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Training and Developing Employees

The document discusses training and developing employees. It covers orienting new employees, analyzing training needs, and various training methods including on-the-job training, lectures, programmed learning, and computer-based training. It also discusses management development and techniques for training managers.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
42 views25 pages

Training and Developing Employees

The document discusses training and developing employees. It covers orienting new employees, analyzing training needs, and various training methods including on-the-job training, lectures, programmed learning, and computer-based training. It also discusses management development and techniques for training managers.

Uploaded by

SHAMRAIZKHAN
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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You are on page 1/ 25

Gary Dessler

tenth edition

Chapter 8 Part 3 Training and Development

Training and Developing Employees

© 2005 Prentice Hall Inc. PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook


All rights reserved. The University of West Alabama
Orienting Employees
 Employee orientation
– A procedure for providing new employees with
basic background information about the firm.
 Orientation content
– Information on employee benefits
– Personnel policies
– The daily routine
– Company organization and operations
– Safety measures and regulations
– Facilities tour

8–2
Orienting Employees (cont’d)
 A successful orientation should accomplish
four things for new employees:
– Make them feel welcome and at ease.
– Help them understand the organization in a
broad sense.
– Make clear to them what is expected in terms of
work and behavior.
– Help them begin the process of becoming
socialized into the firm’s ways of acting and
doing things.

8–3
New Employee
Departmental
Orientation
Checklist

Source: UCSD Healthcare.


Used with permission.

Figure 8–1
8–4
The Training Process
 Training
– The process of teaching new employees the
basic skills they need to perform their jobs.

8–5
The Training and Development
Process
 Needs analysis
– Identify job performance skills needed, assess
prospective trainees skills, and develop objectives.
 Instructional design
– Produce the training program content, including
workbooks, exercises, and activities.
 Validation
– Presenting (trying out) the training to a small
representative audience.
 Implement the program
– Actually training the targeted employee group.
 Evaluation
– Assesses the program’s successes or failures.

8–6
Analyzing Training Needs
 Task analysis
– A detailed study of a job to identify the specific
skills required, especially for new employees.
 Performance analysis
– Verifying that there is a performance
deficiency and determining whether that
deficiency should be corrected through
training or through some other means (such as
transferring the employee).

8–7
Training Methods
 On-the-job training (OJT)
– Having a person learn a job by actually doing
the job.
 OJT methods
– Coaching or under-study
– Job rotation
– Special assignments
 Advantages
– Inexpensive
– Immediate feedback

8–8
Steps in OJT
 Step 1: Prepare the learner
– Put the learner at ease—relieve the tension.
– Explain why he or she is being taught.
– Create interest, encourage questions, find
out what the learner already knows about this or
other jobs.
– Explain the whole job and relate it to some job
the worker already knows.
– Place the learner as close to the normal
working position as possible.
– Familiarize the worker with equipment,
materials, tools, and trade terms.
8–9
Steps in OJT (cont’d)
 Step 2: Present the operation
– Explain quantity and quality requirements.
– Go through the job at the normal work pace.
– Go through the job at a slow pace several
times, explaining each step. Between
operations, explain the difficult parts, or those
in which errors are likely to be made.
– Again go through the job at a slow pace several
times; explain the key points.
– Have the learner explain the steps as you go
through the job at a slow pace.

8–10
Steps in OJT (cont’d)
 Step 3: Do a tryout
– Have the learner go through the job several times,
slowly, explaining each step to you.
– Correct mistakes and, if necessary, do some of
the complicated steps the first few times.
– Run the job at the normal pace.
– Have the learner do the job, gradually building
up skill and speed.
– As soon as the learner demonstrates ability to do
the job, let the work begin, but don’t abandon
him or her.

