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                <p><b><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif">An 
                  Introspective Look at Corporate Training Philosophies<br>
                  </font></b><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>Discover 
                  how companies are rethinking their employee-training philosophies 
                  to meet the challenges of the new millennium.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>In 
                  1999, Integral Training Systems, Inc., (ITS) conducted a survey 
                  of 60 Fortune 100 executives who are at or above the director 
                  level. One of the questions asked of the group was: In looking 
                  ahead to the new millennium, what skills will be most important 
                  for employees to possess, and how prepared is the American workforce 
                  to meet these demands? According to Dr. B. Lynn Ware, president 
                  and CEO of Half Moon Bay, California-based ITS, a provider of 
                  training-related software, education and consulting, the top 
                  four skills selected from among 22 items (including a choice 
                  termed, &quot;knowledge of latest technical trends&quot;) were: 
                  Business-minded and knows how the company makes a profit; Takes 
                  responsibility for his/her own skill development; Demonstrates 
                  an entrepreneurial spirit (can innovate and come up with ideas 
                  to lead the company to success amongst global competition); 
                  Knows how to sustain his/her own commitment during changing 
                  and/or difficult times.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>&quot;Unfortunately, 
                  most employees are ill-prepared to exhibit these skills,&quot; 
                  explains Dr. Ware, &quot;because there are [few] role models 
                  to follow, and employees have never formally learned how to 
                  handle these tasks [in any other situation].&quot;</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>To 
                  solve the problem, many companies are choosing to develop their 
                  staffs from within, rather than trying to find the optimal job 
                  candidate from the dwindling labor pool, especially in the rapidly 
                  evolving high-technology field. Whether it means sending their 
                  employees out to be trained, sitting them down in front of a 
                  videoconferencing set-up, or bringing in corporate trainers, 
                  companies nationwide are waking up to the fact that preparing 
                  for the new millennium and maintaining their &quot;edge,&quot; 
                  requires that their employees be top-notch in their respective 
                  fields.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>The 
                  Driving Force</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>According 
                  to Training magazine, an industry publication that monitors 
                  trends, the five-year trend in budgeted training dollars revealed 
                  total spending was up 26 percent since 1993, and budgeted spending 
                  on formal training by U.S. organizations with 100 or more employees 
                  totaled $60.7 billion in 1998, reflecting a 3.6 percent rise 
                  over 1997, and a 26 percent since 1993. The average organization's 
                  training budget was seven times more likely to have increased 
                  in 1998 than to have been cut (35 percent vs. 5 percent). And 
                  firms with more than 500 employees were more likely than the 
                  smallest organizations to have cut training budgets.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>Overall, 
                  U.S. firms have simply been forced into training by an onslaught 
                  of economic, technological and demographic changes. The demands 
                  of flexible high-tech manufacturing require an agile new breed 
                  of skilled workers - those who can write a memo to the company's 
                  engineering division as swiftly as they can adjust a computer-controlled 
                  welding machine. Corporate downsizing and proliferating computer 
                  technology have thinned the ranks of middle management and created 
                  a need for retooled executives whose main job is &quot;empowering&quot; 
                  subordinates to solve problems. Regrettably, many can't: An 
                  estimated 8 percent to 20 percent of the labor force is functionally 
                  illiterate. And an aging corps of Baby Boomers, likely to dominate 
                  the labor force well into the next century, badly needs to update 
                  its knowledge and skills.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>So, 
                  like millions of children across the country, America's workers 
                  are going back to school. But they aren't just headed for stress-management 
                  seminars held in climate-controlled corporate classrooms. Today, 
                  the education and training of much of the modern labor force 
                  is as sophisticated, lively and diverse as the state-of-the-art 
                  American workplace.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>Technology 
                  is perhaps the single most-important factor driving changes 
                  in training today's workforce. The best training programs anticipate 
                  changes in technology and equip workers to cope with them ahead 
                  of the competition.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>Consider 
                  the training at Xerox's &quot;Document University,&quot; a division 
                  of the company's Leesburg, Va., training center where print-shop 
                  owners and other Xerox customers learn to build their own businesses 
                  through total quality management. Or Motorola Inc., where executives 
                  actually &quot;go back to business school&quot; while on the 
                  job. They meet in teams to study &quot;cases&quot; with a close-to-home 
                  twist, such as how to turn a company traditionally focused on 
                  high-tech hardware into a more friendly environment for tomorrow's 
                  software engineers.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>According 
                  to Ginny Hronek, principal consultant and trainer for Professional 
                  Development Group, Inc., in Pittsford, N.Y., one-third of all 
                  employee training during the past year was information-technology-related, 
                  an indication of the gradually increasing trend toward keeping 
                  employees current on computer applications and systems. &quot;The 
                  training requested and provided today by companies focusing 
                  on maintaining a competitive advantage centers around building 
                  creativity and improving communication skills,&quot; says Hronek. 
