Compensation Today

« Leadership in the Workplace: The Importance of Integrity | Main | Creating a Salary Benchmarking Plan »

Cost-Effective Employee Training Methods

05/11/2009

Share |

Employeetraining Helping Employees Be Their Best in an Economic Downturn: Cost-Effective HR Tips

By Staff Writer

Surviving economic downturns requires resourcefulness, especially when it comes to keeping employees happy at work. When budgets are tight, your organization’s stress level can jump up. Deadlines shorten, staffs shrink and everyone is doing more with less. Plus, you don’t have as many staff parties, free snacks and outings to look forward to.

Because of all this change, your employees may flock to the human resources department for guidance on staying mentally healthy and productive. You may find yourself walking on a tightrope as you attempt to make budget-conscious HR choices while also helping to alleviate employees’ stress and keep your workforce productive. The good news is that you can maintain an HR assistance program for your employees that is both effective and budget-conscious.

Your benefits and human resources training programs are an area that has a lot opportunity to reduce HR costs to your organization, maintain employee morale and productivity, as well as protect you from further expenses.

5 Employee Training Methods to Help Employees Be Their Best in a Economic Downturn

Do you fret over losing your top employees? Feel confident you're paying and managing them better than anyone else in your industry. View our webinar Employee Retention: High Impact Performance Management for Engaging and Retaining Your Top Performers and get ahead of the competition.

1. Streamline employee training methods. Employee training is often a source of unnecessarily lost resources. Refine your employee training program by leveraging technology tools available to your organization. Instead of paying an employee to fly to a short-term conference, have them participate virtually through an online training webinar. Tight budgets shouldn’t mean a lack of employee training, just a more cost-effective way to deliver your employee training methods.

2. Reduce employee travel costs. Work-related travel costs add up quickly when you are paying for flights, food, hotel accommodations, and rental cars. Decide which conferences and events are necessary for your organization to attend, then reduce your travel expenses by cutting out the non-essential journeys – even if only this year. Also, avoid extra costs by skipping far away events or only sending key employees to professional gatherings and then ask them to share their knowledge with the rest of the organization.

3. Provide employee training using internal talent. This is a no-brainer, right? You would think. However, a lot of companies find themselves outsourcing training that their own employees are very capable of handling. Find smaller, simpler ways to leverage employee talent that can save your organization a lot of money. Have your employees train each other with learning sessions. For example, if you have a few employees who want to learn more about PowerPoint, you can have those employees that are PowerPoint gurus teach their fellow employees, instead of hiring someone else to lead a course.

4. Use an employee assistance program. During times of extra stress, an employee assistance program provides employee counseling, employee workshops, as well as referrals to legal systems with pre-paid benefits and help with debt management. Employee assistance programs support your efforts to ensure that, despite stressful economic circumstances, employees feel secure and are able to be productive..

5. Manage your liabilities. Are you employees well aware of all of your company’s liability policies? Workers compensation, disability, and unemployment benefits all tend to increase in stressful economic climates. Talk with insurers to see how you can reduce the cost in these liabilities, and communicate with your employees so they know exactly what benefits are available to them.

Do you have an HR topic you would like to see covered on Compensation Today? Write us at comptoday@payscale.com.

Interested in learning more about cost-effective HR techniques? View our blog posts on:

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d8341bf85853ef0115707fecc5970b

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Cost-Effective Employee Training Methods:

Comments

Feed You can follow this conversation by subscribing to the comment feed for this post.

Thank you for this post. I would agree Employee Training is often the source of unnecessarily loss of resources. We'll follow you advice regarding reducing the costs of training. :)

Verify your Comment

Previewing your Comment

This is only a preview. Your comment has not yet been posted.

Working...
Your comment could not be posted. Error type:
Your comment has been posted. Post another comment

The letters and numbers you entered did not match the image. Please try again.

As a final step before posting your comment, enter the letters and numbers you see in the image below. This prevents automated programs from posting comments.

Having trouble reading this image? View an alternate.

Working...

Post a comment

About Compensation Today
Learn more about Compensation Today and its contributing writers.
Follow Us On:
follow us on twitter facebook linkedin

Search the PayScale Blogs

The PayScale Index
The PayScale Index
Explore national pay
trends with in-depth quarter-by-quarter analysis.
Comp Planning Guide
Working on next year's comp plan? Get it done in 5 easy steps. Download a Comp Planning Guide. Learn more.
Salary Benchmarking
Doing Salary Benchmarking? PayScale provides an affordable and easy solution for HR Professionals. Learn more.
Have a Compensation Problem?
Email our experts at:
comptoday@payscale.com
CONNECT WITH US
subscribe to feed
subscribe to feed
BLOG ROLL
All content on PayScale.com is made available for educational purposes only. The opinions expressed by individual authors do not necessarily represent the opinions of PayScale.com. The information on the website may be changed without notice. Information provided is never a substitute for legal advice. For specific legal advice, you should consult with a licensed professional attorney in your state.