8–11
Steps in OJT (cont’d)
 Step 4: Follow up
– Designate to whom the learner should go for
help.
– Gradually decrease supervision, checking
work from time to time against quality and
quantity standards.
– Correct faulty work patterns before they
become a habit. Show why the learned method is
superior.
– Compliment good work; encourage the worker
until he or she is able to meet the quality and
quantity standards.
8–12
Training Methods (cont’d)
 Apprenticeship training
– A structured process by which people become
skilled workers through a combination of
classroom instruction and on-the-job training.
 Informal learning
– The majority of what employees learn on the job
they learn through informal means of
performing their jobs on a daily basis.
 Job instruction training (JIT)
– Listing each job’s basic tasks, along with key points,
in order to provide step-by-step training for
employees.
8–13
Training Methods (cont’d)
 Effective lectures
– Use signals to help listeners follow your ideas.
– Don’t start out on the wrong foot.
– Keep your conclusions short.
– Be alert to your audience.
– Maintain eye contact with the trainees.
– Make sure everyone in the room can hear.
– Control your hands.
– Talk from notes rather than from a script.
– Break a long talk into a series of five-minute
talks.
8–14
Programmed Learning
 Programmed instruction (PI)
– A systematic method for teaching job
skills involving:
• Presenting questions or facts
• Allowing the person to respond
• Giving the learner immediate feedback on
the accuracy of his or her answers
 Advantages
– Reduced training time
– Self-paced learning
– Immediate feedback
– Reduced risk of error for learner
8–15
Training Methods (cont’d)
 Literacy training techniques
– Responses to functional illiteracy
• Testing job candidates’ basic skills.
• Setting up basic skills and literacy programs.
 Audiovisual-based training
– To illustrate following a sequence over time.
– To expose trainees to events not easily
demonstrable in live lectures.
– To meet the need for organizationwide training
and it is too costly to move the trainers from place
to place.

8–16
Training Methods (cont’d)
 Simulated training (occasionally called
vestibule/ Hall or Outside from the workplace
training)
– Training employees on special off-the-job
equipment so training costs and hazards can be
reduced.
– Computer-based training (CBT)
– Electronic performance support systems (EPSS)
– Learning portals

8–17
Computer-based Training (CBT)
 Advantages
– Reduced learning time
– Cost-effectiveness
– Instructional consistency
 Types of CBT
– Intelligent Tutoring systems
– Interactive multimedia training
– Virtual reality training

8–18
Distance and Internet-Based Training
 Teletraining
– A trainer in a central location teaches groups of
employees at remote locations via TV hookups.
 Videoconferencing
– Interactively training employees who are
geographically separated from each other—or
from the trainer—via a combination of audio and
visual equipment.
 Training via the Internet
– Using the Internet or proprietary internal intranets
to facilitate computer-based training.

8–19
What Is Management Development?
 Management development
– Any attempt to improve current or future
management performance by imparting
knowledge, changing attitudes, or increasing
skills.
 Succession planning
– A process through which senior-level openings are
planned for and eventually filled.
• Anticipate management needs
• Review firm’s management skills inventory
• Create replacement charts
• Begin management development

8–20
Managerial on-the-Job Training
 Job rotation
– Moving a trainee from department to department
to broaden his or her experience and identify
strong and weak points.
 Coaching/Understudy approach
– The trainee works directly with a senior manager
or with the person he or she is to replace; the
latter is responsible for the trainee’s coaching.
 Action learning
– Management trainees are allowed to work full-
time analyzing and solving problems in other
departments.
8–21
Off-the-Job Management Training and
Development Techniques
 Case study method
– Managers are presented with a description of an
organizational problem to diagnose and solve.
 Management game
– Teams of managers compete by making
computerized decisions regarding realistic but
simulated situations.
 Outside seminars
– Many companies and universities offer Web-based
and traditional management development
seminars and conferences.
8–22
Off-the-Job Management Training and
Development Techniques (cont’d)
 Role playing
– Creating a realistic situation in which trainees
assume the roles of persons in that situation.
 Behavior modeling
– Modeling: showing trainees the right (or
“model”) way of doing something.
– Role playing: having trainees practice that way
– Social reinforcement: giving feedback on the
trainees’ performance.
– Transfer of learning: Encouraging trainees
apply their skills on the job.
8–23
Off-the-Job Management Training and
Development Techniques (cont’d)
 Corporate universities
– Provides a means for conveniently coordinating all
the company’s training efforts and delivering Web-
based modules that cover topics from strategic
management to mentoring.
 In-house development centers
– A company-based method for exposing
prospective managers to realistic exercises to
develop improved management skills.

8–24
Off-the-Job Management Training and
Development Techniques (cont’d)
 Executive coaches
– An outside consultant who questions the
executive’s boss, peers, subordinates, and
(sometimes) family in order to identify the
executive’s strengths and weaknesses.
– Counsels the executive so he or she can capitalize
on those strengths and overcome the weaknesses.

8–25

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