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November 2001
Marketing
Glowing Overseas
By David Erickson

General
ADDRESSING the IMPACT

COMPUTER EVENT MARKETING ASSOCIATION

CONSIDER, REVIEW, RENEGOTIATE: MEETING DECISIONS AFTER 9/11

Czech It Out

DIAL IN TO YOUR ATTENDEES
Bob Andelman

EXPO TECH EXPO: A BRAVE FIRST STEP
David Erickson

fast facts

Fight the Fear: Free Flights to DMA Show

fyi

Getting Back on Track
Sue Pelletier

GETTING READY FOR CEBIT?
David Erickson

Hope for the Best, Plan for the Worst
By Beth Negus Viveiros

IMARK PICKS UP THE DECORATOR TAB

LEGAL EASE: Force Majeure Takes Center Stage
Jed R. Mandel

Lend a Helping Hand
Bill Gillette

Lessons Learned
By Carey Houston

MPI Survey: Six-Month Outlook

new spaces

ON THE FRONT LINES OF NORMAL
Susan Hatch Editor

one cool idea

one cool idea
David Erickson

ONLINE MEETINGS: NO FLIGHTS REQUIRED
Kevin McDermott

PEOPLE IN THE NEWS

Practically Paperless
By Susan Hatch

Q&A

Safety First
By Megan Rowe

SAN FRAN SUMMIT ON TERROR IMPACT

THE MOTIVATION SHOW: NOT QUITE BUSINESS AS NORMAL
Betsy Bair

The Show Must Go On (line)
By Susan Hatch

TRAINING: Questions to Expect When Bringing in Experts
Janette Racicot

UNCHARTED TERRITORY

WHERE WILL MEETINGS GO FROM HERE?
Bill Gillette

WIRELESS ANAHEIM
Bridget Mintz Testa

www.specialevents.com

 
Article
 
TRAINING: Questions to Expect When Bringing in Experts

Janette Racicot

Technology Meetings, Nov 1, 2001
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Let me guess. You're doing more training with fewer staff and less time. So how do you work efficiently without sacrificing quality? One answer is to get help from outside. Outsourcing will raise questions, but many managers have pondered them before. Here are some of the big questions.

Is outsourcing really a good idea?

Look to your own company. Do you have an advertising agency, private counsel, or an accounting firm? Could management whip up an ad, review a contract, or track assets? Some jobs are best done by experts. Hiring independent professionals can be less risky than using employees in areas outside their fields.

Here's an example. A major systems company was disappointed with its annual training conference. Retention and product satisfaction were low. Although it could have attempted to solve the problems, management engaged a training professional. That consultant identified the issues, set content standards, restructured presentations, and improved each presenter's delivery in ways that never would have been attempted internally. The next conference evaluations showed a major improvement. Worth the investment?

What jobs are best for outside experts?

Look to areas that require skills, standards, and consistency that may be impractical or impossible from the inside. A professional trainer allows employees to focus on the jobs that only they can do, such as strategic planning, product design, and sales. If you wish you had more time and energy to dedicate to certain programs, those may be perfect jobs for a consultant.

For example, a North American software vendor planned to expand its sales channel training into Europe, South America, and Southeast Asia. The company's relationships, content, and planning processes had to be fine-tuned for each country. One dedicated resource was able to customize the training content and fill the seats in a dozen countries, leaving management time to build invaluable relationships with international colleagues.

Could strategic relationships be affected?

If it's done right, they will be affected for the better. When strategically important partners join to create a training event, the process is inevitably full of complications. With so many “equals,” it is impossible for one player to set and enforce goals, schedules, and standards without risking long-term relationships. Plus, many of those players are competitors.

Investing in an objective third party may be the only way to ensure a smooth, successful program. A single point of contact to set deadlines, ensure quality, and resolve issues frees managers to work on strategic agendas and long-term relationships, and is likely to provide a training event that none of the individual players could have delivered on their own.

What about costs?

The benefits of hiring an outside training professional include rapid availability, finite expenditure, and defined program conclusion. Of course, some budget is required. You may find yourself comparing, say, a $60,000 fee for a four-month project to a $50,000 salary if you wanted to hire a new employee to do the job. The benefits of the latter include additional job responsibilities and a dedicated commitment to your company. But to really understand costs, think beyond salary costs. There's also benefits, vacation, and facilities, and how about the opportunity costs incurred during the interview, hire, and settling-in period? Don't underestimate the competitive edge lost while you are waiting. Plus, can the salary you're paying buy the years of experience you would get with an outside expert?


Janette Racicot is president of Racicot & Associates, which specializes in helping companies improve their important training events. To share your thoughts with her, call (617) 484-3201, or send an e-mail to jracicot@jracicot.com.



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