|

Growing pains. I am 5'6" and have been that height since the eighth grade. I don't remember what real growing pains feel like, but I do know the sting of growing pains in our business. I have talked with many friends who own businesses around the city that I live in and there is a familiarity in the pain that growth brings. How do I fund growth? Where do I find good people? How does a company structure a reward package that really brings value and is motivating to its employees?
Besides these questions we here at Thrive find ourselves asking, "How do we create and maintain a training program?" Well after wrestling with the questions I thought I'd share some of the lessons we're learning from the journey. 1- What's the end goal?If you don't know what your end goals are you will probably end up creating a training program that is incomplete. As we wrestled through what to do it became apparent that we could easily become frustrated if we didn't take a step back and decide what our objectives were before we ever got started. 2- Choose the system you are going to use after defining your goals. Of course once we were pretty comfortable with the direction we were headed in we jumped in (as any tech company worth its salt does) and started designing a solution. As we were busy Googling what open source solutions were available I came across an enlightening article that I'll pass on: The author says, "The following are some of the more glaring weaknesses of an LMS: The tools we use define the manner in which we undertake learning tasks. Using a structured tool like an LMS drives/dictates the nature of interaction (instructors-learner, learner-learner, learner-content). The interface - generally, the initial reactions to the interface is confusion for many learners. I've instructed with various platforms, and the most difficult/disorienting challenge for new learners is figuring out how the interface works and where to get the information she/he needs. This confusion is due to two flaws in the LMS: 1) LMS' try to do everything - simpler tools, with the intent of performing one task seem to be easier for end users to understand,
Armed with this information we put the brakes on and re-evaluated what we were doing. After a half-hour of coffee and interrupting each other we agreed that we didn't need a whole new (confusing) system to manage our training program but simply needed to add some simple, valuable tools to the system that we have already assembled to manage our business out of. Take away point for the Thrive team: Simple is better! 3-Make sure whatever you come up with is flexible for future growth. While we all have ideas of where we would like to be in a year, in five years the reality is no one can forecast with 100% accuracy where you will actually end up. With that in mind choose processes and software that are flexible and easily adaptable to whatever position you may find yourself in. There are tons of proprietary software and programs that will paint you into a corner that you will find hard to get out of-- after all we have to use the system-- it costs us $20,000 to buy. Don't be the person saying that! Think ahead, try open source! (By the way that was a shameless Thrive philosophical jab!) 4- Be user friendly! Refer back to #2. Pick a system that is EASY to use. If your employees / contractors look at the system and run away screaming then you have probably made a huge mistake. With all this in mind, join us on the journey. I'll keep you in the loop on what we discover. |