Training Techniques That Enhance Business Results

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Summary

Training techniques that enhance business results focus on designing learning programs that align directly with organizational goals, promote measurable outcomes, and address specific employee needs. These strategies ensure that training investments translate into tangible improvements in performance and profitability.

  • Identify business goals: Start by defining clear objectives for the training based on the company’s strategic goals and the challenges employees face on a daily basis.
  • Customize for relevance: Use real-life examples, industry-specific scenarios, and input from team members to create training that is engaging and applicable to their roles.
  • Measure and follow up: Set key performance indicators, gather feedback, and schedule follow-up sessions to reinforce learning and track its impact on business outcomes over time.
Summarized by AI based on LinkedIn member posts
  • View profile for Camille Holden

    PowerPoint Expert | Presentation Designer | LinkedIn Learning Instructor | Co-Founder of Nuts & Bolts Speed Training ⚡Helping Busy Professionals Deliver Impactful Presentations with Clarity and Confidence

    5,402 followers

    A lot of time and money goes into corporate training—but not nearly enough comes out of it. In fact, companies spent $130 billion on training last year, yet only 25% of programs measurably improved business performance. Having run countless training workshops, I’ve seen firsthand what makes the difference. Some teams walk away energized and equipped. Others… not so much. If you’re involved in organizing training—whether for a small team or a large department—here’s how to make sure it actually works: ✅ Do your research. Talk to your team. What skills would genuinely help them day-to-day? A few interviews or a quick survey can reveal exactly where to focus. ✅ Start with a solid brief. Give your trainer as much context as possible: goals, audience, skill levels, examples of past work, what’s worked—and what hasn’t. ✅ Don’t shortchange the time. A 90-minute session might inspire, but it won’t transform. For deeper learning and hands-on practice, give it time—ideally 2+ hours or spaced chunks over a few days. ✅ Share real examples. Generic content doesn’t stick. When the trainer sees your actual slides, templates, and challenges, they can tailor the session to hit home. ✅ Choose the right group size. Smaller groups mean better interaction and more personalized support. If you want engagement, resist the temptation to pack the (virtual) room. ✅ Make it matter. Set expectations. Send reminders. And if it’s virtual, cameras on goes a long way toward focus and connection. ✅ Schedule follow-up support. Reinforcement matters. Book a post-session Q&A, office hours, or refresher so people actually use what they’ve learned. ✅ Follow up. Send a quick survey afterward to measure impact and shape the next session. One-off training rarely moves the needle—but a well-planned series can. Helping teams level up their presentation skills is what I do—structure, storytelling, design, and beyond. If that’s on your radar, I’d love to help. DM me to get the conversation started.

  • View profile for Dr. Alaina Szlachta

    Creating bespoke assessment and data solutions for industry leaders • Author • Founder • Measurement Architect •

    7,094 followers

    Demonstrating the value of learning is easier than you think! In a recent workshop with The Institute for Transfer Effectiveness, I demonstrated how! One workshop participant was designing safety training to help employees use Microsoft 365 strategically to prevent data breaches. She was struggling to capture the value of the program for organizational leaders to understand. I used an alignment framework that incorporates Rob Brinkerhoff’s 6 L&D value propositions and mapped out how to connect her learning program with metrics that matter to organizational leaders. Here’s what that looked like! Aligning learning activities, initiatives or programs to strategic business outcomes is like looking for the through line between disparate things: learning, human performance, departmental key performance indicators, and organizational metrics. This can feel nearly impossible. The glue that holds these seemingly disparate things together are Brinkerhoff’s 6 L&D value propositions. In the safety training example we started by identifying the most relevant value proposition for the program. In this case, it was Regulatory Requirements: a learning program designed to ensure employees are complying with industry specific rules and regulations. Then we connect the L&D value proposition (Regulatory Requirements) with the most relevant outcome for the organization. In this case, it was Net Profit. If employees are complying with industry-specific rules and regulations, this consistent practice will save the organization money in fines, lawsuits, or dealing with the unpleasant consequences of safety challenges (like a data breach). Then we must do the hard work unpacking what people will be doing to support the targeted departmental KPIs. If you’re struggling to figure out the KPIs, you’ll likely find them by asking department leaders what problem they are experiencing on a regular basis that they would like solved. In this case it was too many data breaches and too many outdated files on the server causing misinformation and inconsistent practices. I discovered that what people could be doing differently to support the desired KPIs was adhering to updated protocols on how to manage data and documents within the 365 suite. If people followed the protocols with 100% fidelity, departments would experience a reduction in data breaches. Now … we have the behaviors to target in our training program and the data to use to show the value of learning: Learning metrics: Training attendance and completion rates. Capability metrics: Percentage of fidelity to data and document protocols before and after training. KPI metrics: # of documents on the server that are outdated (being at 20% of lower), # of data breaches per department being at 1 or less annually. Organizational metric: Net Profit How will you use the 6 L&D value propositions and alignment framework to tell your learning value story? #learninganddevelopment #trainingstrategy #datastrategy

  • View profile for Jeff Toister

    I help leaders build service cultures.

    81,653 followers

    I was just 23 and lacked experience. So how did I create a training program worth $1 million? My secret was working backward. I was the training supervisor for a call center. My task was to create a sales training program to help our customer service reps increase upselling. Most trainers work forward on projects like this: 1. Create content 2. Hope it gets used 3. Imagine it will lead to some result It's all very squishy. Working backward is more concrete. It focuses on the business goal and analyzes what it will take to get there. 1. Identify the business goal 2. Analyze what it takes to achieve it 3. Design specific training to close the gap Here's what that looked like for my upsell project: The business goal was a sales target. From there, I had to analyze what our customer service reps were doing (or not doing) that prevented us from selling more. I poured over the performance data. Then, I spent time with our top reps, our low-performing reps, and a few reps in the middle. This analysis allowed me to design a simple training program that targeted the reps' specific needs. It was just 30 minutes long, and was supported with tools and job aids that made it easier for reps to make sales. The customer service team did great! Our upsell program generated over $1 million in annual revenue. My training program wasn't cutting-edge. It didn't incorporate the latest learning theories or technology. It was actually pretty basic. It got results because I designed it by working backward.

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