Monday, July 23, 2018

Training Ideas for the Fall

Starbucks recently made the news when it closed 8,000 stores to conduct race bias training. This was made necessary by the actions of managers at a small number of locations who behaved badly. As summer comes to an end and the push toward the holidays begins, here are a couple of training ideas that you might implement before being forced to by a bad incident you hadn't planned on:

1.  Compliance Training - Imagine picking up a skinny envelope from your stack of mail and discovering that a former employee is suing you. You find out that one of your supervisors has done something that you didn't know about and has now made you potentially liable for back pay, damages, legal fees and possibly even fines. This actually happens quite frequently - a supervisor has employees working off the clock to avoid overtime - a supervisor frequently says disparaging things about a particular group of people based on race, age, gender or sexual preference - a male supervisor has been pressuring a female employee (or vice versa) for sex in exchange for better work assignments and better pay. 

Just as Starbucks wanted to be on-the-record as having trained their workers in these sensitive areas, it's important for every small business to be able to show that it holds regular training sessions for supervisors covering these areas of compliance and respect, and it could be an important component of your defense - showing that the perpetrator is a bad actor and the company made a good faith effort to prevent these things from happening. But what if you can't show that you've ever trained them? That's not going to look very good!

2.  Supervisor Training -  In my experience, small companies spend nearly 100% of their training budgets on technical or operational training with the occasional safety training thrown in. But many neglect basic supervisory and management skills training. Since employees join companies but quit bosses, this can prove to be an expensive oversight if poor behavior by one or more of your supervisors is resulting in higher levels of employee dissatisfaction and turnover. Just because Bob was your best technician, doesn't mean Bob has the skills to be a good supervisor. In fact, it's likely that because Bob was a great tech, he didn't require near as much of his supervisor's time when he was simply a tech. Bob may be shocked to find out how poorly some of the other techs perform and may not be equipped to help them raise their game.

Training supervisors and managers how to behave in ways that will keep you out of court is an essential part of running your business. The #MeToo movement has empowered women (and men) in the workplace to more confidently say something when they are being mistreated by colleagues, supervisors or managers. A robust economy where workers have options to work other places has made it easy for workers to leave if they perceive they could be treated better at another organization. Front line managers and supervisors represent the layer in the organization where business owners face the most risk in each of these areas.

If you would like assistance in either of these training areas, contact The Davidson Group. 

   

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