I find it remarkably sad that โtrainingโ departments within organizations continue to pump out bricks and mortar classes as their sole approach to learning instead of shifting to a formal, informal and social mix. As Iโve repeatedly stated, formal classroom sessions are important, but they donโt have to be the only thing offered to the employee base, and they donโt have to exhaust the entire budget.
Perhaps itโs because they (the โtrainingโ departments) arenโt looking at it from a budgeting perspective.
Hereโs a hypothetical situation for you. Imagine if there was a company in a service industry with the following details:
% Learning Investment + Opp Costs on Payroll:ย ย 5.65%
TOTAL Learning Costs:ย ย ย $38,125,000
This is a very typical situation for organizations today where (thanks to ASTD) benchmarking learning investment as a percentage of payroll is the norm, and anything between 1% and 2.5% is considered acceptable.
I also believe that any full-time learning related headcount should be attributed to the overall budget number.
What usually doesnโt get reported, however, is the amount of time, in terms of opportunity costs, we add to the mix when the staff are away โlearningโ in a classroom. In the situation above, I estimate the traditional 2 weeks of training (or 10 class days) as a standard for every employee in the company. After factoring in the opportunity cost of being away you should then begin to gauge what it really is costing the company in terms of a percentage of payroll, in this hypothetical case, 5.65%.
But whatโs really interesting, in my estimation, is how many organizations devote roughly 90% of their real budget to formal learning, leaving 10% for the non-formal pieces. (obviously in contradiction of many studies that suggest we, as corporate citizens, learn 80% of the time in non-formal settings)
If this were the case, then weโd see a breakdown as follows for our hypothetical situation:
That is, weโre spending over $34m on formal learning, if factoring in headcount to develop/deliver/coordinate, travel, opportunity costs and outsourced contractors, training firms, etc.
Thatโs a fair bit of money for what amounts to marginal return.
Alright, so what if we shifted things such that 60% of the budget were devoted to formal events, and 40% to non-formal scenarios such as informal and social learning? And, what if we reduced the ILT capacity to 5 days per year versus 10? And, if we are making such bold claims, wouldnโt we naturally be reducing both the amount of T&E expense required for such a prediction โฆ and โฆ the amount of full-time people required to deliver formal training internally?
Well, in our hypothetical example, here is what could happen:
% Learning Investment + Opp Costs on Payroll:ย ย 3.41%
TOTAL Learning Costs:ย ย ย $23,000,000
Weโve reduced the staff by 20% and taken out $1m because weโre not formally teaching as much anymore. In fact, weโre not teaching as much by roughly 50% because weโve shifted our model from 90% formal to 60% formal and 40% non-formal, thereby freeing up the internal staff to focus on informal and social learning versus always developing and delivering formal training.
Secondly, we havenโt reduced the non-payroll learning budget, but weโve been able to shift T&E dollars towards infrastructure needs of social learning โฆ and โฆ our vendors are now part of the equation, so when we pay them for service, we pay them for formal, informal and social learning service not just โbums in seatsโ.
With the shift, we can see the following breakdown:
What have we done? Weโve reduced the overall costs of โtrainingโ, including opportunity costs, by roughly 40% and weโve shifted the learning model from a 90% formal ILT construct to one that embodies the spirit, passion and vision of Learning 2.0: a formal, informal and social learning paradigm.
We have not cut out formal ILT, but weโve decided the old model had way too much of it, for low return.
Itโs a win-win for everyone, including executives, shareholders, the learning team, vendors and of course the employee population.
Iโm certain there are detractors out there, but Iโd nonetheless love to hear from you whichever side of the fence you are on.
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We are so proud to have had you at our event. Your talk was a big hit. It moved us. We canโt thank you enough.
Malin Bjรถrnell, Salesforce
Dan challenged us to have clarity of purpose, both as individuals and as an organization. He related inspiring stories drawing on his experience in business, technology and academia. As he said, โThere is no ownership without belonging.โ
Christian Pantel, D2L
Fantastic engaging talk for our global partner summit. Thank you so much, Dan!
Barb Kinnard, CEO Response Biomedical Corp
Dan not only brought his presentation to life with his charisma, but also content, style and presentation finesse. Our members were especially interested in his thought provoking and top of mind topic on the future of work and how weโre going to be leading the next generation of leaders.
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Dan is a conference organizerโs ideal speaker. Not only did he inspire and energize our group, but he also masterfully adapted his content so it resonated with the audience and our conference theme. As a bonus, Dan is able to nimbly navigate to adjust to a reduced time slot when other speakers went over time without sacrificing the impact of his session.
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