Survey shows employees want more workplace training
In a happy marrying of priorities, three quarters of employees would be keen to undertake more workplace training, while four out of five HR professionals are making staff development a key focus this year.
A three-year research project commissioned by Middlesex University’s Institute for Work Based Learning among an average 4,300 workers per annum revealed that a huge 74% felt they were not achieving their full potential at work and, as a result, would value access to more development opportunities.
Nine out of 10 felt that training was important, particularly if it was delivered in the workplace, although 83% said they would consider undertaking a relevant course at home, with 72% even saying they think about contributing financially to do so.
The key motivation for most was to feel more valued or become more effective in their current role (44%), although 23% saw training as an opportunity to up-skill and change jobs.
The Institute’s professor Simon Roodhouse said: “It won’t be a surprise to anyone that staff want training and feel valued when they get it, but we were interested to discover that so many people were willing to contribute financially. And while they would prefer to develop their skills at work, many are open to learning at home.”
A second study undertaken among 144 HR managers by Taleo, a Software-as-a-Service-based talent management platform provider, indicated, meanwhile, that 82% considered staff development to have risen up the priority list this year.
Some 56% said they now considered training and development to be an essential business enabler, although 15% still saw it as a ‘nice-to-have’. Luckily, therefore, two thirds indicated that they did not expect their budgets to be cut in this area but to remain static instead.
Nonetheless, just over a quarter of respondents said that greater visibility of skills gaps within their organisation would help them in staff development terms as would more insight into workers’ existing skills.
- 2387 reads
- login or register to post comments
- Add to a social bookmarking site
- ViadeoShare




"On-the job" training and in the workplace are not the same
The study does NOT indicate that people wish for "on-the-job" training but rather that training is <delivered in the workplace>
This is not the same. It is very common for "off-the-job" training such as classroom based training, e-learning, seminars, coaching, mentoring, action learning etc to be delivered in the workplace. However "on-the-job" training refers to learning whilst actually doing the job. This may include sitting with a subject matter expert, project work, extended responsibilities, on-boarding a new employee, international assignment etc.
Why is this distinction important? There has been much research (including Princeton University and the Centre for Creative Leadership) on the relative impacts of on-the-job and off-the-job learning experiences. The general finding being that on-the-job learning leads to a greater chance of increased performance, results and retention of learning.
This article merely states that people would rather attend trainings at work that at home :-)
Workplace training!
Hi Mark
Many thanks for your comment, which was spot on. The story is about workplace training, as you say, and I have changed the headline and introduction.
Many thanks, Martin.