Your (Lack Off) Training Efforts Can Easily Ruin the Outcome of an Otherwise Well-Executed Project

18. Juni 2019
Kategorien
Newsletter abonnieren

Your (lack off) training efforts can easily ruin the outcome of an otherwise well-executed project

Any system is only as good as how well it is used. If its a CRM, ERP, or any other system, when users don’t know how to use the system effectively the benefits of the new system for your company will be small, or even negative.

So educating and training your employees is critical to the success of a project — you can never over-train employees on a new system.

Unfortunately, it is hardly ever done right. How many of the below statements sound familiar to you?

“The training was too fast and did not allow time for people to move up the learning curve. There was a very small time window between training and go-live.”


“The training was not supported by written procedures or reference materials — the project team thought some online ‘help’ files would suffice; they didn’t.”


“I think the training team thought they did a great job as their end-of-session evaluations showed good results, but the real measure was the subsequent level of demand on the ‘help desk’ and that showed the training failed to meet the needs of the business.”


“The training was system-operational based. It was too limited. We did not know the business context, the opportunities, why the changes were required, etc. We were just told, this is how you do it now. The business change was ignored in the training scenario, yet this was the most important bit.”


“There were no ‘sustain’ activities, so people quickly reverted to their old habit patterns; often working around the new system to create the old processes as closely as possible. Equally, the new employee’s onboarding training was ignored. We tried to give them the implementation training but found it was inadequate for people new to the firm and its processes.”


“The new systems introduced new disciplines. Correct account codes needed to be entered at source, purchase orders needed correct part numbers on them before they could be sent. These and many other ‘disciplines’ were introduced as part of the system but without any pre-emptive education or communications. They were therefore seen as examples of the new systems’ complexity and increased workload. The downstream benefits were neither known nor considered. As a result, the system got a bad name as ‘too cumbersome’.”

We are all aware of it, and yet we somehow refuse to spend sufficient fund, focus and time on employee education and training.

In a nutshell: In order for your next project that introduces a new system to be a success, make sure that training is a priority.

Tags

Das könnte Sie auch interessieren

How Your Rollout in Waves Can End in a Tsunami

14. November 2022

Many multinational organizations are bringing larger system implementations to a screeching halt because they misunderstand what it means to do a rollout in waves.  We’re probably all familiar with the “phased rollout”. A phased rollout means you roll a project out to all targeted users at once but don’t deploy all of its planned functionality.

Weiterlesen

My Talk «Why Big Technology Projects Fail» @ Synergy DevPartner Conference

12. November 2022

In September I was invited by Synergex to give a talk at their 2022 Synergy DevPartner Conference.  The title of my talk was «Why Big Technology Projects Fail« and it covers my personal top ten reasons why this happens so often. Many executives and organisations have challenges with bringing large and complex technology projects to

Weiterlesen

Case Study 16: Nike’s 100 Million Dollar Supply Chain «Speed bump»

16. Oktober 2022

“This is what you get for 400 million, huh?”  Nike President and CEO Phil Knight famously raised the question in a conference call days before announcing the company would miss its third-quarter earnings by at least 28% due to a glitch in the new supply chain management software. The announcement would then send Nike’s stock

Weiterlesen

White Elephant Stampede: Case Studies in Policy and Project Management Failures

15. Oktober 2022

This month one of the book projects I have been part of has been published by Connor Court Publishing in Australia.  The book is titled «White Elephant Stampede: Case Studies in Policy and Project Management Failures«, and it examines the seemingly endless cavalcade of projects that fail to meet their objectives, cost more than expected and

Weiterlesen

Project Complexity Reduction – (Non)-Executive Workshop

19. September 2022

«Complexity is the enemy of execution» is a quote from Tony Robbins, the famous coach, and he is absolutely right.   One of the main reasons technology and other transformation projects fail so often is their (underestimated) complexity.   Managing and reducing complexity in projects should be an urgent concern for any organization.   But

Weiterlesen

(Non)-Executive Workshops

19. September 2022

Currently I offer two high impact workshops for C-level executives, partners at a professional service firm, board members, and business unit leaders in the role of Project Sponsor or Steering Committee Member of large and complex technology projects.  > Project Success Definition > Project Complexity Reduction Both workshops are designed for the Project Sponsor, the

Weiterlesen

Portfolio Review

16. August 2022

 Coming soon…

Weiterlesen

New Project Audit

16. August 2022

Audit means compliant with standards. In this case not PMI or Hermes, but with my standards. It is how I would set up a new project based on my 20+ years of experience with large technology projects.    If you are in the early phase of a large and complex technology project my New Project

Weiterlesen

Doing Something That’s Never Been Done

14. August 2022

Executives, project sponsors, project managers, and steering committee members can learn a lot from how some deep technology startups approach their projects. This isn’t true for all kinds of projects, but it is for every project that involves doing something that hasn’t been done before and has a high risk-reward profile. This isn’t another lean

Weiterlesen

Project Failure Database

8. August 2022

As part of writing Project Failure Case Studies I do a lot of research on failed projects.  Not every project I encounter in court documents and/or news papers is suitable for a case study. Nor do I have time to write a case study on each suitable project failure I encounter. But this research has

Weiterlesen