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[On March 1, 2004, GAO issued GAO-04-546G, Human Capital: A Guide for 
Assessing Strategic Training and Development Efforts in the Federal 
Government, which supersedes this document] [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-04-546G] 

Exposure Draft:

July 2003:

Human Capital:

A Guide for Assessing Strategic Training and Development Efforts in the 
Federal Government:

GAO-03-893G:

Preface:

One of the most important management challenges facing federal agencies 
is the need to transform their cultures to help change the way that 
government does business in the 21st century. Federal agencies must 
continue to build their fundamental management capabilities in order to 
effectively address the nation's most pressing priorities and take 
advantage of emerging opportunities. To accomplish this undertaking, 
agencies will need to invest resources, including time and money, to 
ensure that employees have the information, skills, and competencies 
they need to work effectively in a rapidly changing and complex 
environment. This includes investments in training and developing 
employees as part of an agency's overall effort to achieve cost-
effective and timely results.

This guide introduces a framework, consisting of a set of principles 
and key questions that federal agencies can use to ensure that their 
training and development investments are targeted strategically and are 
not wasted on efforts that are irrelevant, duplicative, or ineffective. 
Effective training and development programs are an integral part of a 
learning environment that can enhance the federal government's ability 
to attract and retain employees with the skills and competencies needed 
to achieve results for the benefit of the American people. Training and 
developing new and current staff to fill new roles and work in 
different ways will be a crucial part of the federal government's 
endeavors to meet its transformation challenges. Ways that employees 
learn and achieve results will also continue to transform how agencies 
do business and engage employees in further innovation and 
improvements.

Purpose and Use of This Guide:

As part of our ongoing review of agencies' efforts to address their 
human capital challenges, we saw the need for a framework to serve as a 
flexible and useful guide in assessing how agencies plan, design, 
implement, and evaluate effective training and development programs 
that contribute to improved organizational performance and enhanced 
employee skills and competencies. This guide was developed in response 
to that need. The framework outlined in this guide summarizes 
attributes of effective training and development programs and presents 
related questions concerning the components of the training and 
development process. Over time, assessments of training and development 
programs using this framework can further identify and highlight 
emerging and best practices, provide opportunities to enhance 
coordination and increase efficiency, and help develop more credible 
information on the level of investment and the results achieved across 
the federal government.

This guide is intended to help managers assess an agency's training and 
development efforts and make it easier to determine what, where, and 
how improvements may be implemented. Managers and analysts can use the 
guide to review an agency's overall training and development efforts as 
well as training and development associated with a particular agency 
program or activity. The guide focuses primarily on training and 
development rather than other important methods of learning within an 
organization, such as knowledge management. Consequently, users of this 
guide should keep in mind that this tool is a starting point and that 
it can and should be modified to fit the unique circumstances and 
conditions relevant to each agency. Training and development 
approaches, and how they operate in conjunction with other strategies 
to improve individual and organizational performance, are continually 
evolving and changing.

This guide consists of three sections. The first section provides an 
overview of the four components of the training and development 
process: (1) planning/front-end analysis, (2) design/development, 
(3) implementation, and (4) evaluation. The second section of this 
guide includes key questions to consider when assessing each of the 
four components of an agency's training and development process, along 
with elements to look for related to each key question. These key 
questions ask, for example, how the agency identifies the appropriate 
level of investment to provide for training and development efforts and 
prioritizes funding so that the most important training needs are 
addressed first (planning/front-end analysis). In looking at how 
agencies assess the extent to which their training and development 
efforts contributed to improved performance and results, the guide asks 
about the extent to which the agency systematically plans for and 
evaluates the effectiveness of its training and development efforts 
(evaluation). The third section of this guide summarizes our 
observations on the core characteristics that make a training and 
development process effective and strategically focused on achieving 
results. These characteristics include, for example, ensuring 
stakeholder involvement throughout the process and effectively 
allocating resources to maximize training investments. A list of 
related GAO products is also included at the end of this guide.

We developed this guide by consulting with government officials and 
experts in the private sector, academia, and nonprofit organizations; 
examining laws and regulations related to training and development in 
the federal government; and exploring the sizeable body of literature 
on training and development issues, including previous GAO reports on a 
range of human capital topics. Major contributors to this guide were 
Susan Ragland, K. Scott Derrick, Gerard Burke, and Thomas Davies, Jr. 
An electronic version of this guide is available on GAO's Web site at 
www.gao.gov.

