Let’s Do the Math. Turning Training “Cost” Back Into Worker “Investment”
by Dean Prigelmeier, President of Proactive Technologies, Inc.®
It’s fairly institutionalized now. A lot of time, effort and resources go into recruiting workers, but very little is done once they’re hired to maximize the return on what should be considered an investment. Although employers forgo tens of thousands of dollars in lower worker capacity and, compliance risks and therefore lower ROI for each employee, each year, the solution has always been simple, economical and available but ignored. Here is formula to estimate what it means to the bottom line to “develop organizational capacity” through worker development and how to turn what has become unnecessarily a “cost” back into a manageable “investment.”
Background – There was a time when worker training was considered essential, supported by management and accounting. As employers, unwittingly at first, shifted this focus away from nurturing an investment to placing the burden on someone else, it began to look to some like an unreasonable expectation. Pressured by shareholders, employers saw an opportunity to please them and blame others; the false choice to move and keep work offshore in lower wage labor markets (with greater training needs), or spend a lot of time and money developing automated replacements – never mind the risks or feasibility. Simply training the worker for maximum capacity was nudged further and further off the table. The trichotomy – conflict between cheaper labor markets, automated solutions and simply training the worker – continues.
For many employer’s HR professionals, improving onboarding is popular. It is a good start, but it is informational learning, and 70-80 percent is forgotten before the learner gets a chance to apply it. Re-enforcing it with more classroom learning experiences only amplifies the ineffectiveness. Even more detrimental, leaning so heavily on “learning” experiences with uncertain relevance and outcomes has jaded management and accounting to think all worker development options are “costs” to be minimized.
click here to expandIn fact, what is needed is to simply reemphasize “training” instead; an expert at a process transferring their expertise to a trainee until they become expert, as well. The concept behind “apprenticeship,” whether registered or not. Training is performed where the task is performed, so there is little chance to forget the knowledge imparted during the process-training. The trainer just needs structure to ensure nothing is forgotten in the delivery and it is delivered consistently to others. It also allows for production to continue, albeit slowed slightly and for a short time by the beneficial act of building another “expert.” This can be done with existing staff and without burdening existing work scheduling as employers might have convinced themselves it has to be. Most employers are already doing informal OJT whether they know it or not, so structuring it only makes it more efficient and effective. Read More
Structured On-The-Job Training Programs for Salaried Personnel
by Stacey Lett, Director of Operations – Eastern U.S. – Proactive Technologies, Inc.®
It is not just the hourly workers that, once hired, run into the “Bob, this is Sally. Why don’t you show her around” form of “training.” In environments where no structure exists to deliberately train hourly workers, supervisors and managers are similarly shown their desk and wished “good luck.” Yes, the company may offer a series of management courses that explain contemporary management theories, but often the most overlooked training is for the tasks against which performance is ultimately measured.
We frequently hear anecdotal stories about supervisors who are “thrown into the mix” of not only having to lead their workers to measured levels of performance, but concurrently learn their own job from their surroundings as best they can. Other supervisors and managers may be under the same pressure to focus on output, so they may be rarely available to mentor a new manager. Most likely, nothing was ever written down. Even worse, supervisors or managers who are new to the entire operation may have to learn what it is their employees do by observation before they can attempt to lead them to better performance.
Sounds familiar? It seems to run contrary to all the other business improvement initiatives, such as Six-Sigma, LEAN, Continuous Improvement, Total Quality Management, etc. Do companies have to settle for a “seat-of-the-pants” learning experience for their hourly and salary workers? And could this be a major contributing factor in reduced organizational competitiveness? Read More
Employer’s Missed Opportunity for a Dream Workforce
by Frank Gibson, CEO and Interim Chairman of the Board of the North-Central Ohio Employer-Based Worker Training Partnership, Workforce Development Advisor, Retired from The Ohio State University – Alber Enterprise Center
It’s been a growing disconnect, starting several decades ago and continuing to present a major obstacle to an organization’s longevity, stability, adaptability, and competitiveness. Employers seemingly neglecting their irreplaceable role in workforce development. It has always been unrealistic to expect others to be able to train the workers each employer needs when the processes are unique, their equipment is unique or unique in how they use it, their facilities and safety requirements are unique, and their expectations are unique.
In an article entitled, “Robots Without Mechanics: Why Our Education Pipeline Is Failing the Automation Economy,” by Aaron Prather, the author critiques employers making the capital investment in expensive robots without making the investment to train the technicians to maintain them. “The engineer who originally integrated the system left six months ago. Two experienced technicians retired. The remaining team is juggling alarms while supervisors debate whether to reroute orders to another facility.”
click here to expand“Over the past decade, business leaders and policymakers have made an unmistakable bet on automation.” “The capital flows reflect this confidence. Companies are spending billions modernizing factories and logistics networks. Public incentives for robotics, AI, and manufacturing innovation are becoming central pillars of industrial policy… At the same time, demographic trends are working in the opposite direction. Industrial workforces are aging. Skilled technicians are retiring faster than they can be replaced. Labor shortages in logistics and manufacturing remain persistent.”
