About LOMAOnline LearningLOMA International

Customer Assistance

Downloads
Education/Training
LOMA Societies
Life Insurers Council
LOMANET - Online Enrollment, Testing, and More
Membership
Committees
Meetings/Events
News Center
Products/Services
Publications
Research Reports
Resource Magazine
LOMA Technology Directory
The LOMA Store
Search SiteSite Map


E-MAIL 
This page to a friend

Enter recipient's e-mail:

From Resource, June  2008  

Learning Pays  

What is the value of employee training and development programs?  Here is an in-depth look at how such programs provide strategic value.

 By Jennifer C. Rankin

These are very complex and competitive times for financial services companies. Customers and shareholders are more demanding than ever. Agents and brokers must have top-drawer products and back office support to deliver revenues. Competition is intensifying as the industry both consolidates, through mergers and acquisitions, and converges, with banks, brokerage houses, and insurers entering each other’s business sectors. Operating costs are skyrocketing. Globalization brings new competitors into the picture. The government has a seemingly limitless supply of regulatory hurdles over which to jump.

In response to these—and other—business pressures, insurance companies around the world are trying to do more with fewer people, to control expenses, to encourage product innovation and to craft winning business strategies. That means learning is more important than ever.

Learning is one of an organization’s most critical intangible assets. It’s not listed on balance sheets, yet learning drives product innovation, responses to change and process improvements.

In fact, IBM’s 2004 Global CEO Study found that 75 percent of CEOs believe that employee education is critical for future enterprise success.

In 2005, IBM and the American Society for Training & Development (ASTD) joined forces to probe that finding in more detail, interviewing executives at 26 companies and publishing the results in 2006 in the research report C-Level Perceptions of the Strategic Value of Learning. They wanted answers to three important questions. Does learning improve strategic value? Do chief learning officers and line-of-business executives measure the strategic value of learning in the same way? What is the learning function’s role in—and accountability for—organizational growth, transformation and productivity?

Participating companies came from 11 business sectors, including financial services, and ran the gamut from American Express to Steelcase. Participants were the chief learning officer and one senior business executive from each company. Each participant answered six questions:  

*     How does the learning function provide strategic value to your organization?  

* How does the learning function’s strategic activity translate into business results?  

* What is the learning investment process and your involvement in it?

* How do you know the learning function is maintaining ongoing alignment with your strategic business needs?

* How do you measure the learning function’s value contribution to your organization?

* How do you know the learning function is performing as efficiently as possible?  

Of course, the question on everyone’s mind these days is the first question—that is, how does the learning function provide strategic value to your organization?

The participants offered four measures of value: strategic implementation, transformation, leadership development and capability building.

Learning plays a vital role in strategic implementation. Every year, say the survey participants, companies identify a concise list of key strategies that are critical to taking the business to the next level. These strategies almost always require change—change in work flow, priority, approach or procedure. And when you make changes, you must re-train staff.

The participants also believe organizational transformation cannot occur without learning. In fact, they say learning must occur during transformation, or organizations and individuals find themselves well-prepared for last year’s challenges.

Learning also is a key component of leadership development. Despite popular opinion, the majority of leaders are not born. They emerge after having learned enough through experience, challenging assignments, and support from others to lead their companies. Close to 90 percent of the companies represented in the survey promoted from within to the CEO level. These CEOs gained their positions after their companies invested heavily in their learning, development and growth. Those investments paid off in shareholder gains, organizational advancement and long-term success.

Finally, the participants say market pressures make organizational—and individual—capability building a business imperative. They believe learning helps them to develop the capability to enter new markets or to adapt to rapid changes in their existing markets.

The chief learning officers and chief business officers of each participating company agree on several points:  

* Learning provides strategic value and has a positive
   effect on business outcomes.  

* It’s difficult to isolate and measure those outcomes.

 Stakeholder perceptions are a key indicator of the value of learning programs.  

* The strategic value of learning is increased by strong governance processes for planning, allocating and managing learning investments.  

* Learning programs must be integrated, proactive and responsive to effectively meet business needs.  

The chief learning officers and chief business officers do differ on some key points, however. The chief business officers were less concerned than the chief learning officers with quantitative metrics that demonstrate learning’s value contribution to business outcomes. The business heads are more interested in how to align learning costs with the changing needs of the business and with the perceptions of their employees and their bosses than they are with data from return on investment (ROI) studies.  

Measuring Results

The ASTD/IBM study is just one of many to underscore the conventional wisdom that learning has strategic value in today’s business climate.

This is not news in most companies.

