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UK CORPORATES TOP FOR TRAINING PRACTICES

In Uncategorized on January 5, 2010 at 11:03 am

Corporate UK is leading the way in training practices, according to a comprehensive pan-European survey, published by Cegos Group. The survey found that UK organisations are training more staff and have embraced innovative practices, including e-learning, blended learning and mobile learning, to a greater extent than their European counterparts. The independent survey examined training practice trends during 2007, and was carried among training managers from 1,000 companies employing more than 500 staff, across the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Italy and Spain.

Key highlights include:

  • UK companies are leading the way in providing training to 61% of their employees compared to less than half of employees in Italy, France and Germany.
  • UK employees benefit from technology-driven training programmes. The UK is the European leader in 100% e-learning and blended learning (mixing face-to-face learning with e-learning). Spain is just behind the UK in terms of e-learning and blended learning techniques with 51% of Spanish companies adopting e-leaning and blended learning.
  • While the UK is training more people than any other country, it is running shorter programmes and spending less on professional development than its European counterparts. The survey found the average European corporate spends Euros 580,000 on professional development. The UK and Spain both spend around 40% less than the average European budget, reflecting in part their greater use of blended learning and e-learning.
  • UK corporations are more focused on providing direct feedback to the balance sheet in the effectiveness of training than their European counterparts. Almost half (47%) of UK companies measure ROI and 65% have measures in place to assess the impact of training on their people. The UK is 20% better than any other surveyed country in measuring ROI with France second, where 26% of companies measure ROI.

Jeremy Blain, joint managing director of Cegos’ UK operations, said: “Technology is playing a crucial role in driving down the cost of training, speeding up learning and making training more accessible to a wider audience. This trend will continue to be driven by today’s time-pressured workplace and current economic conditions as companies strive to get more for less.”

The UK carries out more training in-house than any other country surveyed. Among UK organisations, 55% of training is carried out internally by the company itself; 24% is carried out in-house with support from a third-party supplier; and only about 20% is conducted off-site by external providers. In terms of duration of training programmes, the survey revealed that UK companies prefer shorter training courses – 42% of sessions are one day long or less.

While companies still rely heavily on traditional methods to train their workforce, more and more are increasingly turning to the Internet as a delivery channel. Face-to-face learning is the number one method used by more than 90% of organisations across Europe. Coaching is particularly popular in the UK and Germany with 86% and 74% of companies respectively using the method compared to less than half of companies in France, Italy and Spain. The UK and Spain are the prime adopters of e-learning (55% of UK companies use e-learning and 51% of Spanish companies) and blended learning (51% of both UK and Spanish companies use blended learning). The UK also provides more on the job training and one-to-one training than any other country.

All countries surveyed are focusing their training budgets on the same core areas. In order of investment, these are professional development, QSE (Quality, Safety and Environment), IT, and management, with 75% of organisations investing in these areas. The figures show the growing importance of CPD (Continuing Professional Development) and the impact that new legislation and IT systems are making on the training function.

‘Embedding Workplace Learning into Organisational Culture’ Seminar

In Uncategorized on November 6, 2009 at 12:16 pm

Thursday 26th November 10am – 11.30 seminar (9.45 arrival for refreshments) Claddagh Ring, ground floor (0 Church Rd, London, NW4 4EA).

‘Embedding Workplace Learning into Organisational Culture’

Charles Jennings, Director Duntroon Associates

The talk will involve issues of embedding workplace learning into organisational culture, how this fits with university level work based learning and some of the challenges and opportunities for linkage.  Many organisations are just opening up to approaches such as 70:20:10 (where 70% of learning is experiential) which creates opportunities for work based learning development at al levels – including higher cognitive thinking and innovation.

 

At 11.30 -12.30 there will be a further opportunity to stay and discuss ideas that have been raised

 

Charles Jennings is the Director of Duntroon Associates, a UK-based Human Capital and L&D consultancy company. From 2002 until the end of 2008 he was the Chief Learning Officer for Reuters and Thomson Reuters where he had responsibility for developing learning and performance strategy and leading the learning organization for the firm’s 55,000 workforce. He is a leading thinker and practitioner in human capital development, change management, performance improvement and learning.

Charles has deep experience in both the business and learning practitioner sides of planning and implementing world-class performance solutions for organizations. He also has wider experience of ‘what works’ in the world of strategic talent, human capital development and effective performance and productivity approaches.

His career includes roles as head of the UK national centre for the development of networked learning , as a Professor in Southampton Business School, in senior business roles for global companies, and as an evaluator for the European Commission’s learning, performance and eCommerce research initiatives. He also sits on steering groups and advisory boards for national and international training and learning bodies.

Charles has an impeccable record of developing and implementing leading-edge performance solutions spanning more than 25 years. In 2008 he was honoured with the UK World of Learning ‘Outstanding Contribution to the Learning Industry’ award in recognition of his work on performance improvement, and ‘just-in-time’ and informal learning.

In 2006 Charles was one of six experts invited to be members of the UK Department of Trade & Industry’s Global Watch delegation to the USA on the “Beyond eLearning” mission.

http://www.duntroon.com/index.html

IWBL November events!

In Uncategorized on November 2, 2009 at 11:59 am

9th & 10th November 2009
International Professional Doctorates Conference
Days: Monday 9th & Tuesday 10th
Venue: Cavendish Conference Centre, London

11th November 2009
WBL Open Evening
Outline: Join us to learn more about WBL and how it can benefit you.
Day: Wednesday
Date: 11th November 2009
Time: 17.30-19.00, formal WBL Presentation at 18.00
Venue: Hendon IWBL
Cost: Free

Wednesday 26th November 2009
In Pursuit of Growth
Outline: This practical, interactive 1-day workshop is specifically designed for leaders of small and medium-sized businesses. Explore new ideas, identify new opportunities.
Time: 09.30-1630
Venue: Central London

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