Training & Development
Training & Development
1. Retains Employees
Retention is a major challenge for employers but retaining strong workers can be
achieved through career development. In fact, training and development has become
so centralised within businesses that it is often used as a competitive advantage
when hiring. Offering career development initiatives helps employees establish a
sense of value within the company and fosters loyalty, ultimately resulting in
increased staff retention and a 59% lower staff turnover rate.
3. Empowers Employees
Leaders who feel empowered within the workplace will be more effective at
influencing employees and gaining their trust. Consequently, those employees will
feel a greater sense of autonomy, value, and confidence within their work. SHRM
defines employee autonomy as the extent to which an employee feels independent
and can makes their own decisions about the work they do.
PRAN RFL trains their employees for various reasons. They train their
employees so that they can have operational efficiency. Training helps the
worker to increase the efficiency and productivity in completing daily work.
It also helps them to achieve greater competency. Moreover to increase the
employee value. Through training and development PRAN RFL group
make their employees multi-talented. Furthermore, it is very important for
the PRAN RFL group to train their employees for success planning. They
give continuous training and improvement supports progression arranging
by expanding the accessibility of experienced and proficient workers to
accept senior parts as they get to be accessible. Not only that, PRAN RFL
group also trained the farmers to get good products.
STRATEGIZING TRAINING:
NEEDS ASSESSMENT
THE FIRST STEP—NEEDS ASSESSMENT—INVOLVES DETERMINING WHY SPECIFIC
TRAINING ACTIVITIES ARE
REQUIRED AND PLACING THE TRAINING WITHIN AN APPROPRIATE ORGANIZATIONAL
CONTEXT. NEEDS ASSESSMENT
INVOLVES THREE LEVELS OF ANALYSIS: ORGANIZATIONAL, TASK, AND INDIVIDUAL.
1. Organizational level:
The training is considered within the context of the organization’s culture, politics, structure,
and
strategy. This analysis considers how the training will assist the organization or unit in
meeting
its objectives and how the training may affect day-to-day workplace dynamics between and
among different units. It also considers the cost of training relative to the benefits that may
be
expected and considers the opportunity costs of foregoing the training.
2. Task-Level Assessment:
Task-level assessment involves looking at specific duties and responsibilities assigned to dif-
ferent jobs and the types of skills and knowledge needed to perform each task. This level also con-
siders whether the learning can or should take place on or away from the job, the implications of
mistakes, and how the job can be designed to provide the employee with direct feedback on his or
her performance. This level also involves determining whether the training needs of certain jobs
are similar to or different from the training needs of other jobs in the organization.
3. Individual Assessment:
The individual level of assessment considers the people to be trained. It requires an analysis of
their existing levels of knowledge and skills as well as factors relating to their preferred learning
styles,
personality, interpersonal styles in interacting with others, and any special needs individual
employees
might have, such as any physical or mental condition that might need to be addressed in the design
and delivery of the training.
SETTING TRAINING OBJECTIVES
Align/match identified training needs with training objectives
● Define objectives in specific, measurable terms
● Desired employee behaviors
● Results expected to follow from such behaviors
● One source of information for setting objectives
● Performance deficiency data contained in performance
management system
OBJECTIVES
After training needs have been assessed, objectives for the training activities must be developed.
These
objectives should follow directly from the assessed needs and be described in specific, measurable
terms. Measures should be stated in terms of both desired employee behaviors as well as the
resultsthat are expected to follow such behavior. A common problem at this stage is that an
organization’s objectives may be so vague that success in achieving them cannot be accurately
measured or evaluated.
On the other hand, an organization may have no plan for measuring these objectives. Training pro-
grams that cannot be evaluated are of little value to the organization in the long run. One important
source of information in setting objectives can be the data contained in the organization’s
performance
management system,
● Beverage, snacks, plastic and many other products they are collected
raw materials manufacturer by PRAN-RFL Group. Middle East, Asian,
South East are the main distributor panel of PRANRFL main
workplace. The Wholesaler are collect the product various ware
houses. PRAN-RFL Group are largest food processing and many
others products manufacturing in export by Bangladesh. These
products are being exported to more than 142 countries of the world.