arlier this year, the medical device company Guidant Corporation decided to
promote a longtime employee to the title of vice president, employee
development, the equivalent of a chief learning officer, or CLO. The
Indianapolis company’s executive staff thought that the time was right to
better organize training and developmental opportunities and match them more
closely with the business goals of the organization, as well as offer employees
a map for reaching their own career aspirations.
"We felt we could be better at telling employees, when they start here, how
they can grow and develop professionally," says Barbara Reindl, vice president
of the St. Paul-based Cardiac Rhythm Management Group, Guidant’s largest
division.
"We get many employees who just got out of college and want to have an idea
of what kind of career they can have at Guidant," she says. "We want to be
able to say, ‘This is the curriculum if you want to be a manager.’ We’d
really love to create a feeling among new hires that they’re joining a
learning organization, but it’s not as well marketed here as it is at Motorola
and other learning organizations."
Susan Norton, who became head of employee development in August, has begun
talking to divisional vice presidents about their training and development needs
and how they should be strategically organized to meet business challenges.
One of Norton’s discussions resulted in the creation of a three-day
workshop where Guidant managers from around the world had an opportunity to hear
senior executives address leadership issues, network among themselves, and spend
their evenings informally talking with other managers from all levels of the
company. Guidant has held the workshops in Brussels, St. Paul, and California,
and has received positive comments from managers about the program.
Building a learning environment
The first goal of Norton and other CLOs is to encourage their employers to
investigate what competencies will make them successful and then align
development programs with their strategic objectives. The next step is to create
an environment in which that learning is readily available to employees and to
try to determine what return on investment can be measured after learning
occurs.
CLOs say that they identify needs through interviews with managers and
executives, with the underlying premise that matching business objectives with
desired competencies among employees will lead to greater productivity. It’s
less about having everyone take a PowerPoint class and more about leading
employees to the right courseware or college course they can take locally or
online.
Additionally, CLOs say they’re often assigned the task of remaking
classroom-oriented training departments--sometimes called "universities"--into
blended learning environments in which online courses take a front seat to
classroom instruction. Other objectives range from helping management with
succession planning and team-building to creating opportunities for conferences
where internal business leaders can gain a deeper knowledge of what corporate
headquarters has in store for the company.
Driving the CLO movement is one crucial business goal--saving money. At Xerox
Corporation in Stamford, Connecticut, CLO Tim Conlon says that by simply
centralizing contracts with various educational vendors, especially in the
e-learning market, he managed to save the company millions of dollars. Part of
the company's goal was to move away from classroom teaching at its fabled Xerox
University and into an e-learning environment. The company saved money by
reducing classroom instruction and cutting down the number of contracts it had,
often with the same vendors.
As the speed of business grows ever faster, keeping employees in the learning
loop will keep Xerox competitive, Conlon says, an attitude largely shared by
other CLOs. "Companies are realizing they’re having to do more with less,
and the only way they’re going to do that is by restructuring or retraining,
or both," says Tim Sosbe, editorial director of the just-launched Chief
Learning Officer magazine. "It’s all about education and workforce
development."
Long-term thinking
A learning environment helps with retention, especially among
younger employees accustomed to a lifestyle in which creativity and learning
are valued, two traits they would like to see valued by their employers, too.
"Employers have begun looking at employees who could have a lifetime career
with them and thinking, ‘How do we keep them performing and growing and
developing as the years march on?’ " Sosbe says. "Companies are thinking
more about having long-term employees because it’s expensive to hire and
fire employees."
Although the head of learning at most companies operates as a part of human
resources, the concept of making human capital a "c-level" (CEO, CFO, COO)
position certainly has appeal, says Allison Rossett, professor of educational
technology at San Diego State University and an e-learning expert.
Just as the importance of information technology led to the creation of chief
information officers, or CIOs, so too would the proponents of learning like "to
be at the strategic table," she says. CLOs still work within the HR
department, but giving it a special cachet elevates the title.
Within the corporate structure, CLOs do not always get every piece of the
educational pie, says Conlon, who meets twice a year in a forum with other
nationally regarded CLOs. Within Xerox, for example, he handles Web-based
learning and executive development, but does not oversee the university.
Individual departments have funds they can use to obtain specialized training
outside the company, if they so choose.
Turning novices into experts
Most CLOs start their jobs with a large and challenging assignment
before moving on to smaller tasks. When George Selix joined the real-estate
franchiser Century 21 to serve as senior vice president and CLO more than two
and a half years ago, he had the challenge of transforming the training operation
by reducing costs and increasing per-agent commissions and retention. The retention
part of it was a difficult roadblock to overcome in an industry where more than
half of the first-year hires head for the exit after failing to earn much of
a living.
