Too Busy to Train

Do you wish your construction field crews and management people work as well as you do? Do they often struggle and fail to do things the way you want them done? How long does it take them to master a new task or idea? Would a regular training program make a difference? In a recent survey of more than 2,000 contractors and business owners, over 98 percent said their people would do a better job if they were offered more training.

But, this awareness doesn’t necessarily lead to action. For field personnel:

  • 51 percent of companies provide zero to eight hours of training per year
  • 12 percent offer 40 hours or more per year per field employee

For management personnel:

  • 32 percent of companies offer less than eight hours per year
  • 24 percent train 40 hours or more.

Contrast this with the top 500 major companies in America who average more than 40 hours of training per year, per employee!

Why do companies offer more training to management than field people? This doesn’t make sense. Construction companies make or lose most of their money out on the jobsite, not back in the office. Quality, service, productivity—all of it happens out in the field. When firms spend more on training in the office, field employees and their contributions to the bottom line are not properly valued.

No training is draining

Most smaller contracting firms don’t have formal training programs. Stop and consider the old method of distributing information and blueprints versus today’s laptop computers, mobile devices, e-mail, and project websites. In today’s high-tech, high-speed business environment, people need to learn and improve 50 percent every four years just to stay even. Maybe your firm is “too busy to train” because you expect people to learn by doing or the trial-and-error method.

People want to make meaningful contributions on the job. They want to be recognized for their efforts. They need training just to keep up, and additional training to excel. If they don’t get the training and tools they need, they won’t accept responsibility for the quality and productivity of the work they do.

The two percent investment

Your company goal should be to provide 40 hours of training per year for every employee. The total cost will be less than two percent of your payroll cost. And your return can be a five to ten percent improvement in bottom-line productivity.

Getting started is simple. Call a team meeting to select and prioritize 52 training topics. You can cover the same 52 topics each year, as well as new topics and innovative ideas. Allocate 45 minutes per week for training. Conduct training sessions in an interactive setting, on the jobsite or in the office.

Training involves doing

Tell people how to do it, show them how to do it, and then let them do it. Watch the results, coach the participants until they get it right, and recognize those who do a good job. Bosses need to step back Share training duties among your crew, so everyone gets a chance to teach. Assign topics to individuals based on experience and skill. Use outside instructors when introducing new or technical tasks.

Work together to learn together

Offsite seminars and workshops can be excellent training opportunities as well, but make sure the programs offer more than listening to an instructor. Good training involves interaction, doing, and coaching. Often, a company will hold one big annual meeting for their entire staff. The agenda includes informational sessions, but no training really occurs at these meetings. The audience is not participating in the activity or implementing the skill as it is explained. They just listen and try to stay awake. And then, back at their job the next day, they continue to do their work exactly as they did before.

Working together to learn and improve each week fosters team spirit and enthusiasm. Give your people weekly opportunities to perform, opportunities to learn, and chances to train others. The return to your company in productivity, quality work, motivation, and staff loyalty will be exponential.