“Now, I know you all are wondering if this training will work,” the moderator asked.
Damn right, I thought to myself. First off, I don’t work anywhere near a poster of a cat, and I don’t use a keyboard I can’t move. Next, the files I use are never just sitting on the desk top waiting for me to work on them. Plus, if I’m already wondering if the training will work, then you haven’t done a good job of preparing the training!
Truth is, all too often training is thrown together at the last minute and no one is excited to be there. It’s doomed to fail from the beginning. With a little thought and planning you can deliver shop floor and manufacturing training that delivers measurable benefits to the shop floor, here’s six tips to get you started:
Context is important. I’ll admit, sitting beside 4 copies of Charlotte’s Web and that kitten poster did not help me focus on ingesting digital files into an ERP. In the same way, if you conduct training in a classroom or even as a webinar, are you giving the shop floor the right context for the training? Training on the shop floor will always deliver a bigger benefit than training in other places. Give them access to a library of training materials they can use when they need it most, not when it’s convenient to shove everyone in a classroom.
Attach training to your work instructions:
The truth is, no book or instructor can deliver the real-world best practices of actual users, and all too often this knowledge is lost, becoming tribal knowledge totally dependent on the employee, not the organization. A library of best practices will help capture this knowledge, ensure the information is not lost, and will become the basis of training that delivers real shop floor benefit.
Utilize existing shop floor practices in the training:
Many times, it’s not the shop floor developing the training. The instructor will develop “sample cases” to be used in the training, not actual work processes. Even worse, the system users are being trained on doesn’t or can’t incorporate existing work processes. This is especially true for template-based MES systems.
As much as possible, use existing work plans or operations for the training. This will add context to the training and lend immediacy. If you can’t use existing work operations or plans, then you may not have the right system installed.
Not long ago, I came across a shop floor using 4 different versions of a single work operation. The operation was in 4 different plans, used by two different divisions, but it did the EXACT same work. This became apparent during training, and led to a wasted day when work stopped and the confusion was sorted out.
This happens more than you might think. Make sure your training is relevant by ensuring everyone is working from the same plans. If you want to drive consistency and best practices on the shop floor, you need consistency in your work plans.
I’ll be honest, my training that day was 8 hours. I went back to the office and spent 5 hours trying to figure out how to ingest a digital photo. It was 13+ hours of training for a 5 – 10 minute operation. Since then, I haven’t used any of that training. There was no context. The world of the school library seemed distant from my work environment.
Training is necessary for any organization. You need to onboard new employees, you need to build and develop critical skills and incorporate changes to processes and SOP (Standard Operating Procedures). Rather than accept training as a necessary (and likely useless) task, turn it into an advantage for your shop floor.
How do you handle shop floor training? What procedures have you implemented, and how are they working? What could you do to quickly improve the results from your training procedures? Let us know – we’d love to hear from you.