We invite comments on this guide. If you have comments or any questions 
about this guide, please contact me or Susan Ragland, Assistant 
Director, Strategic Issues, at (202) 512-6806. We can also be reached 
at stalcupg@gao.gov and raglands@gao.gov.

Signed by:

George Stalcup 
Director, Strategic Issues:

Contents:

Preface:

Purpose and Use of This Guide:

Section 1:

Components of the Training and Development Process:

Section 2:

Component 1: Planning/Front-end Analysis:

Component 2: Design/Development:

Component 3: Implementation:

Component 4: Evaluation:

Section 3:

Related GAO Products:

Figures :

Figure 1: Cornerstones of GAO's Model of Strategic Human Capital 
Management:


Figure 2: Four Components of the Training and Development Process:

Figure 3: Example Agency's Training and Development Programs Assessed 
Using Each Level of Evaluation:

Figure 4: Core Characteristics of a Strategic Training and Development 
Process:

Figure 5: Linking Core Characteristics to the Components of the 
Training and Development Process:

Abbreviations: 

CPE: continuing professional education:

GPRA: Government Performance and Results Act of 1993:

IDP: individual development plan:

ROI: return on investment:

SCORM: Sharable Content Object Reference Model:

[End of section]

Section 1: Overview of the Training and Development Process:

Strategic human capital management centers on viewing people as assets 
whose value to an organization can be enhanced through investment. Like 
many organizations, federal agencies are trying to determine how best 
to manage their human capital in the face of significant and ongoing 
change. GAO's model of strategic human capital management[Footnote 1] 
identified four cornerstones of serious change management initiatives. 
These cornerstones represent strategic human capital management 
challenges that, if not addressed, can undermine agency effectiveness. 
One of these challenges is for the federal government to successfully 
acquire, develop, and retain talent. (See fig. 1.) Investing in and 
enhancing the value of employees through training and development is a 
crucial part of addressing this challenge.

Figure 1: Cornerstones of GAO's Model of Strategic Human Capital 
Management:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

Training can be defined as making available to employees planned and 
coordinated educational programs of instruction in professional, 
technical, or other fields that are or will be related to the 
employee's job responsibilities. Training can be accomplished through a 
variety of approaches, such as classroom training, e-learning, and 
professional conferences that are educational or instructional in 
nature. Development is generally considered to include training, 
structured on-the-job learning experiences, and education. 
Developmental programs can include experiences such as coaching, 
mentoring, or rotational assignments. The essential aim of training and 
development programs[Footnote 2] is to assist the agency in achieving 
its mission and goals by improving individual and, ultimately, 
organizational performance.[Footnote 3]

Recent indicators of federal agencies' progress in managing their human 
capital continue to show that there is significant room for 
improvement, for example, in agencies' efforts to train and develop 
workforces with the appropriate skills and competencies to achieve 
agency goals. Our recent work has highlighted human capital shortfalls, 
such as insufficient training for employees who lacked needed skills 
and competencies, duplicative and uncoordinated training efforts within 
and across agencies, and incomplete information on the extent to which 
employees had received required training.[Footnote 4] Additionally, 
results of the 2002 Federal Human Capital Survey conducted by the 
Office of Personnel Management showed that only about half of federal 
employees were satisfied with the training that they receive for their 
current jobs. As our previous work and these survey results 
demonstrate, federal agencies face continuing challenges to enhance and 
improve their training and development efforts. Thoroughly assessing 
their training and development activities represents a comprehensive 
first step that federal agencies can take toward identifying 
opportunities to redirect and intensify their efforts to promote 
employee learning within their organizations.

Components of the Training and Development Process:

Taken as a whole, the training and development process can loosely be 
segmented into four broad, interrelated components: (1) planning/
front-end analysis, (2) design/development, (3) implementation, and 
(4) evaluation. Figure 2 depicts an overview of this process along with 
the general relationships between the four components that help to 
produce a strategic approach to federal agencies' training and 
development efforts. Although we discuss these components separately, 
it is important to recognize that these components are not mutually 
exclusive and encompass subcomponents that may blend with one another. 
Evaluation, for example, should occur throughout the process. For 
instance, evaluation is an integral part of the planning/front-end 
analysis as agencies strive to reach agreement up front on how the 
success of various strategies to improve performance, including 
training and development efforts, will be assessed. In addition, 
agencies can build on lessons learned and performance data and feedback 
from previous experiences.

