In today's constantly changing business environment, capable people are crucial to an organization's success, and developing their capabilities through training, learning and development initiatives is a major investment. While measuring the return on that investment is important, attempts to do so are much less valuable if they are not accompanied by a clear understanding of all of the factors than can affect the application of new skills and knowledge on the job - in other words, a clear understanding of what affects learning transfer. So, if organisations are to remain competitive, and develop the highly skilled people that will contribute to their future performance, improving learning transfer should be a priority. Cyril Kirwan's book addresses this critical issue at a number of levels. Firstly, it explores what learning transfer actually is (it's about application of learning back at work, as well as maintenance of that learning over time). Secondly, it describes the main factors that affect transfer, in terms of trainee characteristics, training design factors, and work environment characteristics. It also examines how those factors exert their effect, which ones are more important, how they interact with one another, and in doing so constructs a practical learning transfer model for practitioners. The book also describes in some detail what the various factors working for or against learning transfer look like in practice. Finally, using case studies, it points the way towards what can be done before, during and after training to improve the rate of transfer. This highly practical book will help trainers, development specialists and line managers ensure that their training is about real outcomes and not just inputs.
If organisations are to remain competitive, and develop the highly skilled people that will contribute to their future performance, improving learning transfer should be a priority. This book addresses this critical issue at a number of levels. It explores what learning transfer actually is.
'...In this well organised and practical book, learning providers, those charged with organizing training, and managers will all gain an understanding of the role they play in contributing to successful learning transfer. As a provider of learning and development interventions for more than 20 years, it gave me new insights and practical steps to take away. Kirwan brings together up to date research to support sensible recommendations...From doing a training needs analysis to measuring learning outcomes and all steps in-between, this is a handbook that will become a well thumbed reference for those who care about value for money and real workplace learning.' - Mary O'Rafferty, Director, Leadership and Management, Institute of Public Administration, Dublin 'Dr Kirwan candidly challenges the traditional learning and development mindset. His straightforward and well researched techniques will help training and learning departments demonstrate what tangible difference training is making to their organisation. With clear insights into what blocks learning transfer, he also provides pragmatic methods to maximise the return on investment from training and development programmes. This is a book for HR professionals, those responsible for L&D, and CEO's who are more interested in outcomes, than outputs.' - Hamish Brown, CEO, Concordia International Ltd '"Sometimes I feel that all those trainings and seminars we send our people to are just a waste of money, an HR-Manager told me only recently. And to a considerable extent I agree to it. Simply sending people to courses, only because the programme sounds interesting or - worse still - because some competitors go for the same kind of training, makes little sense. What is needed to have a return on investment into HR is shown in the book Improving Learning Transfer. Cyril Kirwan is a true practitioner and this shows in every line of his work. Thoroughly and systematically he identifies what makes the difference b