• Home
  • About Us
  • Group Facilitation (CoLabs)
  • Online Workshops
  • Client Testimonials
  • Contact Us
  • Articles By Vic
  • Collaborative Design
  • Leadership Ecology
  • Sustainable Innovation
Fuel For Discovering Sustainable Innovation
Posted on June 5, 2009 - by Vic Desotelle

Competency Management and Training Plans in Learning Management Systems (lmss)

Learning Evolution
learning organization
What are competencies? What is competency management?
Competencies are personal capabilities that are demonstrated through measurable knowledge, skills, abilities, and personal attributes, which can contribute to enhanced employee performance and, ultimately, to the individual’s and organization’s success. In a learning management system, competency management is the system’s ability to connect various competencies/skill sets, job roles, and learning events, to build employee training plans and monitor each individual’s learning progress.

How does competency management help your organization to develop training plans?
Competency management hierarchies let you define employee job roles that are specific, complete, and consistent across the affected organization. This allows you to certify that employees possess required skills or competencies, and that they qualify for their job roles. It also gives users clear, specific, easily followed paths to advancement. At any time, users can see what they still need to progress, request or access training that improves their skills, and stay on a clear training track centered on company needs. The company also benefits in improved employee retention.

Defined training plans also show employees how they can improve and gain new job skills. In this way, training becomes important to the employee, easily accessible, and necessary. This certification is also a path to promotion. If all necessary training is completed for a job role, the employee can print a certificate, and offer physical proof that they have completed all requirements for the role.

Many industries must also meet federal, or other, requirements (such as government regulations) that force them to require corresponding employee certifications. Employees must meet related competencies, and execute tasks and responsibilities in ways that support the company’s mandated performance. Tracking and managing the employee-certification process is critical to the success of these types of organizations.

Where does a training manager begin, given such laudable (but broad) business goals?
A good starting point is a survey. What job roles do people possess? How are these roles defined? What is common among the roles? What skills or competencies support each role? What learning events (courses, meetings, demonstrations, on-the-job training, etc.) support and build these competencies? How does a new hire begin their training? This may seem daunting, but defining existing job roles is worthwhile, and brings many insights into the company’s needs for competent performance. The data from such surveys also helps to build measurable ways to determine when employees attain needed skills, and conversely, may identify training needs that are not yet met.

Usually, a common set of competencies runs throughout most organizations, which comes from the human resources department. Most HR organizations require an orientation, which may include courses and handouts about time clocks, harassment, benefits, and other important company-wide topics. On top of these, most organizations have sales personnel that require both technical and sales training. And specific application roles, be they cooks, cleaners, or airplane mechanics, will need to attain both HR-required competencies and their own job-specific competencies. Food-service organizations, for example, may define food-related competencies for every job role, as well as non-food competencies for hosts, servers and maintenance/repair personnel.

How do you link learning events to certification requirements?
Learning events allow employees to gain competencies, and need to be defined, along with related recertification dates. It would be useless to have job roles that did not periodically require updating, as the business needs for these roles change. You may not want to specify recertification dates at first, but you will later need to identify and inform employees, who possess certain job roles, that they must meet new needs and requirements. Thinking through these tasks requires determination of business needs, so the training department must work with all other departments that require competent personnel, to gain insights into their important job roles, competencies, and learning events.

It’s not surprising that some organizations have no idea what “makes the job” in their business. Surveying successful, competent employees is usually the best way to analyze such situations. Communicating those results, and comparing them with the department head’s own ideas, may give you a great starting point. Good luck!

Source: SyberWorks, Inc
This entry was posted on Friday, June 5th, 2009 at 12:46 AM and is filed under Learning Evolution. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

This website uses IntenseDebate comments, but they are not currently loaded because either your browser doesn't support JavaScript, or they didn't load fast enough.

21271 Commenthttp://discoveryfuel.com/learning-evolution/competency-management-and-training-plans-in-learning-management-systems-lmss/Competency+Management+and+Training+Plans+in+Learning+Management+Systems+%28lmss%292009-06-05+05%3A46%3A01Vic+Desotelle

We'd love to hear yours!



  1. Visit My Website

    June 5, 2009

    Permalink

    Dina said:

    This post violates our content syndication policy. Specifically, you need to site SyberWorks, Inc. as the source of this article. For more information please visit http://syberworks.com/syndicate_guide.htm. Thank you.



Leave a Comment

Here's your chance to speak.

  1. Name (required)

    Mail (required)

    Website

    Message

  • Facilitating the Shift to Sustainability

    Sustainable Innovation

    Blog * Videos * News Workshops * Blog Feed Contact Vic * Twitter * Tools
  • Leadership Coaching

    targetedleadership Target Authentic Leadership: Coaching For The Leader's Leader

  • Clickable Tag Cloud

    Added Advantage authentic Business Managers Business Process change Circumstances collaboration Collaborative Design culture design earth ecological ecology education ethics First Meeting Functional Business gaia Global Warming green holistic Innovation Innovations Innovative New Products knowledge leaders leadership Leadership Ecology meaning online people policy principles Probability Process Management Product Roadmaps Senior Management sustainability Sustainable Innovation teams technology Term Sustainability triple bottom line truth Virtual Collaboration

    WP Cumulus Flash tag cloud by Roy Tanck and Luke Morton requires Flash Player 9 or better.

  • Be The Change !

    bethechange bethechange Join Our BeTheChange! Project

  • Our Website Pages

    • Home
    • About Us
    • Coaching For Execs and Coaches
    • Group Facilitation (CoLabs)
    • What’s Sustainable Innovation?
    • Ethics Values Training
    • Assisting Virtual Teams
    • Facilitating Your Own Meetings
    • Online Workshops
    • Mapping Next Gen Innovation
    • 8 Hour Kick-Start Colab
    • Client Testimonials
    • Team Needs Assessment
    • Fuel For Discovery Bookstore
    • Fractal Continuum
    • Green Business Workshops
    • Our Advising Team
    • Sustainable Innovation Blog
    • Contact Us
  • Ad Ad Ad Ad
  • Discovery Communities

    * Virtual Assistants Collaborative

    * 'BeTheChange!'- List of Communities

    * 'Changing Normal' World Design Portal

    * Entrepreneurs For A Better World

    * O2 Sustainable Designers Network

    * Young Inventors Society (new)

    * 'BeTheChange!' Online Communities

    * Fractal Continuums Collaborate Study

  • Blog Archives

    • July 2010
    • June 2010
    • May 2010
    • April 2010
    • March 2010
    • February 2010
    • January 2010
    • December 2009
    • November 2009
    • October 2009
    • September 2009
    • August 2009
    • July 2009
    • June 2009
    • May 2009
    • March 2009
    • February 2009
    • January 2009
    • December 2008
    • November 2008
    • October 2008
  • Take This Five Second Poll

  • Creative Commons License

    Creative Commons License DiscoveryFuel.com by DiscoveryFuel.com is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 United States License. Based on a work at VicDesotelle.com.
© 2008 Fuel For Discovering Sustainable Innovation - Sustainable Innovation, Leadership Ecology, Group Facilitation, Virtual Collaboration, Team Building