Neither is the idea that you can quantify the value of learning.

What is new is the idea that you can isolate the effects of learning programs and convert that data to a monetary value—what one pundit has called the ‘Holy Grail’ of learning measurement.

In fact, return on investment has become one of the most talked about concepts in the C-suite. The topic appears on almost every human resources development (HRD) conference agenda, articles on ROI appear regularly in HRD practitioner and research journals, several books have been written on the topic, and consulting firms have taken up the challenge. In addition, a professional organization has been developed to exchange information on ROI.

Several issues are driving the increased interest in ROI.  According to Jack Phillips, a thought leader in the field, pressure from clients and senior managers to show the return on their training investment is probably the most influential driver. He also says competitive economic pressures are causing intense scrutiny of all expenditures, including all training and development costs. In addition, total quality management (TQM), reengineering, and Six Sigma have created a renewed interest in measurement and evaluation, including measuring the effectiveness of training. Finally, a general trend toward support group accountability is causing some HR departments to measure their contribution.

These and other factors have created an unprecedented interest in the ROI process and how to apply that process to the training function. Unfortunately, measuring the ROI of training is not for the faint of heart. First, the process is confusing. The models offered up by academics, consultants and researchers range from the obvious to the mind-numbingly complex and they all define “return” differently. Its statistical nature frightens even the most capable corporate leaders. Applying ROI to employee development generates heated debate among executives, some of whom believe it is a flawed and inappropriate concept, others of whom believe it is the only answer to their accountability concerns. To add fuel to the fire, some management experts are saying that our love affair over the past decade with measurement and control is destroying employee creativity and hampering corporate innovation, both of which are imperative for survival in the decade ahead.

Unfortunately, ROI can’t be ignored. As Phillips puts it, “To admit to clients and senior managers that the impact of training or performance improvement cannot be measured is to admit that training does not add value or that HRD should not be subjected to accountability requirements.”

Another reason ROI can’t be ignored is CEO concerns about the training function. Forty percent of the CEOs who participated in a 2004 Accenture workforce survey were either ambivalent or dissatisfied with their company’s training function. These same executives also rated boosting workforce productivity and agility as the most important training initiative, but only 17 percent of those were very satisfied with their training function’s ability to deliver in that area. If perception is reality, many training programs are not producing results that are meeting the expectations of business executives.

Companies have always known that knowledgeable employees add value. Nick Bontis, another intellectual capital guru, likes to reference Tobin’s q, a ratio developed by Nobel Prize-winning economist James Tobin that measures the relationship between a company’s market value and its replacement value—that is, the cost of replacing its assets.

Under this theory, if the market value of a company is $25 billion and its book value is $15 billion, the market is providing a $10 billion premium above and beyond its GAAP value. Bontis argues that a significant portion of that $10 billion is the intangible value of employee expertise.

What sorts of measures can you employ to evaluate the effectiveness of employee training and development? In 1975, researcher Donald Kirkpatrick developed the first four of the five measures widely used today.  In fact, they are popularly known as Kirkpatrick’s Four. It’s Level Five—return on investment—that’s generating so much interest and hand wringing today.

Before we discuss Level Five, let’s take a closer look at Level Four—that is, the business impact of learning programs.

Typical Level Four measures include output, quality, costs, time, and customer satisfaction. Effective training might result in lower turnaround time, improved employee satisfaction, reduced employee turnover, higher job performance scores, improved productivity, improved customer satisfaction, increased sales, and so on.

In 2004, for example, LOMA found a statistical link between professional development and improved employee performance. We analyzed the employee records of a financial services company with $20 billion in assets under management and more than 5,500 full-time employees and found that employees who had earned the FLMI designation were about 39 percent more likely than those with no LOMA designations to receive an ‘above average’ rating during their performance evaluations. We also found that employees who had earned one of our Association designations were about 33 percent more likely to be rated ‘above average’ than those with no LOMA designations.

There also seems to be a positive correlation between training and financial performance.

In a 2003 study, Towers Perrin found that high-performing companies are twice as likely as lower performing companies to offer employee training programs on how their business works. The consultant defined high-performing companies as those having an average five-year total shareholder return above the corresponding Dow Jones market sector for their industry.

In the summer of 2007, Towers Perrin conducted another major research project to study the effect of engaged employees on the corporate bottom line. One premise was that a key to producing engaged employees is providing training and development. For the project, Towers Perrin surveyed 90,000 employees in 18 countries to determine their level of engagement and gathered financial data on their companies. It then performed a regression analysis to understand the connection between the two, and found that firms with the highest percentage of engaged employees had a 3.74 percent higher operating margin and a 2.06 percent higher net profit margin than average.

