Know your participants
The analysis phase in the Learning Management Cycle introduced in the previous section is what enables you to ensure the relevance of your training for the direct beneficiaries and organizations. In the private sector, this translates to trainings that respond to the real needs of both organizations and participants, courses that are relevant and perceived as useful by all stakeholders involved.
A report on workplace learning produced and published by 24x7 Learning Inc. in 2015 found that only 11% of employees actually applied the skills they learned in training to their job. This shows how significant the disconnection is between actual learning needs of employees and the training they have access to, or that training providers offer.
What does this mean? It means that you should invest as much effort and resources in the analysis phase as you do in implementation. Because the implementation, as well as the results and the impact of the trainings, depend to a great extent on how much the training responds to the learning needs of your beneficiaries and to the competency gaps identified.
If you don’t do a thorough need analysis, the following might happen:
When preparing a training course, your starting point is identifying and understanding competency gaps and learning needs at different levels. What do your participants need to learn? Why? What is the impact of their learning in the organization/ company? How does this align with, and how is it useful in the context of the broader business strategy or on the level of national or international opportunities for the organization?
As a result, you should have a very clear image of:
It is also important to understand your participants in the context of their personal and professional lives. They are not just participants in your training; they are juggling many other responsibilities, interests and priorities. It might be a good idea, then, to approach their participation in the training in correlation with everything else and to take into consideration the amount of time and energy they are capable of and willing to invest in this learning process. Understand how this training interferes with current job responsibilities: is work piling up while they are in the sessions? Do they have any urgent issues that need to be addressed? Are their coordinators aware of the training taking place? Do they understand its importance in the broader organizational context? Do they perceive training time as work time? Having an answer to these questions will support you in designing activities and processes that are realistic and relevant.
Depending on each situation, you can choose from a variety of learning needs analyzes, or develop your own instruments:
No matter the method you choose, questions are your most powerful tool in this phase. They provide you with an initial assessment of the learning needs and context in which the learning will take place, and at the same time, work as a guide for monitoring and evaluating the success of the training program. So what to ask?
These questions will ensure that your training is tailored, as much as possible, to the participants’ interests, needs and characteristics. Thus, it will increase the relevance and probability of the participants using what they learn after the course in their actual work place, and consequently, produce the expected changes at the company level.
Although the process described above is the recommended approach, things might look very different in reality. There is no right or wrong approach, as long as you remember that the training is like a dance that you dance together with the contracting organization and your participants, and not alone on a stage in front of them.
In this case, do a cost-effect analysis and focus on the segments that you think will bring you the most valuable information.
Try to conduct regular training needs analyzes with all members in order to get a broad picture for how to situate all your trainings. This will be your general guiding light.
The least you need to do is the needs analysis on the learners’ level. If possible, do it before the training by sending a needs assessment questionnaire, in whatever format you find most suitable (Google forms, some questions on a FB or WhatsApp group, etc). You might however, find yourself in a situation where you don’t really know who the people coming to the training will be. On top of that, they might not have a choice, and are only coming because they were requested to. In this scenario, try to find out who the people in the room are once they arrive. Allocate at least thirty minutes to clarify expectations and learning needs, and be ready to adapt your training design, content, and activities on the spot with the reality of your participants.
Examples of on-the spot training needs analysis
You might need to adjust your training in terms of content, methods and approach. If, for example, people want to have a space for peer-discussions, and you did not plan that, check where it can be integrated. Or if, for example, it turns out that people have more expertise in the topic than you imagined, you can still do a short content intro to ensure that everyone is on the same page, but you might allocate more time to a deeper analysis, like the practical implications of a law, for example. At the same time, you might find out that a certain course objective is not relevant for your participants. You might choose to focus less on that, or choose to keep the focus and explain why, if the organization you deliver the training for considers it a priority.
In this case, you should go back to what the organizational needs are. What do they define as a base-line for all employees? This is what defines your training goals and this is also what is communicated to the participants.
At the same time, you can use the group wisdom and dynamic to support peer-learning:
When you create a learning environment, people will understand that exposure to different backgrounds and expertise enriches their learning process.
Also, by using different reflection methods, you can support participants to understand and articulate what is relevant for them within the training and to extract meaningful personal learning outcomes.
You can’t force the process, however, you can support organizations to dig deeper and you can make proposals based on all the information you have. All organizations will be able to express some needs (e.g. that they generally need employees to be up-to-date with Labour Law changes), and you can build on what is available. You can analyze the wider context (regional, business sector, professional niche, etc.): Are there policies that might dictate the implementation of some program? Are there government mandates that must be adhered to?
Whether this is discovered before the training, in the training needs analysis, or comes up on-the spot, it is important that you, as a training provider understand and articulate what the limitations of the training are. If there are needs that cannot be completely covered through training, you can analyze with the clients what other type of learning is available and might be more appropriate. Maybe people need to do some on-the-job learning, mentoring or coaching. It is unrealistic to believe you can cover all the learning needs within a company with your training, so it is important to situate trainings in the wider learning and capacity development strategy of organizations.
If there are needs that you cannot cover in a certain training, you can discuss with your client ways to address them in future trainings or modules. You can also support participants to identify how they might learn what they need after the training is over. You can do that by allocating some time and using reflective methods within the training to evaluate what they have learned, to identify what they still need to learn and how to do that.