| Corporate 
                University Xchange's Pillars of e-Learning Success looks at 
                the key drivers, challenges, and benefits involved in launching 
                an e-learning initiative. Sixty-five corporate learning organizations 
              participated in this study. 2002 Reducing 
                training-related costs is the chief driver in launching an e-learning 
                initiative. Nearly 75 percent of corporate learning professionals 
                indicated that reducing education and training costs was their main 
                driver for launching an e-learning initiative, followed by providing 
                training to a geographically dispersed workforce (63 percent), building 
                employee skills (46 percent), delivering just-in-time information 
                (42 percent), and delivering to a large audience (40 percent). Corporate 
                learning practitioners indicated they saved approximately 20 percent 
                in training-related expenses by delivering e-learning programs. 
                
 The percentage of corporate education programs delivered via
              the classroom is expected to decrease significantly by 2003 from
            64 percent to 39 percent.
 The 
                paradigm for training and development has changed from being a one-time 
                event to more of a process. Learning is being incorporated 
                into all stages of an individual's career and the distinctions between 
                formal and informal learning and training and performance support 
                are blurring. Based on these changes, many best practice 
                organizations have realized the great potential in converging knowledge 
                management systems with e-learning systems. Both systems 
                share the one common goal of diffusing knowledge throughout an entire 
                organization. Cap Gemini Ernst and Young, First Consulting Group, 
                and Level 3 Communications are examples of the many organizations 
                that have taken on this effort. 
 Knowledge management systems were common among organizations that 
              launched their learning initiative 3 - 5 years ago (57 percent), 
              organizations that offer more than 100 courses (55 percent), and 
              organizations that have invested more than 30 percent of their overall 
              education/ training budget in e-learning. IT and professional services 
              organizations were also trendsetters in this area; with over 60 
              percent indicating their e-learning infrastructure contained a knowledge 
            management system
 While 
                the trend in e-learning is to focus on tangible topics, such
                  as computer applications or IT-related topics, we predict that
                  in the next 12 - 18 months more corporate learning organizations
                  will provide e-learning courses that focus on the "softer" side
                  Currently, e-learning courses for the most part focus on technical
                  training topics, such as computer or IT-related topics (63
                  percent), followed by functional training or topics specifically
                  related to an e-learner's job (18 percent), and soft skill
                  training, such as leadership or management development (18
                  percent). e-Learning technologies have become a proven way
                  for corporate learning organizations to get a consistent message
                  across the organization to large groups of people quickly.
                  In addition, organizations have leveraged e-learning technologies
              for their new hire orientation programs.  Corporate 
                learning organizations are leveraging eLearning to provide education 
                programs and services to their customers. For the most part, corporate 
                learning organizations are targeting their eLearning efforts to 
                technical/IT employees (79 percent), customer service representatives 
                (70 percent), sales employees (69 percent), first line supervisors 
                (69 percent), professionals - excluding IT staff (69 percent), middle 
                managers (67 percent), and administrative employees (67 percent). 
                Twenty-three percent of corporate learning organizations target 
                their programs to external customers and 13 percent target to suppliers. 
                IT/professional services firms and mature learning organizations 
                (organizations that began offering eLearning programs more than 
                5 years ago) were more likely than any other segment to extend their 
                offerings to external customers. "Educommerce," using
                education to drive commerce while reinforcing a company brand, 
              is the latest phenomenon sweeping the corporate education marketplace. 
              While providing education to customers and suppliers is an old practice, 
              the ability to deliver education to these audiences via eLearning 
              technologies is expected to make a tremendous impact in the corporate 
            education marketplace.   
 
Texaco 
                doesn't view its knowledge management projects as a  
"separate investment that must generate standalone returns".  
              The focus in usually on improving processes or creating new ways of 
                working. 
              
                 In general, professionals can spend as much as 3/4s of their time
                looking for sources or  
              information needed to do their jobs, so making
                that process faster
                will automatically increase productivity,
              Information Week, 9/6/2001, Employees Share Pearls of Wisdom   
                            A recent IDC study found that “knowledge workers spend 15 percent to
  20 percent of their time actively looking for specific information; however,
  these searches are successful less than 50 percent of the time.” Just
  calculating the time spent in the unsuccessful searches, the study found that “these
  unsuccessful searches could cost a company employing 1000 knowledge workers
  $6 million in time lost.” 
  
                
    What
                    do They Need?In an October 2003 survey of 1,021 American workers ages
                  18 or older, by Harris Interactive (margin of error is plus
                  or minus
                3%) the question was asked, “Which one of the following scenarios
              is the most critical thing you expect from your technology at work?”:
 
                
                  
                    | 27% | Providing
                        you access to the data that you need to be successful at
                    your job |  
                    | 20% | Connecting
                    you to the people you work with |  
                    | 20% | Simplifying
                    the business process you have to go through to do your job |  
                    | 14% | Making
                    it easy for you to collaborate with others |  
                    | 14% | Making
                    the busy work as painless as possible |   
                     
                The relationship between education and productivity at more than
                3,100 U.S. workplaces was studied. The study controlled for factors
                like the age of equipment, industry, and establishment size.
                On average, a 10% increase in the workforce education level led
                to an 8.6% gain in total factor productivity. By comparison,
                a 10% rise in capital stock - that is, the value of equipment
                -increased productivity by just 3.4 percent. The marginal value of investing 
                      in human capital is about 3 times greater than the value of investing 
                      in machinery.  Also, for every year of additional education in 
                      a city's workforce,productivity goes up about 2.8%.
                      Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania, 1995.  .
 ... 
                   a research project initiated in 1996 by the Education Development 
                   Centre Inc. (EDC) of Massachusetts. The study was based on in-depth 
                   research involving more than 1,000 employees at seven companies 
                      in seven states,
 including Motorola, Boeing, Ford Electronics, 
                   and Siemens.
 
