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CEP
Press goes 3 for 3!
In its first full year as a full-service publisher, CEP Press
has earned the International Society for Performance Improvement's
prestigious Award of Excellence for Outstanding Instructional
Communication on all three of its 2001 titles: The
Business of Winning, Making
an Impact, and Conquering
Organizational Change!
PERFORMANCE
CONSULTING: THE BEGINNING OF THE ROI PROCESS
By Ann W. Parkman,
Executive Vice President, CEP, & Perry Anne Scott, General
Manager of Air Logistics Learning Organization, Delta Air
Lines
Accountability is a matter of
growing importance in our industry. According to ROI expert
Patricia Pulliam Phillips, "increasingly, executives
require the training and performance improvement function
to show the value it brings to the organization in the same
terms as other operational elements" ("The
Bottomline on ROI: Basics, Benefits, & Barriers to Measuring
Training & Performance Improvement," CEP
Press, 2002).
In order to do a good job of
evaluation at the end, however, it's important to lay the
right groundwork from the beginning. Conducting up-front analysis
before engaging in a training or performance improvement solution
offers a number of benefits:
- It ensures that the projects
you undertake will have real value
- It forces you to clarify
your goals in terms of the business results you want to
impact and the job performance changes you need to make
- It ensures that the solutions
you implement are based on data, not intuition
- It helps to secure needed
buy-in from key stakeholders, who will be instrumental in
helping you complete your analysis
- It provides meaningful data
for use in comparing pre- and post-intervention performance
- It enhances the credibility
of your results
Linking Analysis with Evaluation
There are five generally accepted levels of evaluation. These
include Kirkpatrick's four evaluation levels-reaction, learning,
job application, and business impact-and Jack J. Phillips'
fifth level-ROI. Similarly, there are five levels of analysis
that link directly to each level of evaluation.
- Feasibility analysis (which
links to ROI evaluation): Is the project worth doing? Are
the benefits of the solution likely to outweigh the costs?
- Business needs analysis,
which links to business impact evaluation): What business
needs are not being met?
- Job performance analysis
(which links to job application evaluation): What elements
of job performance are prohibiting the achievement of these
business needs?
- Learning needs analysis (which
links to learning evaluation): Assuming the performance
problem is due to a skill or knowledge deficiency, what
do people need to learn in order to perform proficiently?
- Preferences analysis (which
links to reaction evaluation): What instructional methods
and media will best meet the needs of both learners and
management?
The following case study describes
how CEP and Delta Air Logistics (DAL) applied the different
levels of analysis to develop a true, results-oriented training
solution.
Delta Air Logistics: A Case
Study
DAL is the cargo arm of Delta Air Lines. While not as well
known as its passenger service, DAL currently is responsible
for one-third of Delta's net revenue, with tremendous opportunity
for growth. For this reason, Delta has recently committed
to investing in both DAL personnel and training. This case
study focuses on one of these training initiatives-Acceptance
Agent new-hire training.
Acceptance Agents (including
full-time DAL employees and, in smaller facilities, external
contractors) are responsible for accepting cargo and processing
shipment requests. Until Delta's investment in DAL training,
no analysis had ever been done to determine the needs of new
agents. Over time, this lack of analysis resulted in a large
discrepancy between DAL's business needs and its existing
new-hire training. For example, international cargo represents
a large percentage of DAL's business. Yet in the 40 hours
of initial training, new hires received virtually no instruction
in this area. This training gap resulted in a significant
on-the-job learning curve and inconsistent work practices.
It also contributed to a high turnover rate by new agents
and frustration on the part of management and facilitators
alike.
1. Feasibility Analysis
A feasibility analysis is particularly useful when: a) a lack
of consensus exists over whether or not to undertake a performance
improvement effort, or b) a project is likely to be very expensive.
In this case, all key decision makers, including Delta and
DAL's leadership team, as well as DAL's design team, strongly
believed that the ROI of the new training initiative would
prove significantly higher than that of the existing training
program.
With respect to cost, CEP agreed
to conduct the up-front analysis and design, and to serve
as a quality advisor to expedite instructional development,
implementation and evaluation by DAL designers. This served
two purposes-it minimized the financial investment in the
project while speeding the development timeline. For these
reasons, DAL did not require a feasibility analysis in order
to proceed with this project.
