Many restaurants view employee training as a one-time first step. Once an employee is hired, training starts. Once training is over, the real work begins and learning stops. This outdated idea couldn't be more detrimental to both employee and business success. With modern technology and updated training ideas, employees don't have rely on an initial training period to prepare for every situation they might encounter on the job, which means restaurants can benefit from a flexible and constantly evolving workforce.
If you're ready to expand your employee training techniques to advance learning outside the classroom, these five innovative tips will get you started.
Continuous training means employees don't stop learning once they've graduated into the workforce. By providing options for continued learning after the initial training period, restaurants can increase employee retention, present opportunities for improvements and promotions, and ensure that employees never have to feel unprepared to deal with new situations. Essentially, continuous learning leads to more adaptable employees.
Don't disregard the usefulness of simple, easy to access resources such as FAQs and help desks. As long as these tools are consistently updated, they can reliably assist employees on the job without requiring extensive training courses. Additionally, these tools provide a stable source of information for common issues.
Branded content isn't just for your clientele. Using branded content rather than generic restaurant training videos and courses allows you to target your employee's specific concerns. After all, your restaurant's day to day interactions, priorities, and recipes aren't going to be exactly the same as that of another restaurant. By producing branded content, your employees will be trained for your particular needs rather than general restaurant procedures.
Having a platform for employees to engage with each other provides a means for questions to be answered right away by those who have insider knowledge: experienced employees and management staff. In-house social media creates a space for newer employees to ask specific questions and get detailed responses that relate directly to their work.
Mobile training options mean employees can get on the job training exactly when they need it. Flexibility is especially important for restaurant staff as employees often have a more difficult time leaving the work environment for a full day of training. Mobile learning also provides convenient solutions for deskless employees.
If a training course isn't useful for employees, wouldn't you want to know about it?
Making room to incorporate employee feedback is key to making your training stick since it comes from real life context. Inviting employee questions also allows you to provide more relevant information that can actively improve morale and engagement. In addition, setting a precedence for two-way communication lets new employees know that their every day concerns matter.
When you look beyond traditional classroom learning and incorporate modern learning systems into your employee training programs, it becomes much easier to increase the effectiveness of your training. Restaurants that embrace mobile learning end up with employees who are more productive and more confident, which leads to greater business success.