4 Challenges in Workplace Training and How to Avoid Them
Avoid common pitfalls in workplace training by learning strategies to make learning experiences that are thought-provoking, engaging, customized, and flexible.
The initiative that benefits both employers and employees
When created effectively, workplace training has the potential to lift up both employees and employers in numerous ways. Employees not only get stronger at their jobs—they can also tap into greater career opportunities and job satisfaction through their skill development. Employers, meanwhile, benefit from much more than just productive employees. Often, after investing in their learning environment, companies see higher levels of employee retention.
When creating training content, teams can often succumb to common pitfalls that reduce the impact of these programs. But by building out a training strategy that acknowledges these challenges and moves past them, workplaces can harness the true value of learning and development.
For more strategies to build excellent training programs, check out The No Excuses Guide to Effective E‑Learning.
Key Takeaways
What is the opportunity cost of neglecting workplace training programs?
Today’s employees must be more agile than ever. Even the most qualified hires will likely need to learn new skills on the job as priorities change and technology evolves. This is where workplace training programs come in.
By investing in your company’s learning initiatives in the right ways, you don’t just boost employee skills. You can tap into a wealth of benefits from increased employee retention to reduced on-the-job errors, greater opportunities for employee development, higher employee engagement, and a stronger company reputation.
While great training lifts up your entire organization, the cost of ineffective training can be monumental. Morale can suffer, error rates can rise, and employees might leave—all chipping away at your company’s culture, and at your bottom line.
4 common employee training challenges and how to solve them
While every workplace encounters unique challenges, there are four common issues that arise when creating training initiatives. Below, we’ll dive into each one, then equip you with strategies for success.
1. Training materials aren’t challenging enough
In order for real learning to take place, your training sessions should challenge learners to think critically and apply their skills. If training is too easy, learners miss out on the opportunity to engage with the information, and may be less likely to acquire new skills and knowledge.
Solution: Keep learners on their toes
Every type of training has the power to challenge learners and create real opportunities for learning. To create challenging training that results in true learning, consult subject matter experts to inform your content and break down complex topics. From there, make sure any knowledge checks and quizzes hit at the right level of difficulty so learners are progressing in their knowledge.
For example, Aptive wanted to challenge learners with compliance training that truly prepared them for the complex scenarios that arise in their field of government contracting. By creating checkpoints that made learners pause, reflect, and even retry answers when necessary, they were able to create a course that was praised for its difficulty level and achieved a 5-star rating in their LMS.
2. Training methods are boring
Proper training shouldn’t feel like an activity that employees can do mindlessly—rather, they should be engaged and present as they progress through it. Boring training is easy to tune out, creating a huge missed opportunity for learning to take place.
Solution: Create opportunities for engagement
Make your training entertaining and engaging makes it far more memorable for your audience. Consider strategies like e-learning gamification, where elements of game theory are applied to online courses, to make learning fun and capture learners’ attention.
Throughout your course, you can also weave in opportunities for learners to interact with content. For example, drag-and-drop activities require learners to click and make choices along the way.
3. Training is one-size-fits-all when it shouldn’t be
While some training can remain the same for different roles or types of learners, many types of workplace training benefit from customization. When training that should be tailored is the same for every learner, nuance is neglected, making training less effective and relevant.
Solution: Customize training for different roles
To make sure training is effective for different types of learners, customize it for different roles. Work with team leaders to identify learning priorities for separate teams. With branching scenarios, you can build in customized learning paths for different groups within the same course. This helps ensure that different types of learners can all get value out of a course by seeing slightly different variations of the same online training.
4. Training isn’t flexible enough
Inflexibility is a massive training challenge that can hinder learning and participation. When training opportunities don’t fit into employees’ daily lives, they can become a nuisance, making it harder to achieve real learning.
Solution: Leverage e-learning software
Even if your office operates exclusively in-person, e-learning can be a powerful tool for increasing the flexibility of your training. With e-learning, employees can take on-the-job training on their own time rather than having to sit through a live course or presentation. If some employees are in the field, they can even complete training on their mobile devices, making it more likely that they’ll complete training.
For best-in-class training programs, foster a culture of continuous learning
By following the strategies above to avoid common training pitfalls, you can build learning into your company’s values. A true learning culture encourages all employees to seek constant improvement, bettering themselves and the organization in the process.
Solicit employee feedback on the way, incorporate it strategically, and aim for continuous improvement as your program grows and evolves over time. In doing so, you can harness the true potential of workplace training, lifting up your employees and your bottom line in the process.
For more insights on how to create e-learning that achieves real results, read The No Excuses Guide to Effective E‑Learning.
You may also like
A Culture of Giving Back: Articulate’s First Impact Campaign
Articulate’s first annual Employee Impact Campaign showcased how purpose and generosity drive change—and how small actions can result in a big impact.