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ROI PPT - Week 2 DQ

This document discusses the importance of determining return on investment (ROI) for training programs. It covers defining goals and objectives, conducting needs assessments, developing evaluation methods, tracking costs and benefits, and reporting findings to stakeholders. Calculating ROI allows training practitioners to quantify training impact, justify budgets, and secure management support for future initiatives.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
82 views36 pages

ROI PPT - Week 2 DQ

This document discusses the importance of determining return on investment (ROI) for training programs. It covers defining goals and objectives, conducting needs assessments, developing evaluation methods, tracking costs and benefits, and reporting findings to stakeholders. Calculating ROI allows training practitioners to quantify training impact, justify budgets, and secure management support for future initiatives.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Return on Investment:

Training and Development

Session 1
ROI and Evaluation
Objectives

• At the completion of this unit, students will


be able to:
> Discuss the importance of determining ROI
in training environments.
> Identify stakeholders and develop questions
to determine their views and needs.
> Write training goals and observable
objectives based on stakeholders’ needs.
Objectives

> Describe the importance of the


assessment of learning for ROI.
> Recognize the differences between
short-term and long-term assessment.
> Identify items that belong on a training
budget sheet to determine ROI.
> Calculate expenses and ROI.
> Write a report on training that includes
all relevant data.
Return on Investment

• Rooted in manufacturing.
• Advanced to banking, health care, non-
profit, public and education sectors.
• Part of quality and efficiency
methodologies.
ROI Is Used To:

> Quantify the effectiveness of training.


> Manage the training budget.
> Provide evidence to management
and other stakeholders.
> Build trust and respect for ourselves
and our unit.
> Earn the ears of senior management.
> Identify areas for improvement.
> Provide data requested by senior
management.
> Keep our jobs.
Models

• Benefit/Cost Ratio

Program Benefits
BCR 
Program Costs

• ROI (%)

Benefit  Cost
ROI (%)  x100
Cost
Why is ROI important to you?
Evaluation Levels

1. Reaction and Planned Action


2. Learning
3. Application and Implementation
4. Business Impact
5. Return on Investment
Stakeholders

• Who are they?


> Anyone who pays for, participates in,
benefits from, or has decision-making
responsibility for HRD and training.
• What should they know?
> The need for training.
> The results from training.
> The costs of training.
Needs Assessment and Task Analysis

• Needs assessment: identifies gaps


between what is and what should be in the
organization.
• Task analysis: investigates the specific
skill(s), knowledge or attitudes and at
which point there is a breakdown in use or
performance. If the analysis uncovers a
lack of knowledge, skills or attitude, then
training is required. If it reveals faulty
equipment, poor work conditions or lack of
incentive, then another solution is needed.
Return on Investment:
Training and Development

Session 2
Goals, Objectives, Assessment
Goals

• Organizational Goals
These goals are typically targeted
toward the organizational level and
include such things as productivity, net
income, inventory and cash cycles, and
customer satisfaction.
• Learning Goals
These goals typically focus on the
individuals in the organization and their
performance, knowledge and skills.
Writing Objectives

Easy as A, B, C, D

Audience: Who?
Behavior: What do “they” do?
Condition: What is the setting and
method of evaluation?
Degree: Measurement to be met.
Example Objective

At the completion of the course the learner


will be able to score 85% or better on a
written multiple choice 25 question test
Condition
Behavior
Audience
Degree
Example Verbs

• Verbs to Use: • Verbs to Avoid


> Discuss > Understand
> Explain > Comprehend
> Demonstrate > Know
> Identify > Do
> List
> Perform
> Compare/Contrast
> Score (on an
assessment)
Objectives in ROI

• Course objectives: What is it that the


learners will be able to do upon course
completion?
• Application objectives: What goals do
the HRD/training practitioner have for the
application of the skills gained in training?
• Impact objectives: What effect will
accomplishing the application objectives
have on the organization?
Example Objectives

• Course objective: Learners will


be able to make 15 entries in a
customer database in 15 minutes
with no more than 1 error.

Increasing Scope
• Application objective: Learners
will be able to reduce the data
entry error rate by 50 percent over
the next 6 months.

