觀點管理

Better management, not endless training, will solve our corporate ills

Rather than call out sloppy working practices, it is easier to arrange yet another development course

An overworked friend recently warned her boss that her team was burning out. In response, HR sent them all on a mindfulness course. This only increased the backlog of work when they returned to their desks. “What I actually need,” she said, “is more staff”.

Training has become the panacea for every corporate ill, the default answer to improving productivity, retaining talent, and even taming the wage-price spiral. But it increasingly feels like a substitute for good management. I keep meeting people who are being forced to attend workshops which aren’t relevant to their job, or seem like virtue-signalling. As one weary charity worker said to me, “we always have to say the course was wonderful, or we get treated like s**t”.

Some lacklustre training is part of modern life. We’ve all clicked through falsely jolly compliance videos while scrolling on our phones or been lectured by a well-meaning person about, basically, being kind. But as the world spends more and more on “learning and development” — $370bn in 2019 — I have found it surprisingly hard to discover what actually works.

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