Proactive Technologies Report – March, 2018

Explaining Your Process Training to Auditors, Prospects and Clients

by Dean Prigelmeier, President of Proactive Technologies, Inc. 

For most organizations, the general notion of training is going on in every corner of the organization, for every worker at any time of the day or night. One person is showing another person how to perform a process, operate a piece of equipment or software, fill out a form or, yes, make a copy using the new copy machine just installed. Have you ever walked by a copy machine and seen someone standing in front of it, staring at the control panel…then the sky as if seeking divine intervention.

Someone who is familiar with the new copy machine might wander by, and then an informal training process starts. There is probably no training record generated for this transaction, but neither are so many of the things workers learn on-the-job. Somehow, the organization gets by. In this case, like so many, it may sound like an insignificant example of training, but not to the person who needs the copy and for whom it is an important task of the job.

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STEM Programs are Good, But No Substitute for Employer-Delivered Structured On-The-Job Training

by Stacey Lett, Director of Operations – Eastern U.S. – Proactive Technologies, Inc.

STEM learning is all the buzz these days. From coast-to-coast, high schools, career centers and community colleges are trumpeting the promise of Science, Technology, Engineering and Math to employers and future workers. Some see this as the cure-all to the pervasive and persistent “skills gap” dilemma. Some emphasize that STEM merely represents a reversal of the policies in the 1990’s that emphasized preparation for college over preparation for work and society (some even say History and Civics should have been left in the curricula as well). This realignment with industry will take years to bear fruit and to bring workforce preparation back to where it was before the decision was made to change focus…that is if politics doesn’t take it off course again before it can produce.

While STEM represents a good start at building a better foundation upon which career paths can be developed, it is important to keep it in perspective and not oversell the promise as often happens. It is understandable that educational institutions who are delivering the STEM classes are enthusiastically marketing it as the cure, but care should be taken not to over-market the product and crowd out other necessary components of proper and effective worker training that make it possible to obtain and retain a job with an employer in need. Too much focus on building the foundation can lead to lost years for a potential worker, lost opportunity for an employer, and lost support for workforce development as interest and belief wanes.

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Five Most Important Ways Structured On-the-Job Training Can Reclaim Wealth For an Employer

by Dean Prigelmeier, President of Proactive Technologies, Inc.

In a Proactive Technologies Report article entitled “10 Reasons Structured On-The-Job Training is a Vital and Necessary System for Any Organization,” a few of the many important reasons that structured on-the-job training – at least Proactive Technologies’ version – were explained that should be part of any organization’s operational strategy. Here are 5 ways this approach to worker development that integrates an organization’s existing systems unlocks tremendous wealth and yields substantial returns – just for doing what every employer says they want anyway but most find a reason to avoid it.

Too many employers still, wrongly, believe that they have little in the way of tools and metrics to develop and measure the value of each worker that comes to the organization. No structured training program in place means no one has analyzed the job for the tasks required to be performed, the compliance criteria, the core skills and knowledge necessary to master the tasks, or why a task resides in a job classification. If there is no structure, there is no way to measure what percent of the job a worker has mastered or, if still in development, how well they are progressing to the expected level of job mastery and performance. If no structure or metrics exist, there is nothing to improve or, at least, notice an improvement. And if something goes wrong and worker malperformance is suspected, there is little from which to draw evidence to support a conclusion and proper course of corrective action.

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Read the full March, 2018 newsletter, including linked industry articles and online presentation schedules.

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