Prather offers solutions for the employer, educational institutions and state workforce development agencies. Read More
It’s Past Time to Be Honest with Students and Workers About the Future of Work in America and America’s Future
by Dean Prigelmeier, President of Proactive Technologies, Inc.®
So much is going into the marketing of “the promise artificial intelligence (AI).” Without the necessary security, protections and guardrails in place, the message can be confusing and overwhelming to say the least. So far, AI seems to be a boom mainly for those who would use it to harm others rather than to help humanity. And those who are financing and benefiting from the imposition of AI on all aspects of life are betting the farm on AI thriving long enough to pull their profits out before it is realized for what it was only meant to be.
Let me be clear up-front, I am not against AI when it is used as defined and confined to the things it is proven to be good at and still in the controlled testing stage. But in this day and age, and with the wealthy and opportunistic investors seeing this as “the next big thing” to increase their wealth, so much in the way of safety, security, practicality, and efficacy is tossed out the window. In fact, changes by this administration have removed even more regulations and oversight, and we the people who are most vulnerable are, as we have been for some time, the guinea pigs.
For decades, the narrative students and workers were hearing was that manufacturing jobs were leaving America and are never coming back. At the same time, we saw that German, Austrian, Swiss, Korean, Japanese, Swedish and many other countries were building manufacturing plants in the US. The predominant pretext for leaving we heard from US employers and politicians was that they “just couldn’t find skilled workers” while manufacturing jobs established here were shipped overseas where there were literally no skilled workers but magically a way was found to make product. Now students and workers are kept guessing over whether jobs they are studying for are going to be insourced or near-sourced to a neighboring country, or replaced by AI, but told “if you hurry and change career paths again you might be OK.”
click here to expandCurrently, the media binge-feeds on the conflicting messages with every press release on AI development that is lopped onto the market to stoke investor fires. Nothing needs to be fully tested and secure, just rush it to the market before investors lose interest. So many big tech companies have staked their futures and reputation on AI. Daily assessments of jobs that will be lost to AI, of intellectual property that will be illegally misappropriated for someone else’s use and enrichment, project a hallucination that we will all somehow be better off when it is just the narrow few. This movement represents an attempt at a monumental “repurposing” of the worker in a capitalist democracy…without defining or ensuring that purpose. Read More
Proactive Technologies, Inc.® Offers Pilot Project Structured On-The-Job Training Opportunity
by Proactive Technologies Inc.® – Staff
If your organization sees worker training as a cost, not as an investment, maybe you should reconsider your approach! For each worker trained to only 30-40% of the tasks required of the job, employers lose tens of thousands of dollars to undeveloped and underutilized capacity and compliance risks, as well as opportunity costs. Unless you have documented your process best practices completely for training, what is there for AI to learn? Even if it could, are you ready for the many risks, hallucinations and ineffectiveness? This is no way to treat an investment;
If you are interested in learning how a structured on-the-job training project could work for your firm, but want to consider a “pilot project” to work out the kinks before scaling it, Proactive Technologies is ready to help.
The PROTECH©® system of managed human resource development:
click here to expand- Captures worker expertise and legacy knowledge, expedites the training process with the accelerated transfer of expertise systemTM;
- Cuts the employer’s internal costs of training;
- Lowers turnover and, therefore, the associated costs;
- Drives new-hires and incumbent workers to “full job mastery;”
- Increases worker capacity, work quality, productivity and compliance (ISO/AS/IATF and Nadcap training and records requirements, engineering specifications and safety mandates);
- Creates framework for cross-training, retraining and worker certification/recertification;
- Establishes the framework for employer specific/job-specific apprenticeships and internships – registered or not;
- Builds career development tracks and succession plans for hourly (and salary) workers;
- Ensures increased and maintained “Return on Worker Investment” through any type of change…
ALL FROM ONE APPROACH! AND structured on-the-job training takes place where, and while, the work is being performed. No need for additional staff, this approach builds on the informal OJT system you have in place.
The SOJT infrastructure, records and reporting of a project are attractive for state grant assistance, and PTI will prepare your application for you and manage the reporting as part of a project! We believe strongly you will recognize the value of the project early on, so we offer something not often seen today as added assurance – Clients can pause or cancel a project at any time, for any reason!
Contact Proactive Technologies today to schedule a videoconference briefing and/or an onsite presentation to learn more! Develop and protect your work investment…all workers, all of the time.
Read the full April, 2026 Proactive Technologies Report™ newsletter, including linked industry articles and online presentation schedules.


























Proactive Technologies, Inc.®; PROTECH®; Human Resource Management for Tomorrow...Today!® and logo; PROTECH©® System of Managed Human Resource Development™; Accelerated Transfer of Expertise System™; Certificate of Job Mastery Program™, Certificate of Task Mastery Program™ are all trademarks of Proactive Technologies Inc.®;