And a 2001 cross-analysis of training data collected by ASTD and financial data collected by Standard & Poor’s found that companies that invest heavily in training experience far higher gains in stock market valuation compared with firms that spend the least on employee training.

Nevertheless, it’s hard to give training all the credit for Level Four improvements. An employee could simply be delighted with his new boss. A product could be selling because it strikes a chord with the customer, regardless of the service he receives. A stock could be taking off because your business sector is hot. Still, they are very important measures, because high-performing employees deliver, low employee turnover saves you lots of money, happy customers endorse your company, which brings in new customers, and so on. And untrained employees are rarely effective.  

Next Level

The uncertain nature of business impact measures, coupled with the intensifying business pressures we touched on earlier, is fueling C-suite interest in ROI—that is, Level Five—measurement. Some executives want to harden the traditional ‘soft’ and ‘semi-soft’ evidence of training effectiveness into a dollar amount.

Phillips is trying to help them do just that. In his book Return on Investment in Training and Performance Improvement Programs, he takes readers through all the ins-and-outs of measurement and provides several case studies. Among the topics he addresses are collecting data, isolating the effects of training, and converting data to dollars.

Another thought leader is the aforementioned Nick Bontis. He recently gathered data on 25 of the largest insurance companies in the U.S. and found that every $1 spent on training and development per employee results in an increase of $168 in revenue per employee.

Yet another thought leader is Kaliym Islam, who published the book Developing and Measuring Training the Six Sigma Way a year ago. Islam is the director of learning product development for the Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation, the largest financial services post-trade infrastructure in the world.

Islam believes you can’t measure training program returns in a vacuum—that all stakeholders must be involved in the process—and that true return on investment is a matter of perspective. For example:

*A training manager would likely perceive a leadership program that receives high evaluation scores from students as successful.

n*A chief financial officer who paid $1 million to build this program when it could have been purchased for $750,000 would have a different perspective.

*An operations manager who missed a deadline because her employees were mandated to attend this three-day training class would have yet another.

*Reporting student evaluation results to the CFO or program costs to the operations manager who missed her deadline would not be perceived as a return on their investment.

*Only when all stakeholders perceive the program as being successful has a true return on investment been achieved.

 Islam has developed a measurement model that combines traditional instructional system design measures with the Six Sigma methodology. He believes this model will enable you to: identify business requirements; develop evaluation criteria that ensure there are predetermined, quantifiable and objective standards agreed to by all project stakeholders; and provide a true measure of the effectiveness of learning. He offers up an example from his own company and the book sheds much light on the learning measurement topic.

Despite all the buzz about learning ROI, it appears that very few companies are measuring it. A 2003 Accenture survey of 200 executives in six countries found that only 18 percent of them get either weekly or monthly evaluations of the effectiveness of their training efforts and 14 percent never receive such evaluations. Nevertheless, more than 40 percent of them also reported having increased their training budget in the past year.

In conclusion, there’s lots of information available on learning measurement. The trick is wading through it all and trying to figure out what’s old news wrapped in a new package and who’s developing leading-edge concepts.

As you study ROI trends and issues for the training function, remember that there’s a lot of middle ground between the ASTD/IBM executives who say they’re not all that interested in performance metrics and the thought leaders who, after all, have products and services to sell. It’s in the middle ground that most of us find ourselves today. And it’s where we must begin to define for ourselves what we mean by “return” and how we’re going to track it. 

 

Contact Resource at resource@loma.org

 

 


Advertise with us...Your Financial Services Customers are here.
Download LOMA's 2008 Products and Services Catalog here


Chinese | Español | Français | Português | About LOMA | Banking | Healthcare Management | Members OnlyWhat's New
 Customer Assistance | Downloads | Education/Training | FLMI Program/Societies | InternationalLife Insurers Council
 LOMANET | Meetings/EventsNews Center | Online Learning | Products/Services | Publications  
  Research Reports | Resource Magazine | Technology Directory | The LOMA Store | Search Site | Site Map | Privacy Policy

Write us at: LOMA, 2300 Windy Ridge Parkway, Suite 600, Atlanta, GA 30339-8443
Phone: 770-951-1770  or  In the U.S. and Canada: 1-800-ASK LOMA (1-800-275-5662) 
Fax: 770-984-0441         E-mail: Askloma@loma.org

 

Copyright © 2008 LOMA. All rights reserved.

For technical assistance or to report problems, contact: webmaster@loma.org