human-capital1

September 2, 2014

How to Improve Your Return on Human Capital Investment

here is no shortage of workers for businesses, but there is a lack of the evolving, essential skills needed for both employee and organizational growth. With employee salaries making up nearly half of many company’s operating expenses,

An in-depth look at how businesses can retain, develop, and advance its workforce through continued education programs.

There is no shortage of workers for businesses, but there is a lack of the evolving, essential skills needed for both employee and organizational growth. With employee salaries making up nearly half of many company’s operating expenses, the contribution of the workforce is perhaps the most important asset to achieving a competitive advantage.  That’s why executives are responding to this need for skill development by creating and implementing further education programs and career advancement strategies.

The 2014 Bersin by Deloitte report “The Corporate Learning Factbook 2014: Benchmarks, Trends, and Analysis of the U.S. Training Market,” found that businesses increased training budgets by an average of 15% last year, reflecting the highest growth rate in this area in the last seven years. In fact, businesses across the U.S. spent $1,169 per learner. As far as which areas of training and development organizations are focusing their increased budgets on, leadership development takes the largest share at 35 cents on average of each training dollar.

This rise of internal training programs prepares employees to consistently make informed and intelligent decisions by offering them ongoing access to up-to-date and relevant knowledge.  One of the more popular learning incentives for employees is tuition reimbursement.  Classes that provide skill sets directly relevant to the employee’s current job can be covered in its entirety or at least in part.  This does two positive things for the company:  demonstrates the employer’s commitment to its employees, and provides them with the skills needed to contribute even more to the company’s success.

Smaller businesses may lack the finances to implement complete tuition reimbursement, but there are other cost-effective resources that will assist in continued education.  For example, offering online tutorials in a virtual classroom is a tried-and-true method.  Employees are able to partake in these courses on their own time, and still retain valuable skills or business wisdom. 

Another easy way to share information is to form a book club in which a group of employees voluntarily reads the same business literature.   Combine the book reading with a regularly scheduled discussion roundtable to double the impact of the book on job training, learning and development.  When employees learn the same concepts, they share a language and ideas that makes the application of the ideas easier and more seamless in the workplace. 

Finally, an in-depth succession planning program will help satisfaction and retention among top-performing employees.  This identifies fast movers and progressive workers so you can provide climbers with the skills and knowledge to advance in their career.  Some companies, for example, develop a mentorship program with high-level executives to begin mobility training.

The opportunity to develop management and leadership skills may be the most valuable investment for both sides of the employee-management relationship.   It prepares the next generation of organizational leaders, it communicates a commitment to employees’ futures and it strengthens internal business ties.

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Michel Koopman is currently chief executive officer at getAbstract Inc., overseeing operations in the US, Canada and Latin America. Previously, Michel held a number of senior sales, marketing and business development positions at Citrix Systems where he built many of the firm’s most strategic go-to-market, revenue-generating alliances and channel partnerships. Prior to Michel’s roles at Citrix, he held business development and consulting positions at Baan Company (now Infor). He also worked at Morgan Stanley and International Distillers (now Diageo).

 

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