Figure 2: Four Components of the Training and Development Process:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

Planning/Front-end Analysis:

It is essential that agencies ensure training and development efforts 
are undertaken as an integral part of, and are driven by, their 
strategic and performance planning processes. Front-end analysis can 
help ensure that training and development efforts are not initiated in 
an ad hoc, uncoordinated manner, but rather are strategically focused 
on improving performance toward the agency's goals and are put forward 
with the agency's organizational culture firmly in mind. To make 
certain that their strategic and annual performance planning processes 
adequately reflect current ideas, policies, and practices in the field, 
agencies should consider the viewpoints of human capital professionals, 
agency managers, employees, employee unions, and other critical 
stakeholders in partnership with agency leadership in addressing 
training and development efforts. Part of this process must include 
determining what skills and competencies are needed in order to meet 
current, emerging, and future transformation challenges and assessing 
any gaps in current skills and competencies. It is important to note 
that not all such gaps will be addressed through training and 
development strategies, or through training and development strategies 
alone. Rather, strategies involving training and development are but 
one of the means available to agency leaders to help transform their 
cultures and operations. At times, for example, training may complement 
job or process redesign, but in other instances, agencies may identify 
hiring or other sourcing decisions as the solution.

In addition, agencies should integrate the need for continuous life-
long learning and incorporate employees' development goals into their 
planning processes. Planning allows agencies to establish priorities 
and determine how training and development investments, along with 
other human capital strategies, can best be leveraged to improve 
performance. In addition to planning how training and development 
strategies are expected to contribute to results, agencies should set 
forth how the training and development program's contributions to 
achieving results will be measured. Each agency needs to ensure that it 
has the flexibility and capability to quickly incorporate strategic and 
tactical changes into training and development efforts when needed. As 
the pace of change continues to accelerate, agencies face changes in 
their missions and goals, as well as changes in how they do business, 
with whom they work, and the roles that they play in achieving results. 
Planning and preparing an integrated approach, including training and 
development efforts, is key to positioning federal agencies to be able 
to address current problems and meet emerging demands.

Design/Development:

Well-designed training and development programs are linked to agency 
goals and to the organizational, occupational, and individual skills 
and competencies needed for the agency to perform effectively. Once 
these skills and competencies are identified, agencies need to 
determine how a skill or competency gap can best be addressed, whether 
through a specific training or development program or other 
interventions. If a training or development strategy is selected, 
agencies need to consider how the training and development program 
would work in conjunction with other initiatives to enhance 
performance, such as changing work processes or providing just-in-time 
support tools. Regardless of whether agencies use centralized or 
decentralized approaches (or a combination of both) in managing their 
training and development programs, agencies need to develop mechanisms 
that effectively limit unnecessary overlap and duplication of effort 
and ensure delivery of integrated and consistent messages. As part of 
an agency's sourcing decisions, it can also help to have clear criteria 
for determining when to contract for training and development services.

In response to emerging demands and the increasing availability of new 
technologies, agencies are faced with the challenge of choosing the 
optimal mix for the specific purpose and situation from a wide range of 
mechanisms, including classroom and distance learning as well as 
structured on-the-job experiences, to design training that is as 
effective and efficient as possible. It is important for agencies to 
ensure that their training and development efforts are cost effective 
given the anticipated benefits and to incorporate measures that can be 
used to demonstrate contributions that training and development 
programs make to improve results. By incorporating valid measures of 
effectiveness into the training and development programs they offer, 
agencies can better ensure that they adequately address training 
objectives and thereby increase the likelihood that desired changes 
will occur in the target population's skills, knowledge, abilities, 
attitudes, or behaviors.

Implementation:

Effectively implementing training and development programs provides 
agencies with the opportunity to empower employees and improve 
performance. Throughout this process, it is important that top leaders 
in the agency communicate across the organization that investments in 
training and development are expected to produce clearly identified 
results. Similarly, leaders must also be open to feedback from 
employees. Along with these key executives, the agency's training and 
performance organization should be held accountable for the maximum 
performance of the workforce. Likewise, agency managers and employees 
also have important roles--their input and actions have a critical 
effect on the success of training and development activities. Managers 
are responsible not only for reinforcing new competencies, skills, and 
behaviors but also for removing barriers to help employees implement 
learned behaviors on the job. Furthermore, if managers understand and 
support the objectives of training and development efforts, they can 
provide opportunities for employees to successfully use new skills and 
competencies and can model the behavior they expect to see in their 
employees. Employees also need to understand the goals of agencies' 
training and development efforts and accept responsibility for 
developing their competencies and careers, as well as for improving 
their organization's performance.