The first order of business was replacing an on-site lecture-based training
program with a mix of live e-learning and classroom instruction, often received
by agents through a conference feed transmitted on the Web. The training became
an intensive six-week course involving 120 hours of instruction, with 24 hours
in the live, online classroom, 40 hours of self-directed learning, and 50 hours
of income-producing homework. Students learn how to work with buyers and
sellers, how to build client databases, which technologies work with different
clients, and what real estate knowledge they will need to work as agents.
After a year under the new system of computer-based training and live
instruction, attrition dropped to just 15 percent of new enrollees and
commissions closed by new agents jumped 16 percent. Selix continues to refine
the franchisee instructional program while also developing a competency-mapping
program for Century 21 employees to determine and close enterprise-wide
knowledge gaps. By 2004, he’d like to roll out a learning program directed at
building specific competencies throughout the supply chain, including consumers,
who would have access to online material about the buying and selling process.
"For a CLO, it all comes down to transferring knowledge and skills to
people who don’t have them," he says. "There are experts and novices, and
you have to transfer knowledge in such a way that the novices get the knowledge
and skills they need to perform like an expert."
Teaching business literacy
Just a year before Selix joined Century 21, former General Electric executive
Bill Kline became Delta’s CLO. Assigned to "develop a vision and strategy
around learning" for the company’s six distinct divisions--pilots,
reservation representatives, flight attendants, and so forth--Kline first had to
learn about the training that already existed.
First, he created a Global Learning Council, with representatives from each
division, and he asked those representatives to identify training needs. Using
input from the council, he organized a training program for each division that
would enhance employee performance. At the corporate level, he established a
"learning services organization" to offer leadership development,
succession planning, and talent-management programs.
As part of Delta’s recovery efforts after 9/11, the Learning Services
Organization designed and developed a business literacy initiative. Kline this
year unveiled the $2 million program, "Our Airline, Our Business," in
which employees role-play and make decisions based on Delta’s financial data.
It’s become a huge hit. Since May 1, 1,300 employees a week have gone through
the program, which has trained more than 28,000 employees (as of October 27) in
the fundamentals of business literacy.
Now Delta’s managers routinely share the company’s financial reports with
employees, ensuring that the knowledge gained will not go unused.
Unlike some other CLOs, Kline is less concerned about career mapping, since
most of the airline's hourly employees stay in the division they joined
initially--flight attendants typically do not aspire to marketing positions, and
mechanics generally don’t want an eventual career in HR. Rather, he’s
ensuring that the company has clear job descriptions and has spelled out
training and development requirements for salaried and management positions
through competency models.
Says Kline: "We’re developing a learning system where employees can learn
and grow to continually improve individual, team, and operational-unit
performance and realize their career aspirations."
A company "willing to invest"
Figuring out whether training really does pay off is a perpetual struggle for
HR departments, even though executives are demanding it. Jim L’Allier, CLO for
NETg, a provider of blended e-learning solutions, says it is "a duty of a CLO
to establish high-level metrics to determine whether or not a knowledge gap is
closed" after putting employees through a training program. Looking at the
cost of training and determining the results in monetary terms will help
companies see which educational efforts pay off.
Not every CLO can describe precisely how each training effort paid off. Yet L’Allier
has examples of how NETg arrives at ROI through a rigorous formula. Recently, an
airline wanted to downsize training for its already reduced information
technology workforce, but L’Allier convinced it that a better-trained
workforce could increase productivity and reduce costs during a cash-crunch
time. He showed how the training on specific IT tools would save employees
several hours a week and therefore save the company money.
The estimated $778,000 in savings against a cost of $321,000 for the training
program revealed a 142 percent ROI that could be paid back in 2.6 months, says L’Allier.
"It allowed that department head to defend his budget and not cut training
because of the loss of people," he says. "When you lose people, you need to
do more with less. You need to invest more in training to make up for the loss
of individuals you had to sever from the organization."
Still, ROI is an ongoing process. When Xerox’s Conlon unveiled a Web-based
learning system with more than 2,000 courses this year, he wanted to see at
least 35 to 40 percent of the company’s employees participate in a course. "That’s
a terrible goal because it doesn’t really tell you anything," he concedes.
"But three years out, when I see that employees are getting to the tools, then
I can begin to put services in place where I can test if the quality of the
content is good and if it is getting to the right people."
Though some CLOs are being chosen now to navigate their companies through a
time of cutbacks in employees and training, Guidant’s move comes at a time of
great growth for the company and for the medical technology industry, among the
few bright lights in the economy. As Norton pushes forward, the company's
educational programs build skills and assist employees and managers with
understanding corporate goals. Two recent programs help employees learn more
about Guidant’s complex products and teach managers the finer points of
leadership, communicating with groups, and performance management.
They’re not about doing more with less. They’re about educating employees
to do their jobs better.
"This is a company that I see is willing to invest in employees, personally
and professionally," Norton says. "The last thing you want to see in a
company is a status quo mode, where people aren’t developing. Those companies
won’t attract talent in the future."
Workforce Online, November 2002 -- Register Now!