 The two-year study
                     was conducted by the Center for Workforce Development, a
                     nonprofit research and
                      development organization affiliated with the Education
                     Development Center in Newton, Mass. The $1.6 million study
                     was funded by the
                      U.S. Department of Labor, The Pew Charitable Trusts, and
                      state economic or workforce development agencies from Connecticut,
                      Florida, Massachusetts,
                      North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Washington. The study
                     has "profound 
                      implications on corporate culture, worker satisfaction, productivity, 
                      and improving the rate of innovation," according to
                      Monika Aring, co-director of the research project. "researchers
                      calculated that every hour of formal training yielded a four 
                      hour spillover of informal training. Motorola is proud that 
                      it offers 40 hours of training a year to each employee and now questions 
                      if that is sufficient. Motorola has calculated that it receives 
                      an ROI of 30 dollars for each dollar it invests in employee training.
 
 The researchers identified 13 work-related activities during
                       which most informal learning occurs.   Among
                 them
 
                
                  |  Teaming,
                        which brings together employees with different skills
                        and responsibilities within the organization to
                        address problems or goals. 
  Meetings,
                        especially those at which employees at many levels are
encouraged to express opinions. 
  Customer
interactions, especially in companies where customer feedback is encouraged. 
  Mentoring,
which was most commonly observed as a voluntary and loosely structured association
between a novice and more experienced employees. 
  Peer-to-peer
communication, which is characterized by interactions among employees at all
levels. |  Training, Jan, 1998,
                     Learning Ecologies, David Stamps  (A
              copy of the original study can be purchased at https://secure.edc.org/publications/prodview.asp?1029)
  Training 
                  focuses almost entirely on formal learning. But half to 70% of learning 
                is informal. Elliot Masie 2002
 
 
  100 percent
                  of technology workers reported that they had to stop their
                  work several times a day to either look for information to
                  do their jobs or to provide information to co-workers needing
                  help. The study concluded that “the data shows technology workers
                  spend an average of seven hours per week—more than 31 hours
                  per month—looking for answers, researching issues and solutions
                  for problems, and helping colleagues do the same. The study
                  found that by providing content directly in the workflow, workers
                  could save 3.3 hours per week for “a monthly time savings
                  of 13.5 hours or just over four labor weeks per year.” 
 An enterprise with
          500 technology workers each spending 7+ hours per week hunting
          down answers and information costs a whopping $7.5 million
          per year in lost productivity.  This
                  essentially cut lag time by 50 percent, and on average, saved
                  more than US$6,000 per worker, per year
 Information Gathering in the
                  Electronic Age: The Hidden Cost of the Hunt, Safari, January
                  2003
 
 
  
 Average company spends 85% of operating costs on payroll and less
               than 1% for training those people.
 There is an estimated 30-1 payoff to improved performance 
                  and profitability from proper training.
 Brian Tracy - The Effective Manager
 
 
  
 The effect of training on productivity growth is approximately five 
                  times
 as much as would be generated by compensation incentives.
 Barron, Berger, and Black, 1993; Bishop, 1991
 
 
  
 According to a Business Week article (March 1, 1999), Interim 
                  Services and Louis Harris and Associates conducted a survey
                  that measured the cost of not mentoring employees and providing
                  poor training. The article stated: "Among employees who
                  say their company offers poor training, 41% plan to leave within 
                  a year, vs. only 12% of those who rate opportunities excellent. 
                  High turnover isn't cheap.
 The survey pegs the cost of losing a typical worker at $50,000."
 
 
  
 Workers who want training via computers, TV or internet - 61%
 Workers who say they receive it - 21%
 May 2000, Training, Rutgers University report
 
 
  
 Impact of Improving Customer Service
 Better service performers charged about 9% more for their products/services.
 Better service performers grew twice as fast and picked up market 
               share at 6% per year,
 while those with poor customer service lost 2% a year.
 Profit Impact of Marketing
 
 
  
 Great service providers earned a 12% return on sales, Vs 1% for
               the rest.
 Strategic Planning Institute
 
 
  
 There is no significant statistical difference in job performance
 between hiring an inexperienced sales person and training them
 vs hiring an experienced person.
 Summarized statistics from Harvard Business Review, Vol 58, No 
                  5.
 
 
  
 25% of workers said they were capable of doing 56% more work.
 Why don't they?
 33% mentioned one or several of the following reasons:
 Not being involved in decision making
 Lack of reward for good performance
 No opportunity for advancement.
 Lack of quality supervision
 Inadequate Training
 Compensation and Benefits Review, American Management Association, 
                1997
 
 
  
 What motivates Generation X?
 Give them responsibility for projects.
 Offer constant feedback instead of annual performance reviews.
 Help them train for another job.
 Offer them access to many different kinds of information.
 Adapted from HR Focus, American Management Association, reported 
                in The Motivational Manager, 1997
 
 
  
 What 
                 companies are looking for in employees
 -Ability to learn
 -Ability to listen and communicate information
 -Innovative problem-solving skills
 -Knowing how to get things done.
 Survey from ASTD, 1997
 
 
  
 A 
               four-year study by the American Society of Training and Development,
                     2000
 Firms who invest $1500 per employee in training
 compared to those that spend $125, experience on average:
 24% higher gross profit margins and 218% higher income per employee!
 
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