In carrying out their training and development efforts, agencies must 
select employees on a fair and nondiscriminatory basis or provide the 
opportunity for employees to self-select to participate in training and 
development programs. Moreover, agencies should avail themselves of the 
various options in paying for their employees' training and 
development, and attempt to maximize the use of the training and 
development flexibilities available to them. Furthermore, encouraging 
employee buy-in and creating an environment conducive to training and 
development can go a long way toward contributing to effective learning 
across the agency. Agency managers should take active roles in setting 
expectations for learning when they approve employees' requests for 
training, ensuring accountability and reinforcing behaviors when 
employees attempt to apply lessons learned in the workplace. As with 
other programs or services that agencies deliver, it is important for 
agencies to collect performance data during implementation so as to 
assess the progress that training and development programs are making 
toward achieving results and to make changes if needed.

Evaluation:

It is increasingly important for agencies to be able to evaluate their 
training and development programs and demonstrate how these efforts 
help develop employees and improve the agencies' performance. In the 
past, agencies have primarily focused on activities or processes (such 
as number of training participants, courses, and hours) and did not 
collect information on how training and development efforts contributed 
to improved performance, reduced costs, or a greater capacity to meet 
new and emerging transformation challenges. Because the evaluation of 
training and development programs can aid decision makers in managing 
scarce resources, agencies need to develop evaluation processes that 
systematically track the cost and delivery of training and development 
efforts and assess the benefits of these efforts. Providing training is 
one of many actions an agency can take to improve results, so credible 
performance data are necessary for considering potential trade-offs and 
informed decision making. The investment in developing and using 
measures of efficiency and effectiveness far outweighs the risk of 
inadequate training. As part of a balanced approach, assessing training 
and development efforts should consider feedback from customers and 
employees, as well as organizational results. Agencies can also inform 
these decisions by comparing their training investments and/or outcomes 
with those of other agencies or private sector organizations, where 
appropriate.

Evaluation of an organization's training and development efforts can be 
complex due to the many factors that affect performance. Agencies' 
experiences in developing performance measures for other programs, 
however, are applicable here as well. For example, agencies may 
identify incremental or intermediate measures to demonstrate that a 
training or development program is contributing to a goal. It is 
important to note that the federal government is increasingly moving 
toward connecting resources with results, and this is no less the case 
for training and development efforts than for other agency programs. 
The conduct of evaluations of training and development programs is 
often discussed in terms of levels. One commonly accepted model 
consists of five levels of assessment that measure (1) participant 
reaction to the training program, (2) changes in employee skills, 
knowledge, or abilities, (3) changes in on-the-job behaviors, (4) the 
impact of the training on program or organizational results, and (5) a 
return on investment (ROI) that compares training costs to derived 
benefits. Some of these methods, such as participant reaction, can help 
provide better value through continuous improvement. Further, given the 
large variety of ways to provide training, such as classroom, e-
learning, and on-the-job training, agencies need evaluative data to 
make reasoned decisions about the optimal mix of mechanisms to employ 
given the specifics of the situation and the objective. The bottom line 
is that agencies need credible information on how training and 
development programs affect organizational performance. Decision 
makers will likely want to compare the performance of these programs 
with that of other programs, and programs lacking outcome metrics will 
be unable to demonstrate how they contribute to results.

In determining the mix of approaches selected for evaluations, agencies 
need to bear in mind the importance of identifying reliable indicators 
of progress that are aligned with agency outcomes. Training 
effectiveness must be measured against organizational performance. 
However, not all training and development programs require, or are 
suitable for, an ROI analysis. Determining whether training and 
development programs merit the cost of using such a rigorous approach 
depends on the programs' significance and cost. Indeed, such 
evaluations can be challenging to conduct and, because of the 
difficulty and costs associated with data collection and the complexity 
in directly linking training and development programs to improved 
individual and organizational performance, ROI analyses should be done 
selectively.

