach a newly hired employee how to fail intelligently. We have to train him to experiment over and over and to keep on trying and failing until he learns what will work.
Content: Quotation | Source: Unknown | Subjects: Management, Training & Development
Charles Handy
Education for adults is basically experience understood in tranquility. In other words, you have the experience and then you can go away to a place of tranquility like a school or a course and reflect with the help of people who give you some concepts on what you’ve learnt or what you’ve experienced. Then you go off and do it hopefully better next time. And … [ Read more ]
Content: Quotation | Source: Ivey Business Journal | Subjects: Education, Training & Development
Robert Morison, Tamara Erickson, and Ken Dychtwald
Many of today’s midcareer workers are well educated and have retained their love of learning. They know that increasing their skills will raise their chances for personal and professional advancement. However, many find themselves too busy for extensive education and training; personal development time comes at the sacrifice of other responsibilities, both on the job and off. And some people, especially those who have reached … [ Read more ]
Content: Quotation | Source: Harvard Business Review | Subjects: Learning, Training & Development
Kenneth R. Brousseau, Michael J. Driver, Gary Hourihan, and Rikard Larsson
Most organizations have management development programs in place, and some have multitiered programs. But generally, the tiers are differentiated by the amount of training given, without reference to any fundamental shift in the way managers must think and lead. Such programs fail to take into account the different behavioral demands that accompany different levels of responsibility.
Content: Quotation | Source: Harvard Business Review | Subject: Training & Development
Samuel Johnson
People need to be reminded more often than they need to be instructed.
Content: Quotation | Source: 43 Folders | Subjects: Communication, Leadership, Management, Training & Development
Jeffrey Gandz
In pursuit of leadership talent, organizations tend to hire for knowledge, train for skills, develop for judgment – and hope for wisdom. When wisdom does not materialize, they are forced to hire it.
Content: Quotation | Source: Ivey Business Journal | Subjects: Human Resources, Training & Development
Dick Grote
The mistake organizations frequently make is to use training and development as a damage control strategy to shore up the weaknesses of those who are not doing well. That is a mistake. It’s a bad use of corporate assets. Training and development need to be directed towards the best performers, i.e. to polish diamonds not polish coal.
Content: Quotation | Source: Emerald Now | Subjects: Human Resources, Training & Development
Steve Salerno
What I have a problem with are the amounts of money that corporate America is spending on motivational training. I’ve attended presentations by…leading figures in “training and motivation” who present this very expensive, rah-rah cheerleading nonsense. These people are getting paid $1,000 to $5,000 a minute, but they aren’t accomplishing anything more than a sales manager can accomplish simply by taking his staff out to … [ Read more ]
Content: Quotation | Source: Across the Board (ATB) | Subjects: Motivation, Training & Development
Jonathan Byrnes
Productive learning often takes place in stages. First, the learner is exposed to the core concepts, and then he or she tries to apply them and finds that he or she needs to understand them better. This makes the learner more receptive, and so the process repeats itself. Most effective courses are structured this way. Periodic tests help highlight progress and areas where more work … [ Read more ]
Content: Quotation | Source: Harvard Business School (HBS) Working Knowledge | Subjects: Learning, Training & Development
Ashok Gopal
Although building strengths can lead to world-class performance, training to improve areas of weakness is essentially damage control — by aiming to eliminate defects, it inspires adequate, not superior, performance.
…The fact is, training can do wonders for the right person in the right job — especially when that training builds on the employee’s greatest talents. But all the training in the world cannot make … [ Read more ]
Content: Quotation | Source: Gallup Management Journal | Subject: Training & Development
Tom Kelly
One problem with how most companies deliver information is that they expect people to spend too much time at one sitting. We work in a world of limited attention spans, unlimited demands on people’s time, and endless multitasking. Learning programs have to reflect these realities: most e-learning is still anchored in the mind-set that learning means going somewhere for 8 hours at a time to … [ Read more ]
Content: Quotation | Source: Fast Company | Subjects: Learning, Training & Development
Tom Kelly
Ultimately, e-learning will be most effective when it no longer feels like learning — when it’s simply a natural part of how people work: Today, people say, ‘I’m working,’ and what they’re doing is quickly answering emails and voice mails. They don’t say, ‘I’ve got the next two hours slotted for email.’ If you do things in small chunks, they become just another part of … [ Read more ]
Content: Quotation | Source: Fast Company | Subjects: Learning, Training & Development
Jim Clemmer
Training that produces tangible results starts by changing behaviour – which ultimately changes attitudes.
Content: Quotation | Source: CEO Refresher | Subjects: Change Management, Training & Development
