Computerware Blog
Focus on Upskilling Your Employees
When many businesses look to add to their teams, they typically have a series of qualifications they need each applicant to meet before they grant interviews. They make their selection, do their entrance training, and then expect that the new hire will settle in and be as productive as possible as soon as possible.
On the surface, there is nothing abnormal or wrong about this scenario. The problem, however, is that dropping a new hire into the fray with a copy of the employee handbook and a day-and-a-half of software and sensitivity training may actually not be the best way to handle your human resources. This month we are going to talk about how creating a sustained training platform can actually have a marked effect on your business’ ability to stay secure and productive.
Education vs. Experience
The first place we’ll start is with the hiring process. Many organizations prefer to hire people that have a college degree of some sort. While that may be prudent if you are hiring people for a specialized job, many entry-level job postings are now requiring college degrees, often to the organization’s detriment. Since college graduates are likely to command a higher salary (and need higher-paying jobs to afford their student debt payments) they typically get impatient with their professional growth and hop from job-to-job until they find something more to their liking. In fact, people who have graduated from college since 2010 have averaged four job changes in their first nine years.
You also have people whose education doesn’t match up with the demands of their jobs. People that get their degree in a certain discipline and didn’t work a job relating to that discipline for years, are often further behind than people who have experience in the field. Then you have that person who applies, but majored in Anthropology in college. Most businesses would be better off filling the position from within than hiring someone from outside the company that lacks real-world experience in the job.
This is where training comes in. For the college graduate who has been exposed to different perspectives, disciplines, and rules than the people that work real-world jobs are exposed to the practical knowledge necessary to troubleshoot even basic problems in a business setting may be a little troublesome to start with. There’s a reason why your average tradesman keeps being able to raise their rates: they’re experienced and trained.
Types of Training
The first thing that should be mentioned is that dedicating a lot of time and resources to employee training can become expensive. This is likely why a lot of people don’t do much of it. There are five major types of training that most organizations offer, to varying degrees. They are:
Orientation
Every business has some form of orientation. This is a short rundown of the expectations of an employee by management. Orientation will show new hires all the relevant information about what it means to be an employee at the company. Some businesses go into detail about things like the company mission, values, corporate culture, leadership information, employee benefits, administrative procedures, and any other tasks that need to be completed before any actual training begins.
Onboarding
Onboarding is different from orientation. When you are onboarding your employees, you train them in the specific duties their job entails. This could be training on software systems they need to be accustomed to using, or training on how your business wants them to complete specific tasks. The idea is to make new hires as effective as possible, as quickly as possible. Some jobs come with half-a-day of onboarding, while others take over a year to complete.
Mandatory
There are some things that workers need to know, regardless of the position they hold. Some mandatory training is dictated by Federal and State governments, while others are strictly industry-wide points of emphasis. Public-sector jobs often are required to take occupational health and safety courses. This practice is becoming more and more prevalent in the private-sector, as is sexual harassment training.
Operational Skills
Skills training is designed to improve an employee’s ability to do the work, or to fill in other positions in your company. There is soft skills training and technical skills training. Soft skills training is designed to improve an employee’s ability to interact with others; and, with the company. These skills include:
- Presentation and communication
- Problem solving
- Conflict resolution
- Time management
- Collaboration
- Emotional intelligence
- Adaptability
Studies have shown that a dedication to soft skills training works to resolve the normative problems with high turnover and unsuccessful collaborative culture.
Technical skills training enhances the technical proficiency of an employee. Any time employees can get better at the technical aspects of their jobs, it improves the products and services the company they work for delivers.
Security
Nowadays, with the circumstances that modern workers have to consider, security training is an absolute must. Not only does it improve employees’ ability to protect business assets, it ensures that they are aware of the potential problems that the modern business is exposed to.
Physical security training is typically limited, but if it is a major part of a person’s role within your company to keep assets secure, they should be given the information needed to accomplish this task.
What’s more likely is that each person will need to take part in cybersecurity training. Digital assets are routinely targeted by people inside and outside of your business, so knowing how to protect them is a major point of emphasis that decision makers have to consider. The average worker needs to know how to identify a phishing attack, the best practices of data transmission, and what are good and bad practices when interacting with cloud-based and other online-based resources.
At Computerware, we know just how important keeping malware and unwanted visitors out of your network is and can help you with your cybersecurity and network security training platforms. Our team of professional IT technicians, and our dedication to helping businesses keep hackers from negatively affecting business, can go a long way to help you establish the training platform you need to keep your business' digital assets secure. Call us today at (703) 821-8200 for more information.
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