2. Business Needs Analysis
DAL identified a number of critical issues that were negatively
impacting business results:
- The number of service failures
resulting from incomplete paperwork and other errors was
higher than acceptable to DAL
- This service failure rate
was negatively impacting the level of insurance claims,
regulatory fines and letters of investigation, as well as
"pennies per pound" productivity (how much it
cost for DAL to move a pound of freight)
- The attrition rate of new
agents ranged from an estimated 20% for full-time staff
to 100% for external contractors
Even before the start of the
training initiative, DAL regularly tracked most of these business
measures. This provides a solid pre-intervention baseline
that DAL will be able to use to conduct Level 4 evaluation
on the business impact of the new training program.
3. Job Performance Analysis
DAL operates 133 stations across the U.S., ranging from small-
and medium-sized cities to large metropolitan areas. To gain
a representative picture of the performance issues facing
all Acceptance Agents, CEP interviewed and observed the supervisory
staff, typical and exemplary agents and, where applicable,
external contractors, in four of these cities-New York, Cincinnati,
Birmingham, and Orlando.
The analysis focused on the specific
business issues identified during the business needs analysis.
At the same time, it addressed other potential performance
issues, such as perceptions of rewards and punishment, feelings
toward existing training, and impressions of the Acceptance
Agent position overall.
The analysis uncovered a number
of gaps between actual and required performance. The identification
of performance gaps provides the necessary data to conduct
Level 3 evaluation, as it offers a benchmark upon which to
measure performance improvement.
The analysis also uncovered the
reasons for the performance gaps, which ranged from skill/knowledge
deficiencies to motivational and environmental obstacles.
Determining the causes of the performance gaps ensured that
CEP's recommended solutions would achieve their intended results.
4. Learning Needs Analysis
CEP established the learning objectives for the training program
based on the skill/knowledge deficiencies uncovered by the
job performance analysis. The completion of Level 2 and Level
3 analysis ensured that these learning objectives were tied
directly to both the job needs of performers and the business
needs of the organization. At the same time, the establishment
of learning objectives will make it easy to answer the overriding
question, "Will people learn what we set out to teach
them?" (thereby satisfying the measurement criteria for
Level 2 evaluation).
In comparing the existing training
program to the recommended program, DAL's Learning Organization
determined that the former covered only 18% of the critical
skills and knowledge needed for Acceptance Agents to perform
to DAL's expectations. The ability to precisely quantify the
differences between the two programs enhanced the credibility
of DAL's Learning Organization while increasing confidence
in the approach being taken.
5. Preferences Analysis
While preferences should not drive any solution, being sensitive
to the needs of both performers and managers is an important
part of designing a program that will fit your target audience's
work environment and management's time/resource constraints.
While it isn't essential to perform this type of analysis
in order to conduct Level 1 evaluation, considering and accommodating
preferences can improve learner reactions to the training
program overall.
With respect to DAL's Acceptance
Agents, learner preferences were clear-minimize classroom-based
training as much as possible. DAL's design team easily accommodated
this request by developing materials that minimize stand-up
lecture. In any given hour, lecture will comprise only 25%
of training time, with the remaining time spent on hands-on
activities, including ample practice scenarios and skill checks.
Regarding manager preferences,
CEP found that many of DAL's supervisory staff expressed interest
in career and skill enhancement opportunities. DAL plans to
leverage this interest by giving qualified supervisors a chance
to serve as "operations coaches." In this volunteer
role, supervisors will receive training to enable them to
provide structured mentoring and coaching to new hires.
Some training professionals may
be reluctant, even afraid, to conduct comprehensive evaluation,
particularly at Levels 3-5, because of what the results may
or may not show. But by starting off with comprehensive analysis,
you can maximize your chances of achieving positive and credible
bottom-line results.
This article is based on a
presentation of the same title delivered by Ann W. Parkman
and Perry Anne Scott at ASTD's June 2001 Conference Within
a Conference in Orlando, FL.
(A Brief Update on DAL's Training
Initiative: The new Acceptance Agent training program
was scheduled for rollout in the fall of 2001, but because
of 9/11, implementation has been delayed and ROI results are
not available. Nevertheless, both DAL and CEP are confident
that the new performance-based training program will virtually
guarantee an extremely positive ROI. As CEP President and
CEO Dr. Seth Leibler states, "it's not uncommon for the
ROI of true performance-based training to completely offset
its costs. Linking analysis to evaluation simply makes good
business sense.")
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SPECIAL
MAGER WORKSHOP DISCOUNT OFFER!
Save $500 on any Mager Workshop (including CRI, IMD,
TMW, and MILT) you or your colleagues attend
in 2002!
This special
offer can be used by up to 3 people in your organization.
To take advantage of this offer, simply call CEP at
1-800-558-4237 or 770-458-4080.
This
offer may not be combined with any other discount offer.
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