urnover
is an issue that all managers have to deal with, but in the retail industry it’s an
epidemic. Given that the jobs are often low-paying part-time positions that are
usually filled by high school or college students, retention is almost impossible in
certain retail businesses.
This makes training a particularly tough challenge, says Mike
Donahue, who knows the issue all too well. Donahue was once a manager of a Nike
store. Every few months one employee would leave and another would start, and Donahue
would have to start the training process all over again. "The intellectual capital
resides only with senior people at the store, but eventually those people leave too,"
he says.
Seven years after his stint as a manager, Donahue, who is in
charge of e-learning at Nike, was asked to design an online training program that the
company could offer to employees in its own stores as well as at other retailers that
sell its products. He knew that he and his team would have to design a program that
would convey a lot of information quickly, but also would be easy to digest.
"We knew that we did a great job of advertising and that we
could drive people into the stores, but ultimately the person that is talking to the
customer is a 16- to 22-year-old kid," he says. "We wanted them to have a better
dialogue with the consumer."
Nike faced a challenge that a number of retailers today are
confronting as they adopt e-learning: Many of these companies face more than 100
percent turnover in their stores, and to train their staffs in a classroom setting is
just not cost-effective or even possible for retailers that have stores scattered
throughout the country, says Claire Schooley, senior industry analyst at Forrester
Research.
E-learning became a buzzword in human resources departments
four years ago, but retailers only recently began installing the high-speed Internet
connections needed to run such programs. Fifty percent to 60 percent of retailers
have broadband or are installing it, according to research firm Gartner Inc.
For retailers with a turnover problem, creating a training
program that the average retail associate absorbs quickly can make a significant
difference to the company’s bottom line, says Bruce Carocci, senior vice president of
marketing and sales at Via Training, a Portland, Oregon-based e-learning company. "If
my average associate stays on for six months but the regular training cycle takes
four months, that is an issue," he says. "But with e-learning, if I can get team up
and running in six weeks, that makes them much more productive."
The Nike experience
With that mind, Donahue and his team knew they wanted their
program to deliver information in short increments to make it easy for associates to
take in--and keep them out on the floor.
"We were throwing out ideas, and someone suggested that we
needed to come up with something edgy, something underground," Donahue says. That’s
when the idea for the Sports Knowledge Underground was born.
It was by pure coincidence that the acronym for the new
program, SKU, also stands for the retail term "stock keeping unit," Donahue says.
The layout for Sports Knowledge Underground resembles a subway
map, with different stations representing different training themes. For example,
Apparel Union Station branches off into the apparel technologies line, the running
products line and the Nike Pro products line. The Cleated Footwear Station offers
paths to football, whereas the Central Station offers such broad lines as customer
skills.
Each segment is three to seven minutes long and gives the
associate the basic knowledge they need about various products. As new products are
introduced each season, the training is updated and Nike customizes the program for
each retailer if requested. Associates are quizzed at the end of the training and
asked for feedback, which gets routed back to Donahue and his team. "If we get
feedback that something is confusing, we can go back and change it immediately,"
Donahue says.
Nike ran a pilot of the program in its own stores but now has
Sports Knowledge Underground running at external retailers too, reaching about 20,000
associates. Donahue expects that number to quadruple in the next few months as the
company continues to place the program in more stores.
Already Nike has seen results. Stores that have implemented
Sports Knowledge Underground have seen a 4 percent to 5 percent increase in sales.
"The bottom line is if you can move the needle on the sales floor, it’s worth it,"
Donahue says.
Setting standards
For Nike, one of the most appealing aspects of introducing
e-learning is that it sets a standard of learning for diverse workforces. The culture
of one store may be vastly different from the next, Donahue says. "One of the
problems that a lot of organizations face is that training is usually not a
centralized activity," says Peter McStravick, senior research analyst in learning
services at IDC.
That was one of the primary reasons that Cingular Wireless
decided to launch a broad-based e-learning program in its stores when it acquired
AT&T Wireless last year. "One of the key strategies for the business was to present a
unified front for customers to minimize confusion," says Rob Lauber, executive
director of learning services at Cingular.
Cingular had e-learning in its stores previously, but now it
wanted to use the program to make sure that all of its employees, including those
brought in from AT&T, followed the same procedures. "If you were a former AT&T
customer and you walked into a legacy Cingular store and wanted a particular service,
the training would explain how an associate should address it," Lauber says.
Cingular, however, had a unique challenge. For regulatory
reasons, it could not go into the AT&T stores or talk to AT&T store managers about
the e-learning until the merger was completed. That didn’t happen until October 26.
The launch date for the "common services experience" was November 14. That gave the
company 19 days to get all 19,000 associates up and running.
Lauber and his team decided on mixing face-to-face training
with e-learning. Two hundred trainers were sent out to the stores to communicate the
culture and business strategy behind the new company. For more product and
customer-scenario training, Cingular worked with IBM to develop the e-learning
program. "It makes sense to use face-to-face contact to explain culture and
leadership and things that set the tone for the employee and the environment," says
Susan Varnadoe, learning and development partner at IBM Business Consulting Services.
To gauge the success of the training, managers quizzed their
associates on the programs and the company is conducting pulse surveys of employees
to make sure they feel they have the tools they need. Ultimately, Lauber says, the
company looks at its business outcome to determine the success of the program. In the
first quarter, Cingular saw a net increase in subscribers of nearly 1.4 million.
The future is mobile
As technology develops, many major companies, such as Wal-Mart,
are discussing how store employees could use mobile technology for training.
Specifically, there are prototypes for using product scanners as educational devices,
allowing an employee to scan a product and call up information about it.
"Today a lot of learning makes associates go back to learning
terminals, and that reduces the time they have on the floors," says Susan Oliver,
senior VP of human resources at Wal-Mart. "We are looking for avenues that would
allow us to use the scanner as a form of learning so that you are putting learning in
bite-sized segments."
Although retailers are eager to bring hand-held learning
devices to their sales floors, just when that might become a reality remains to be
seen.
"In a year this will be all over the place," Varnadoe predicts.
But Ranjani Iyengar, director of learning and performance
management systems at Hewitt Associates, thinks that timeline is ambitious. "There
are still issues with content integration and the mainframes within retailers," she
says. "I think it’s going to be a long time before mobile technology is there."
Whenever stores begin implementing mobile technology, Nike will
be prepared. The company developed its Sports Knowledge Underground program so that
it could easily translate to hand-held devices, Donahue says. "When the retailers are
ready, we will be ready," he says.
