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HRM Principles & Practices (Second Edition) All Rights Reserved

Oxford Fajar Sdn. Bhd. (008974-T), 2011 Chapter 3 1


CHAPTER
3
TRAINING

HRM Principles & Practices (Second Edition) All Rights Reserved


Oxford Fajar Sdn. Bhd. (008974-T), 2011 Chapter 3 2
WHAT IS TRAINING?

Training is the attempt by an


organization to change employees
through the learning process so that
they are able to perform their jobs as
efficiently as possible.

HRM Principles & Practices (Second Edition) All Rights Reserved


Oxford Fajar Sdn. Bhd. (008974-T), 2011 Chapter 3 3
THE ASK MODEL

Change A
Attitudes

Develop
Skills S

Increase K
Knowledge

HRM Principles & Practices (Second Edition) All Rights Reserved


Oxford Fajar Sdn. Bhd. (008974-T), 2011 Chapter 3 4
TRAINING IS A LEARNING
PARTNERSHIP
The Government
Training
Vendors
The Training
Department

Employees Employers Consultants

Heads of
Department
Educational
Institutions
The Organization

HRM Principles & Practices (Second Edition) All Rights Reserved


Oxford Fajar Sdn. Bhd. (008974-T), 2011 Chapter 3 5
THE HUMAN RESOURCE
DEVELOPMENT FUND

Sectors Which Are Required to Contribute


to the Human Resource Development
Fund:
Manufacturing, with more than 50
employees
Manufacturing with 1049 employees but
paid up capital of RM2.5 million and above

HRM Principles & Practices (Second Edition) All Rights Reserved


Oxford Fajar Sdn. Bhd. (008974-T), 2011 Chapter 3 6
THE HUMAN RESOURCE
DEVELOPMENT FUND (cont.)
Services with more than 10 employees in the
following areas:
Hotel Computer services Training
Tour operators (in- Freight forwarding Accounting &
bound) Private higher auditing
Shipping education Direct selling
Air transport Warehousing services Engineering
Advertising Security Services Consultancy
Telecommunication Hypermarket, Private hospitals
supermarket and Road transport
Postal and courier
department stores Railways
services

HRM Principles & Practices (Second Edition) All Rights Reserved


Oxford Fajar Sdn. Bhd. (008974-T), 2011 Chapter 3 7
WHAT HAPPENS TO A COMPANY
WHICH DOES NOT TRAIN ITS
EMPLOYEES?

Margaret Anne Reid (2004) and her


co-authors in Human Resource Development
point out that the following costs will be
incurred if an employer does not
train his employees.

HRM Principles & Practices (Second Edition) All Rights Reserved


Oxford Fajar Sdn. Bhd. (008974-T), 2011 Chapter 3 8
WHAT HAPPENS TO A COMPANY
WHICH DOES NOT TRAIN ITS
EMPLOYEES? (cont.)
The following costs will incur if an employer does not
train his employees.
Payment to employees when learning on the
job, which may take longer if it is not properly
planned for.
Costs of wasted materials, sales and
customers lost because of mistakes made by
untrained employees.

HRM Principles & Practices (Second Edition) All Rights Reserved


Oxford Fajar Sdn. Bhd. (008974-T), 2011 Chapter 3 9
WHAT HAPPENS TO A COMPANY
WHICH DOES NOT TRAIN ITS
EMPLOYEES? (cont.)

Management time cost taken to undo the


mistakes made by the untrained employees.
Lowered morale, leading to higher turnover,
amongst team members who are
demotivated by working with an untrained
employee.

HRM Principles & Practices (Second Edition) All Rights Reserved


Oxford Fajar Sdn. Bhd. (008974-T), 2011 Chapter 3 10
WHAT HAPPENS TO A COMPANY
WHICH DOES NOT TRAIN ITS
EMPLOYEES? (cont.)

Accident-related costs; it is well-documented


that untrained workers tend to have more
accidents.
Higher turnover leading to recruitment costs
because employees feel they have no
prospects of further development.

HRM Principles & Practices (Second Edition) All Rights Reserved


Oxford Fajar Sdn. Bhd. (008974-T), 2011 Chapter 3 11
BENEFITS OF TRAINING

Training opportunities attract and help to


retain talented workers
Training increases worker productivity
Training increases workers job satisfaction
Training keeps workers up-to-date
Training helps to motivate workers

HRM Principles & Practices (Second Edition) All Rights Reserved


Oxford Fajar Sdn. Bhd. (008974-T), 2011 Chapter 3 12
THE TRAINING PROCESS

Identify training needs

Set training objectives

Develop the training programme

Implement the programme

Evaluate the programme


HRM Principles & Practices (Second Edition) All Rights Reserved
Oxford Fajar Sdn. Bhd. (008974-T), 2011 Chapter 3 13
HRM Principles & Practices (Second Edition) All Rights Reserved
Oxford Fajar Sdn. Bhd. (008974-T), 2011 Chapter 3 14
WHAT IS A TRAINING NEED?

