First IPD national training survey

Journal of European Industrial Training

ISSN: 0309-0590

Article publication date: 1 October 1999

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Keywords

Citation

(1999), "First IPD national training survey", Journal of European Industrial Training, Vol. 23 No. 7. https://doi.org/10.1108/jeit.1999.00323gab.016

Publisher

:

Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 1999, MCB UP Limited


First IPD national training survey

First IPD national training survey

Keywords: Training, Human resource planning, Organizational development

The Institute of Personnel and Development (IPD) unveiled the results of its first national training survey at Human Resource Development Week 1999 in London. It shows that 95 per cent of training managers expect spending on training to remain stable or increase over the course of the next year.

The IPD survey also revealed that employers significantly under-estimate how much they are spending on the training and development of their staff. Nearly a quarter of establishments did not have training budgets. Nearly 40 per cent have budgets which exclude fixed costs. Nearly a third have budgets which cover only the costs of external courses and a mere 4 per cent have budgets which cover the cost of training technology and other support materials. Salaries of trainers and trainees are almost universally excluded, as are the costs of on-the-job training- the most extensively used form of training.

The IPD survey of 800 UK training managers highlighted a number of important developments. Most organizations now establish links between their strategic business objectives and training. The main strategic reasons for investing in training were given as follows:

  • organizational development (89 per cent);

  • increasing returns on investment (77 per cent);

  • improving market share and increasing the levels of product innovation (66 per cent).

On-the-job training is the most significant and important training method with 96 per cent of organizations using it. Training is seen by most as enhancing the commitment of employees to their employers- an important argument for smaller employers worried that, if they train staff, they will lose them more quickly to competition.

Of respondents, 70 per cent anticipate a shift in training methods towards use of the Internet and intranets even though new technology methods are still viewed with suspicion, with relatively low effectiveness scores, probably because of lack of experience in using these new forms of training.

Of respondents, 60 per cent expected CD-ROM usage and other forms of computer-based training to grow. However, traditional methods such as face-to-face and classroom tuition are also expected to grow. On-the-job training was the most highly rated form of training with coaching and mentoring also achieving almost equally high ratings.

Training and Development in Britain 1999: The First IPD Annual Report is the result of work undertaken by David Ashton, Johnny Sung and Marcus Powell of Leicester University. Subsequent annual surveys will enable year-on-year comparisons to be made and trends to be identified. Further information is available from the Institute of Personnel and Development, IPD House, Camp Road, London SW19 4UX. Website: http://www.ipd.co.uk

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