How To Create A Training Curriculum In 3 Stress-Free Steps (Even When Outsourcing)

How To Create A Training Curriculum In 3 Stress-Free Steps (Even When Outsourcing)

How To Create A Training Curriculum In 3 Stress-Free Steps (Even When Outsourcing)

What Are The Steps To Create A Training Curriculum For Your Team?

You can choose to either build your own in-house custom training curriculum, or you can outsource training by using online training materials through an e-learning platform. Whichever you choose to do, it’s important to focus on these three easy steps to find the best training curriculum for your company.

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eLearning 101: How To Create The Perfect Curriculum For Your Company
Corporate training can be a significant expense. Should your organization look at offshoring to a custom tailored training program that utilizes eLearning?

Step 1: Identify Your Training Needs

It is imperative that you first identify all of the goals of your training program before building or selecting a training curriculum. You will need to define what each member of your audience group needs to know, and why they need it, before committing any time or money to developing any curriculum content.

If you are building an in-house training curriculum, start by thinking about all the skills and knowledge that make up what is considered “good performance” in your company. Brainstorm as many as you can, and then categorize them into broad themes, like “teamwork,” “communication,” or “initiative.” Don’t forget to include softer skills, too, like “work ethic” or “attitude.” Include everything you think is important for your employees to know or be able to do at any point in their career.

For example, after interviewing all their supervisors and managers, an HR team might decide that their organization is struggling with teamwork and communication. This could be due to a number of issues, including inexperienced employees who don’t know how to work collaboratively or employees who feel like they’re not part of the team because they don’t speak up enough during meetings. They might create a list that looks like this:

Teamwork

How to work collaboratively and productively in a team setting.

Communication

Effective listening skills, non-verbal communication skills, how to constructively provide feedback, or how to disagree diplomatically with others.

Initiative

The importance of taking initiative at work and using it when appropriate (e.g., volunteering for projects outside of one’s job description).

Customizing Your List Of Needs

Each business unit will have a different list, based on the needs of those employees and areas they need to be trained in. The goal is to evaluate current training needs and come up with a list of what needs to be addressed in the curriculum.

If you are outsourcing your training curriculum, make sure to still go through this process of identifying these needs. Many companies are turning to e-learning agencies as a first step in their training programs. Some offer platforms with friendly interfaces that are easy to use, and they provide courses in various subjects.

With courses designed by industry experts, you’re able to train your entire staff without going through the expense of hiring a trainer or losing time searching for the right course online.

It’s important for the head of any company to realize that there are more benefits to training than just improving your employees’ skills. Training not only makes your company more productive, but you can also use it as a vehicle for retaining employees or recruiting new ones.

Training employees is the first step to meeting any business goal. When you start by figuring out what the training needs are, you can communicate to your C-Suite how the training curriculum will address those needs and help make employees more efficient and effective at their jobs.

Step 2: Create A Timeline For Your Training Curriculum

After determining the training needs for your company, the next step is to come up with a timeline on how to deliver the curriculum. The timeline will depend on if you want the training to coincide with an event or an organizational change. For example, launching a new product line or organizational restructuring may determine when the curriculum is launched, as employees should ideally be trained before major changes go into effect. There are some other factors to consider when creating a timeline for your training curriculum:

In-House Vs. Outsourcing

If you are developing your own in-house training, you can have total control over the timeline. After considering these factors above, come up with a timeline that makes sense and schedule it into the calendar of those who are participating, so they are aware it’s coming up.

If you are outsourcing your training curriculum, you may not have as many options of when to offer the training. If it is a live training curriculum offered in real-time, there may only be a few dates to choose from. Other online trainings are offered on-demand and can be accessed at any time through a Learning Management System.

Whether you are building your own in-house company training, or outsourcing it from an eLearning training platform, make sure you review the factors listed above to ensure the timing is right.

Step 3: Build Or Choose Your Training Curriculum

You’ve completed steps one and two, so you now have a clear idea of your training needs and a timeline for your training curriculum to be rolled out. If you are building an in-house training curriculum, it is now time to plan out what you want to teach specific employees at your organization about those topics.

It takes time and money to build something from scratch, so there are a few ways that you can make the process a bit easier:

If you are planning to outsource your training curriculum, this step is pretty easy – you just need to work with the right agency and ensure that the curriculum design fits the training needs and training timeline that you previously determined in the other steps. Working with a leading eLearning agency will take less time. It will also provide scope for a huge amount of added creativity and best practice to be included in your curriculum build.

Convincing Senior Leadership To Invest In Your Training Curriculum

We’ve gone through the three steps to creating a training curriculum, whether you are building it in-house or outsourcing it through an e-learning agency. Now, the last thing to do is convince your
C-suite that it is worth the investment. Senior leadership is often busy and may not have the time to go through the nuts and bolts of a training curriculum. It is your job to convince them that it is worth it and needs to be a priority.

Since you followed our three easy steps, you are now familiar with the training needs of your employees, you have developed a training timeline based on important factors, and you have developed or chosen an appropriate training curriculum. You can use this information to discuss the benefits of your training curriculum with the C-suite.

Here’s how you do it:

If you are building a custom in-house training curriculum, walk them through the outline and what it will cover and give an estimate of what it will cost to create. Walking through this three-step process allows you to consider and think deeply about the training needs, the timeline for training, and the actual curriculum you are going to use.

You will now be well-positioned to convince the C-suite of why this is a valuable investment for the company. These three easy steps will help train employees to better perform in their jobs and help the company meet their business goals.

Conclusion

Download the eBook eLearning 101: How To Create The Perfect Curriculum For Your Company to discover action points you can follow to launch a custom-tailored L&D strategy for your team. It's a must-read for companies that are weighing the pros and cons of outsourcing and want to learn more about curriculum design from industry experts.

Also, join the webinar to learn how to jump-start your eLearning initiatives by collaborating with a third-party provider!

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