A training need is a problem which prevents


work being done satisfactorily and which
can be overcome by TRAINING.

HRM Principles & Practices (Second Edition) All Rights Reserved


Oxford Fajar Sdn. Bhd. (008974-T), 2011 Chapter 3 15
TRAINING NEEDS ANALYSIS

Who needs training?


What skills or knowledge do they need?
Do their attitudes need changing?

HRM Principles & Practices (Second Edition) All Rights Reserved


Oxford Fajar Sdn. Bhd. (008974-T), 2011 Chapter 3 16
TRAINING NEEDS ANALYSIS
(cont.)

Situations
New employees
Promotion and transfer
New machinery
New procedures and policies
New products or services

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Oxford Fajar Sdn. Bhd. (008974-T), 2011 Chapter 3 17
TRAINING NEEDS ANALYSIS
(cont.)

Problems suggesting a training need


include:
Falling output
Rising error, scrap, waste, mistakes
Increasing time taken to complete work
Increasing accident rate
Increasing customer complaints
HRM Principles & Practices (Second Edition) All Rights Reserved
Oxford Fajar Sdn. Bhd. (008974-T), 2011 Chapter 3 18
TRAINING OBJECTIVES

A well-written training objective includes a


statement on:
Behaviour required of the trainee
Standards of performance
Conditions for performance

HRM Principles & Practices (Second Edition) All Rights Reserved


Oxford Fajar Sdn. Bhd. (008974-T), 2011 Chapter 3 19
DEVELOPING TRAINING
PROGRAMMES
Factors to Consider
Venue
Trainer
Duration
Budget
Individual or group
Methodology
Logistics
HRM Principles & Practices (Second Edition) All Rights Reserved
Oxford Fajar Sdn. Bhd. (008974-T), 2011 Chapter 3 20
TRAINING VENUE

On-the-job?

or

Off-the-job?

HRM Principles & Practices (Second Edition) All Rights Reserved


Oxford Fajar Sdn. Bhd. (008974-T), 2011 Chapter 3 21
JOB INSTRUCTIONAL TRAINING/
ON-THE-JOB TRAINING

Step 1: Break down the job into its separate parts


Step 2: Give an overview of the job
Step 3: Demonstrate a part of the job for the trainee
Step 4: Let the trainee try to do what has been
demonstrated
Step 5: Correct any mistakes made

Step 6: Let the trainee practise

HRM Principles & Practices (Second Edition) All Rights Reserved


Oxford Fajar Sdn. Bhd. (008974-T), 2011 Chapter 3 22
TRAINING METHODS

Lecture
Handouts
Audio-visual aids
Computer-aided learning/e-learning
Role-playing
Case studies
Simulation
Coaching

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Oxford Fajar Sdn. Bhd. (008974-T), 2011 Chapter 3 23
TRAINING METHODS (cont.)

Apprenticeship
Projects/Special assignments

Which Methods to Use?

A, S or K?
Active or Passive?
Cost and facilities?

HRM Principles & Practices (Second Edition) All Rights Reserved


Oxford Fajar Sdn. Bhd. (008974-T), 2011 Chapter 3 24
LEARNING PRINCIPLES

The learner must want to learn


Active learning is more effective than
passive learning
Learning is faster in teams

HRM Principles & Practices (Second Edition) All Rights Reserved


Oxford Fajar Sdn. Bhd. (008974-T), 2011 Chapter 3 25
E-LEARNING

E-learning allows learners


to learn at the speed
which suits them best.
E-learning allows for savings
on logistics costs.
E-learning allows employees to learn at
times which suits them best.

HRM Principles & Practices (Second Edition) All Rights Reserved


Oxford Fajar Sdn. Bhd. (008974-T), 2011 Chapter 3 26
Tutorial Submitted by today
in my pigeon hole
Case Study 1: Alis First Experience of
Training.

Answer all questions.

HRM Principles & Practices (Second Edition) All Rights Reserved


Oxford Fajar Sdn. Bhd. (008974-T), 2011 Chapter 3 27

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