Proactive Technologies Report – May, 2020

Confusion Over What Constitutes “Training” is Stumbling Block to Effective Worker Development Strategies

by Dean Prigelmeier, President of Proactive Technologies, Inc.

For the anyone searching for information to help them choose a worker development strategy, a web search of “on-the-job training methods”  might produce thirty or forty informative, but confusing, charts. The search result is a mixture of domains, methods, philosophies – one seemingly in conflict with the other. A non-practitioner of workforce development strategies can gather from this search result alone why there is a perpetual state of confusion between even “experts,” marked by decades of employer and trainee disappointment in the lack of recognizable strategies and outcomes, which are often devoid of meaningful results.

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Online Resources for the New, Reluctant “Home Schoolers” and “Home Learners”

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

A massive disruption, such as the Covid-19 virus, challenges everyone’s notion of “normal.” It can send us, especially the unprepared, scrambling for short-term solutions when the connections to established institutions and resources are unplugged.

Some workers who had not worked from home try to set-up a space to effectively perform work previously performed onsite if employers support the effort. Some workers either find themselves at home, not necessarily “working” from home, with children who are also restricted to house confinement – children whose education can be at risk if delayed or previous progress is idled for too long. Teachers and parents are painfully aware of the “drop-off” in retention that occurs just over holiday and summer breaks alone. Younger students might see this as an unexpected vacation, older students may see this as a threat to their educational attainment and next phase of their education or employment.

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Are Advances in Technology Distracting, Rather Than Assisting, HR From the Fundamentals of Worker Selection and Development?

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

Billions of investment dollars are driving the advancements in technology into every corner of our lives, including the selection and development of workers. Predictably, the emphasis often seems more on the technology and the money it can make for investors than the practicality for the end-user or those it effects.

It is not just the refrigerators that talk to your grocery store, or watches that talk to the phone in your pocket. Wall Street, with an accumulating mountain of cash, can drive any idea to fabricate a “trend” that often dissipates as quickly as it emerges, sometimes leaving disruption in the wake but yields a return for investors. For investors it is the means to an end. To many, it may negatively affect their life and their future.

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Nine Scenarios That Would Make You Wish You Had a Structured OJT System

by Dean Prigelmeier, President of Proactive Technologies, Inc.

I think one can confidently say that most employer’s focus on training the workers they need – to perform the tasks they were meant to perform – has become detrimentally blurry, counterproductive and often non-existent. There are many reasons for that – some legitimate. But without a deliberate, measurable strategy for quickly driving each worker to mastery of the entire job classification, an employer’s labor costs (not just wages, but opportunity costs and undermined return on worker investment as well) can be substantial and act as a drag on an organization’s performance.

Many employers are still waiting for the educational institutions to solve the problem. After all, look at all of the money spent on education directed at “training the workers of tomorrow.” Yet a lot of the institutional strategies appear to include repackaged tools from the past…and not the ones far enough past that seemed to work. For example, the recent comments made by education insiders saying we should have kept the high school vocational programs in place. These were phased out when the push to prepare students for college took priority. 

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Read the full May, 2020 Proactive Technologies Report newsletter, including linked industry articles and online presentation schedules.

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