                  &quot;This skill-building can easily be integrated into high-performance 
                  team development, or customer sales and service training.&quot;</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>As 
                  an example, Hronek says one major corporation implemented a 
                  training program that forced its employees to &quot;think out 
                  of the box.&quot; Several teams within the company evolved from 
                  work groups to high-performance teams by committing to ongoing 
                  training and development, she explains. &quot;This has been 
                  a year-long process requiring assessment and commitment to working 
                  on interdependence and high performance,&quot; Hronek explains. 
                  &quot;For example, within a limited timeframe, participants 
                  may be required to develop a product or service for a customer 
                  with no restrictions on cost of management approval. From brainstorming 
                  and prototype-building, participants experience the value of 
                  innovation and liberation from typical restrictions, an experience 
                  that encourages risk taking and out-of-the-box thinking that 
                  they will then apply to their everyday practices.&quot;</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>The 
                  Virtual Answer</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>In 
                  today's highly technical business world, experts agree that 
                  the best solution to corporate training requirements may be 
                  instructor-led online learning. Such courses are characterized 
                  by a class led by a live instructor, combined with videoconferencing 
                  technology that allows students in other locations to see, hear 
                  and interact with the class from their computers. The ideal 
                  solution also includes features that allow students to see and 
                  use the software on their computer screens as they are being 
                  taught. Companies are increasingly turning to state-of-the-art 
                  online learning classrooms to provide cost-effective, real-time 
                  technology training to employees around the globe. Once they 
                  make the switch, they not only save valuable time and money; 
                  they increase employees' retention of new material and create 
                  a more effective, fun classroom environment.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>According 
                  to Training magazine, 1998 saw an 84 percent hike in spending 
                  in the hardware category - dollars budgeted for everything from 
                  slide projectors to computers to elaborate videoconferencing 
                  systems. For example, Austin, Texas-based ProSoft, a company 
                  that does training on Internet and intranet software tools such 
                  as Netscape Communicator, is among those using Troy, N.Y.-based 
                  Interactive Learning International Corporation's distance-learning 
                  solutions to deliver mission-critical training. By using LearnLinc, 
                  ProSoft can connect about 100 full-time instructors online from 
                  42 sites around the United States, as soon as courseware is 
                  ready - without spending time and money for travel to corporate 
                  offices.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>&quot;Distance 
                  learning is on the upswing because employers see, theoretically, 
                  how cost-effective it can be when compared to traditional training 
                  models,&quot; says Dr. Ware. &quot;However, the technology still 
                  has a long way to go in terms of learner efficacy &#8230; Even 
                  in high-tech companies, employees prefer classroom or group 
                  learning situations.&quot;</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>Also 
                  in the high-tech realm, company intranets are being tapped into 
                  as effective training resources. Sharon Lieder, president of 
                  Lieder Consulting Group, cites San Diego-based Qualcomm, Inc. 
                  as one company that has invested heavily in intranet development. 
                  &quot;Some of the more progressive employers are moving toward 
                  using their intranets as a training resource,&quot; say Leider, 
                  who, as a training and organizational manager, instituted internal 
                  training functions at both UCLA and University of California 
                  San Diego in the '80s. &quot;Qualcomm, [a company that develops 
                  and manufactures digital wireless communications], provides 
                  a number of resources for their employees via their own internal 
                  Web site.&quot;</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>Studies 
                  Show &#8230;</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>After 
                  a major national study of workplace learning practices and outcomes 
                  involving 540 U.S. corporations, the American Society for Training 
                  and Development revealed in late 1998 that investments in training 
                  and learning predict corporate financial performance. The professional 
                  association of more than 70,000 workplace learning and performance 
                  professionals worldwide revealed that companies that invested 
                  the most in workplace learning found higher net sales per employee, 
                  higher gross profits per employee, and a higher ratio in market-to-book 
                  values, compared with companies who invested less in workplace 
                  learning.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>&quot;We 
                  find that leading-edge companies simply approach this whole 
                  topic of investment in people with a different mindset,&quot; 
                  says ASTD President Curtis E. Plott. &quot;They spend more, 
                  they use technology more extensively and creatively, they outsource 
                  more, and they have a more innovative blend of practices.&quot; 
                  Specifically, ASTD found that leading-edge companies:</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b> 
                  * Spend up to 6 percent of payroll on workplace learning;<br>
                  * Train 85.9 percent of employees on average;<br>
                  * Use high-end technology, like the Internet and intranets, 
                  to deliver learning;<br>
                  * Are 11 percent to 18 percent higher than the industry average 
                  in the use of training companies and educational institutions 
                  to deliver innovative training, high performance and compensation 
                  practices simultaneously. </b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>Measuring 
                  the Results</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>Until 
                  recently, even companies heavily committed to workplace training 
                  admitted that much of what they did was &quot;hard to quantify.&quot; 
                  Few of those companies could cite exactly what they spent on 
                  training, since those outlays were frequently buried in department 
                  budgets or other expense items on the corporate income statement. 