[End of section]

Section 2: Key Questions for Review of Agency Training and Development 
Efforts:

This section contains a discussion of key questions to consider when 
assessing each of the four components of an agency's training and 
development process: (1) planning/front-end analysis, (2) design/
development, (3) implementation, and (4) evaluation. Included under 
each key question is a narrative description along with elements to 
"look for" that relate to the key question. These "look for" elements 
should serve as guides for assessment and do not comprise a complete or 
mandatory "set" of elements needed in response to each question; their 
relevance will vary depending on each agency's specific circumstances.

Component 1: Planning/Front-end Analysis:

Planning/front-end analysis involves developing a strategic approach 
that establishes priorities and leverages investments in training and 
development to achieve agency results. Some key questions related to 
planning/front-end analysis include the following.

Does the agency have training goals that are consistent with its 
overall mission, goals, and culture?

To what extent do the agency's strategic and annual performance 
planning processes incorporate human capital professionals in 
partnership with agency leadership and other stakeholders in addressing 
agency priorities, including training and development efforts? :

How does the agency determine the skills and competencies its workforce 
needs to achieve current, emerging, and future agency goals and 
missions and identify gaps, including those that training and 
development strategies can help address?

How does the agency identify the appropriate level of investment to 
provide for training and development efforts and prioritize funding so 
that the most important training needs are addressed first?

What measures does the agency use in assessing the contributions that 
training and development efforts make toward individual mastery of 
learning and achieving agency goals?

How does the agency incorporate employees' developmental goals in its 
planning processes?

How does the agency integrate the need for continuous and life-long 
learning into its planning processes? :

Does the agency consider governmentwide reforms and other targeted 
initiatives to improve management and performance when planning its 
training and development programs?

Does the agency have a formal process to ensure that strategic and 
tactical changes are promptly incorporated in training and development 
efforts as well as other human capital strategies as needed?

1(a): Does the agency have training goals that are consistent with its 
overall mission, goals, and culture?

An agency's mission statement explains why the agency exists and what 
it does. An agency's goals represent the key outcomes that the agency 
expects to achieve in carrying out that mission. An agency's 
organizational culture represents the underlying assumptions, beliefs, 
values, attitudes, and expectations shared by the organization's 
members. Agencies need to align their activities, core processes, and 
resources to support outcomes related to these missions, goals, and 
cultures. In carrying out an agency's mission, senior managers should 
ensure that training goals and strategies are incorporated into 
organizational decision making and aligned with organizational goals 
and culture.

Appropriate accountability mechanisms, such as an active training 
oversight committee and effective performance management systems, can 
help to ensure that a sufficient level of attention is paid to planning 
for training and development needs and that such efforts are consistent 
with agency mission, goals, and culture. Line managers and supervisors 
can ensure consistency of training goals with the agency's overall 
mission and goals by developing their employees with this alignment 
duly in mind, including approvals of employees' specific training 
requests. Human capital professionals need to focus on developing, 
implementing, and continually assessing human capital policies and 
practices, including those related to training and development, that 
will help the agency achieve its mission and accomplish its goals. With 
this level of attention, each agency can better create a coherent and 
comprehensive framework of human capital policies, programs, and 
practices specifically designed to steer the agency toward achieving 
results.

Look for:

* The existence of a training oversight committee or learning board 
composed of senior and line managers who ensure that training 
investments align with the agency's strategic goals and organizational 
culture.

* Evidence that the agency provides training and development for its 
employees that is aligned with the agency's mission, goals, and 
culture.

* Analyses of the agency's legislative authorities and policies that 
may relate to or require training and development.

* An explicit link between the agency's training offerings and 
curricula and the skills and competencies identified by the agency for 
mission accomplishment.

* Training and development efforts that target specific performance 
improvements, such as improved customer service or enhanced public 
safety.

1(b): To what extent do the agency's strategic and annual performance 
planning processes incorporate human capital professionals in 
partnership with agency leadership and other stakeholders in addressing 
agency priorities, including training and development efforts?

