s global head of learning for Reuters Group, Charles Jennings puts great stock
in employee training. He just doesn’t care whether they remember everything they
learn.
It’s an unusual stance for a learning chief, especially considering
that London-based Reuters budgets $30 million to $40 million a year on training
and development. But Jennings is nothing if not provocative.
Unlike many learning professionals, Jennings dismisses skills-based
training as a "mistake," saying its approach is backward. Skills development may
help employees execute tasks, he says, but it does little to cultivate the attitudes
and behaviors needed to elevate their performance.
Nor is he a big believer in the carrot-and-stick approach
of dangling training to recruit and retain employees. He says he could not care
less about learning.
"What I am passionate about is performance," says Jennings,
who joined Reuters’ executive team full time in 2001.
Employees at Reuters are encouraged to "unlearn" what they
know, rather than store every conceivable piece of information in their heads. Employees
participate in learning through various methods, which may include creating user
content, taking on stretch assignments and rotating to work on different project
teams.
"The unlearning concept revolves around employees finding
the knowledge they need at the point they need it, so they can put it into action.
But there isn’t a necessity for them to remember it, especially since the information
may soon become outdated," Jennings says.
Reuters’ learning strategy could face changes in coming months.
In May, Reuters and Thomson Corp. announced plans to merge. The proposed $17.5 billion
deal must clear regulatory hurdles, but if approved, the merger would create one
of the largest financial news providers in the world. Jennings says it’s too soon
to tell whether the merger might affect Reuters’ approach to training and development,
but Jennings says the company is conducting "business as usual" while regulators
pore over the details.
Jennings first brought his iconoclastic thinking to Reuters
as an independent paid consultant in 2001, charged with developing a companywide
learning strategy. Six months into the assignment, he jokes of having a consultant’s
worst nightmare: "They offered me the job to execute it."
Since taking over, Jennings has pushed an aggressive training
agenda to build competencies across Reuters’ workforce of nearly 17,000 employees,
but particularly those working in its financial services division.
Founded in 1857, Reuters is best known for providing wire
stories and information to newspapers and media outlets around the world. Less well
known is that Reuters also supplies software and technology services to global investment
banks, brokerages, pension companies, insurers and related companies.
In today’s fast-paced knowledge economy, that segment accounts
for about 90 percent of Reuters’ annual revenue, which in 2006 topped $5 billion.
Included among Reuters’ 1,000 customizable applications are trading platforms, live
data feeds, stock charts and tools for compliance and risk management.
To continuously deliver this breaking financial data and do
it reliably, Reuters relies on sophisticated computer networks capable of updating
data 22,000 times per second. Software developers and network engineers keep the
technical wheels rolling.
But when Jennings came aboard, Reuters had already been losing
ground to Bloomberg Inc., its chief competitor and the largest provider of financial
news. Several factors accounted for Reuters’ slide, including the burst of the dot-com
bubble and the consolidation of currency brought about by the founding of the European
Union.
When Tom Glocer took over as CEO in 2001, becoming the first
American to lead Reuters, he immediately emphasized training as the key to shore
up deficient areas.
"There was a realization that the knowledge, attitudes, skills
and behaviors all needed to be addressed," Jennings says. Even though Reuters has
a very strong news brand, the company needed to focus on customers in its financial
products division, he says.
Chucking more formal training in favor of just-in-time approaches,
Jennings champions a learning culture in which Reuters’ employees take greater responsibility
for acquiring the knowledge they need to perform their jobs.
Rather than pouring them full of required information, the
media and communications giant has eliminated most classroom training and instead
empowers its employees to seek out the dynamic business information they need only
when they need it.
For example, rather than attending vendor workshops to learn
about new hardware and software upgrades, Reuters’ computer programmers gain knowledge
through online tutorials, peer networking, user groups, books or white papers.
This enables them to learn at their convenience and to apply
knowledge as soon as they acquire it—not to mention freeing them from sitting in
classes for days. As a result, technology staffers are learning new competencies
that promise far greater value to the company, such as interacting directly with
customers to anticipate their needs and engineering solutions for them.
"We’ve got people dealing with very complex systems that have
a rapid rate of change," Jennings says. "The traditional model of sending them through
structured training just doesn’t hold up anymore."
The Internet certainly has caused companies like Reuters to
adjust their thinking about employee training. According to a 2006 report by McKinsey
& Co., 70 percent of the jobs created in the U.S. during the past decade require
employees to exercise accurate judgment. Those knowledge-based jobs also account
for more than 40 percent of the U.S. labor market.
Greater attention also is being paid to making sure training
efforts support actual business needs, experts say. That often means using more
versatile delivery mechanisms to reach employees.
"When people have resources at their fingertips that match
the way they prefer to learn, they are motivated to perform well," says John Ambrose,
the vice president of strategy and emerging business for Skillsoft, an e-learning and performance-support company based in Nashua, New
Hampshire.
The evolution of Reuters from a buttoned-down bureaucracy
is far from complete, but the company has changed its approach to employee development.
In place of traditional learning metrics—number of training
hours per employee, completion of required coursework or reuse of content—Reuters
measures employee performance against business goals. Training that fails to directly
support Reuters’ business objectives is being eliminated.
Reuters embeds as much learning as possible within individual
business units. A 13-member governance board composed of senior managers provides
direction and guidance for corporate training along the way.
Reuters is allocating its training resources to deliver 70
percent of knowledge informally; 20 percent through coaching, feedback and networking;
and 10 percent through formal structures. That is in line with widely published
research that suggests employees acquire most of their knowledge on the job. Estimates
place the figure between 70 percent and 90 percent.
Likewise, employees are being given a greater say in the types
of training they want. Self-directed learning that pertains to a person’s job is
the norm, not the exception.
Employees and supervisors work up individual development plans
based on specific annual objectives, with periodic measurement to ensure progress
toward the goals.
Using questionnaires and interviews with managers and employees,
Reuters attempts to gather feedback on how its employees prefer to learn on the
job and, more important, whether training has improved their workplace performance.
"We do not run any program that doesn’t have a formal assessment
of knowledge at the end of it. And we run quite a few programs in which we give
people the option to demonstrate their knowledge," Jennings says.
He says Reuters tends to "cherry-pick" examples of how training
provides a direct return on investment. One such instance is in the company’s use
of Skillsoft’s Books24x7 library, an online archive that provides full texts of
computer programming and other technical books. References include user guides,
code libraries and related books on how to prepare for technical-certification exams.
About 4,000 users took advantage when Reuters piloted the
program. Jennings says Reuters realized a productivity gain of about
2,000 percent, since programmers did not have to spend time thumbing through textbooks
or attending workshops.
Reuters tries to tie learning to employee development, but
that sometimes makes for tough calls. When one employee recently expressed interest
in pursuing an outside course in project management, the company declined to pay
for it. The employee was interested in a course in project management using the
Prince2 methodology, a trademarked technique developed by the Office of Government
Commerce in the United Kingdom.
Instead, the employee was encouraged to learn methodologies
of the Newtown, Pennsylvania-based Project Management Institute, which Reuters prefers.
The message was clear: "If you want to develop project management skills, we will
support you and help you," Jennings says, "but you’ll do it against what our business
priorities are."
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