                  As a result, firms that could cite with precision the returns 
                  they reaped on investments in physical capital could seldom 
                  quantify the benefits they got from educating workers.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>Today, 
                  the landscape has changed, and companies are paying attention 
                  to and expecting more from their training dollars. More specifically, 
                  the benefits of those expenditures and efforts must be revealed 
                  in measurable quantities. &quot;The biggest trend for trainers 
                  is that organizations are demanding return on investment,&quot; 
                  says Lieder. &quot;From a management perspective, every company 
                  should challenge or train their human resource function to really 
                  get to know the business and help them design programs that 
                  will benefit the overall organization. For example, many of 
                  the companies that do mandatory ethics training don't really 
                  know, or care, if the training is working or not.&quot;</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>According 
                  to Dan Heck, consultant and trainer at Northbrook, Ill.-based 
                  Management &amp; Employee Training Services, General Electric's 
                  training strategy includes the requirement that all managers 
                  be at least &quot;green belts&quot; in the company's Six Sigma 
                  program. &quot;The rationale is that it does employees little 
                  good to use statistics and other quality tools if the people 
                  signing the checks can't understand the terminology or processes,&quot; 
                  Heck explains. &quot;Many leaders are lacking or weak in areas 
                  like using quality tools, problem solving and project management, 
                  for example.&quot;</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>Implementation</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>For 
                  businesses looking for help with their internal training functions, 
                  local universities, colleges and community colleges are all 
                  valuable tools. In fact, many of the larger corporations are 
                  finding themselves partnering up with these institutions in 
                  an effort to create a viable workforce that is already knowledgeable 
                  and employable upon graduation or certification. &quot;There 
                  are a tremendous variety of avenues to acquire knowledge and 
                  skills,&quot; says Heck. &quot;That's why the skill of learning 
                  how to learn is critical. Not only are the community colleges 
                  in many states very attentive to companies' needs, but most 
                  colleges and universities feel the competitive pressures to 
                  venture into new areas and students.&quot;</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>Heck 
                  continues: &quot;I believe training and education - on the right 
                  subjects and skills - is a strategic and competitive weapon. 
                  If human resources can't handle the coordination of skill accumulation 
                  that has been linked to the business strategies, then an internal 
                  training coordinator is justified. If all of the external resources 
                  for a company's strategic training have been exhausted, or outside 
                  training required is uncomfortably expensive, then more sophisticated 
                  cost models could be employed to look at internal options.&quot;</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>In 
                  offering advice to business owners and managers, Heck says the 
                  first step is to start with a strategic training plan. &quot;If 
                  a strategic plan is weak or absent, training will be scattered 
                  and debated,&quot; he says. &quot;Any training objectives in 
                  the corporate world need to be linked to what the business wants 
                  to accomplish and how that business is satisfying customer needs.&quot;</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>Looking 
                  to the Future</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>With 
                  the new millennium swiftly approaching and a labor force that 
                  is, at least for now, contracting at a disconcerting rate, companies 
                  nationwide are being forced to rethink their human resource 
                  functions. New information, products and services continue to 
                  challenge employees at all levels, and at an astounding rate. 
                  Unfortunately, too many companies wait until they're &quot;in 
                  pain&quot; before taking action, and end up behind the curve 
                  instead of in front of it.</b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b>&quot;Investment 
                  in employee education and training is the single most-valuable 
                  thing you can do for your business,&quot; says Hronek. &quot;Without 
                  continuous employee development, you run a big risk of stagnation, 
                  not to mention being overrun by your competitors.&quot;<br>
                  </b></font></p>
                <p><font color="#9999CC" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><b><a href="http://www.va-interactive.com/inbusiness/editorial/hr/articles/philosophies.html" target="http://www.va-interactive.com/inbusiness/editorial/hr/articles/philosophies.html">http://www.va-interactive.com/inbusiness/editorial/hr/articles/philosophies.html 
                  </a></b></font> </p>
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                      <br>
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