• Impact objective: Employee time


spent correcting database errors is
reduced by 25 percent from last
year’s rate.
Learning Assessment

• Alignment between assessment and objective is


paramount.
> Easy to do with well-written objectives.
• Cognitive, psychomotor and affective domains
are assessed in different ways.
> Cognitive: written and oral tests; discussion;
compare/contrast exercises.
> Psychomotor: demonstration; performance.
> Affective: longitudinal observation and/or
discussion.
• Be sure to use the right type of assessment for
each objective of the learning event.
Return on Investment:
Training and Development

Session 3
Costs, Budgets, Accounting
Costs, Budgets, Accounting

• Quantifying ROI means accounting for all


the costs of the program.
> Fixed costs: independent of the number
of participants.
> Variable costs: Dependent on the
number of participants.
• There are costs at every step – make sure
to account for them all.
Output Measures

Outputs are product-driven and include


data that are not performance-based but
rather outcomes of changes in
performance or investment in equipment.

Examples include:
> Units built.
> Time it takes to build the units.
> Income from sale of units.
Benefits and Soft Skills

• Change in:
> Attitude, work climate, leadership,
teamwork.
• We desire these changes because they
ultimately effect productivity.
> Allow time for change in attitude or
behavior, then measure these changes
and report qualitatively.
> Allow time for change in productivity,
then measure for data and report
quantitatively.
Models

• Benefit/Cost Ratio

Program Benefits
BCR 
Program Costs
• ROI (%)
Benefit  Cost
ROI (%)  x100
Cost
• Phillips – See Figure 2-2 in text.

Karen Kaminski
Tobin P. Lopes
Benefit/Cost Ratio Example

• Data entry clerks’ average wage: $9.50/hr.


• Five hours per week were spent correcting errors before
training.
• 20 percent less time correcting errors saves one hour each
week.
• 40 clerks.
BCR = .076 for one week. What about 13 weeks? 26 weeks?

9.50x40x1 hr
BCR   .076
$5,000
Now with ROI%

• Data entry clerks’ average wage: $9.50/hr.


• 20 percent less time correcting errors saves one hour each
week.
• 40 clerks.
• When clerks use their skills for 26 weeks, ROI% is almost
100%!!

380 x1  5000  4620


ROI (%)  x100  x100  92.4%
5000 5000

(380 x 26)  5000 4880


ROI (%)  x100  x100  97.6%
5000 5000
Create a Data Collection Plan

• What?
• New information that needs to be
recorded?
• Who?
• When?
• How?
Additional Thoughts

• Access to learners after training:


> Do you have access to learners to
follow up on application and use of the
knowledge and skills developed during
the training?
• Isolating training effects:
> Consider what else may have occurred
at the same time as the training that
may have made a difference.
Trend Line Example

Trend Line
35

Y axis: 30
Number of
Customer Complaints 25

Projected Value 20
Before Training
15
Training Intervention
10

New Projected Value


After Training J F M A M J J A S O N D

X axis: Months
Return on Investment:
Training and Development

Session 4
Reporting Your Findings
Review of ROI

> Justify the training budget.


> Quantify effectiveness of training.
> Provide evidence to management and
other stakeholders.
> Build trust and respect for ourselves
and our unit.
> Earn the ears of senior management.
> Identify areas for improvement.
> Respond to management directive.
> Keep our jobs.
Stakeholders: Review

• Customer
• Employee
• Supervisor
• Subordinate
• President
• Board of Directors
• Stockholders
Reporting

• Needs to be:
> Timely, targeted and unbiased.
• The purpose is to:
> Illustrate success.
> Secure approval.
> Gain acknowledgement/agreement on
solutions.
> Build credibility.
> Enhance marketing.
Reporting

• Who needs to know?


• What do they need to know?
> How will you inform them?
• Presentation.
• Briefing paper.
• Detailed report.
• Letter.
• When and where?
• Who will present?
• Feedback?
Items to Include in a Report

• Executive summary.
• Title of training.
> Goals and objectives.
> Who participated, when/where, length.
• Assessment and outcomes.
• Evaluation.
• Budget.
• Recommendations.
Summary

• Know your audience:


> Who, existing and desired skills,
knowledge and attitude (audience
analysis).
• Expectations of/from organization:
> Goals and objectives, stakeholders.
• Assessment and evaluation:
> Budget, data collection.
• Reporting.
Finally

Take action on the data collected.


Use it to enhance your training and
therefore your organization.

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