Pro Installer December 2014 - Issue 21 | Page 33

33 PRO INSTALLER DECEMBER 2014 PRO SKILLS @proinstaller1 EFFECTIVE TRAINING CULTURE THE KEY TO SUCCESS At this year’s G14 Awards, Quickslide, a leading manufacturer of windows and doors, took home the trophy for Best Training and Development Initiative. Quickslide recently revised their approach to training and development, which lead to their success at the awards. Here, the company discusses what they did and the skills they employed to make their Training and Development Initiative a success as their reassessment of its training and development strategies resulted in a seismic shift of the entire operational culture involving every member of the workforce. Winning the trophy for Best Training and Development Initiative was a matter of great pride for the Yorkshire-based fabricator but the real prize was the transformation that was behind it – not to mention the six-figure savings that came along with the new regime. The process began with identifying and categorising where improvement was needed. In general, there was a lack of clear direction but this broke down to specific issues such as lack of problem-solving skills, outdated and limited skill matrices, short-term decision making and lack of succession planning. In practical matters, there was no record of training hours, no effective annual appraisals and the workforce was controlled by an inflated bonus system. Chairman, Adrian Barraclough explained they pinpointed an issue, which many companies face: “We identified a distinct ‘them and us’ culture along with a general lack of any sense of ownership and accountability, both of which were affecting everything we did. At the same time, we recognised that the business had grown so quickly there was no time to build the kind of business architecture we needed for the larger business we had become. “It then became clear that we had focused our growth on increasing turnover rather than long-term profitability so, while we saw sales increasing, we did not realise that the profits were being eaten away by inefficient working practices. “There was also a lack of understanding of how to standardise training and reward systems for the benefit of all. Something had to be done and we knew training was the key.” An interim action plan was brought into effect immediately, beginning with a ‘state of the nation’ briefing to let every employee know where the company was, where it was going and specifically emphasising how every one of them had a part to play in the shared vision of its future. The two main targets within the plan were: ‘we had to have a supervisory management team who actually listened’ 1. To reduce the Cost of Quality total by £203K by, among other things, creating a company-wide skills matrix, World Class Standard operating procedures and a standardised roles and responsibilities template as well as standardised recognition of what could be expected from each individual. 2. To reduce labour costs by £269K, mainly by replacing a bonus payment scheme which had encouraged numbers at any cost, with a transparent annual reward and review system based on pay-bands as well as company-wide profit sharing. Then came the longterm plan. Before anything else was a top-to-bottom commitment to Continuous Improvement as a norm in everything the company does. Next was a regime of six monthly reviews using a standardised and well-understood format, followed by monthly budget tracking and team development reports to the board. After that came a drive towards excellent training systems to standardised systems for all employees. ‘accountable problem-solvers’ The biggest step, however, was not in practice but in basic philosophy, as Adrian Barraclough explained: “Most important of all, we had to have a supervisory management team who actually listened, and of course, we had to make sure everyone knew that. “The result now \