Under the Government Performance and Results Act of 1993 (GPRA), 
federal agencies are required to prepare strategic plans (updated at 
least every 3 years) and performance plans (annually) to provide 
direction for achieving the agency's overall mission. Stakeholder 
involvement in these planning processes is especially important for 
federal agencies because they operate in a complex political and legal 
environment. The involvement of human capital professionals is 
particularly important to helping the agency in communicating 
workforce-related goals, priorities, and decisions to managers and 
staff throughout the agency. To help ensure that agencies integrate 
their human capital approaches with their strategies for accomplishing 
organizational missions, the role of human capital staff in the agency 
should expand beyond providing traditional personnel administration 
services. Rather than isolating them to provide after-the-fact support, 
human capital leaders should be included as full members in key agency 
strategic planning and decision making.[Footnote 5] This partnership 
will be particularly important in meeting the newly amended GPRA 
requirement that human capital approaches be included in agencies' 
strategic plans as well as their performance plans and reports.

The head of an agency's training and development organization, 
increasingly referred to as the chief learning officer, has an 
important role in maximizing the agency's investments in workforce 
development programs. A training and development organization's 
responsibilities should include developing training based on strategic 
initiatives, soliciting input from stakeholders, and prioritizing and 
scheduling training based on strategic initiatives and stakeholder 
input. Through early cooperation, the training organization and other 
stakeholders can work together more effectively because they will 
better understand how each office or function within the agency 
contributes to achieving business goals. Concerted and ongoing 
attention from agency leaders, human capital professionals, and other 
key stakeholders can directly contribute to the training and 
development of employees who are capable and motivated to accomplish 
the organization's missions and goals.

Look for:

* Involvement of human capital leaders, as full members of the top 
management team, in key agency decision making.

* Participation of human capital and training professionals, as 
consultants to the management team, in the identification of strategies 
and measures to be used in assessing progress.

* Involvement of the chief learning officer and other human capital 
professionals in the development and review of strategic and annual 
performance planning documents.

1(c): How does the agency determine the skills and competencies its 
workforce needs to achieve current, emerging, and future agency goals 
and missions and identify gaps, including those that training and 
development strategies can help address?

Organizations can evaluate the extent to which human capital approaches 
support the accomplishment of current, emerging, and future strategic 
goals through the use of workforce planning. At its core, workforce 
planning focuses on determining the skills and competencies needed in 
the future workforce to meet the agency's goals; identifying gaps in 
the agency's current and future skills and competencies; and crafting 
strategies for acquiring, developing, and retaining people to address 
these needs. These workforce planning efforts, linked to an agency's 
strategic goals and objectives, can enable an agency to remain aware of 
and be prepared for its current, emerging, and future needs as an 
organization. These needs include the size of the workforce; its 
deployment across the organization; and the knowledge, skills, and 
abilities needed for the agency to pursue its current and future 
mission. To ensure a strategic workforce planning approach, it is 
important that agencies consider how hiring, training, staff 
development, performance management, and other human capital strategies 
can be aligned to eliminate gaps and improve the long-term contribution 
of critical skills and competencies that have been identified as 
important for mission success. In some cases, agencies may identify 
credentials that employees need to perform certain duties, and require 
that employees meet certification requirements to ensure they possess 
needed knowledge and skills.

Workforce planning should entail the collection of valid and reliable 
data on such indicators as distribution of employees' skills and 
competencies, attrition rates, or projected retirement rates and 
retirement eligibility by occupation and organizational unit. Agencies 
can use an organizationwide knowledge and skills inventory[Footnote 6] 
and industry benchmarks[Footnote 7] to help identify current 
performance problems in their workforces and to plan for future 
training and development efforts that may be needed not only to address 
performance and skill gaps but to optimize overall performance as well. 
For example, the movement toward a knowledge-based economy, 
technological advances, and demographic shifts as the age and diversity 
of the workforce changes illustrate the importance of investments in 
training and development for continued growth. Such determinations 
should include an effort to identify skills and competencies not 
traditionally associated with specific positions. Failure to make such 
determinations could hinder individual and organizational performance 
as the federal government transforms and increasingly uses strategies 
that can integrate capabilities and provide flexibility to meet new 
challenges and improve services.

Look for:

* A discussion of workforce planning in the agency's strategic or 
annual performance plans and reports, or separate workforce planning 
documents linked to the agency's strategic and program planning.

* Data from agency human resource information systems on such 
indicators as distribution of employees by pay level, attrition and 
retirement rates, and ratios of managers to employees.

* A knowledge and skills inventory identifying current skills and 
competencies of the agency's employees.

* Information on how the agency has identified the roles and core 
competencies needed to support its goals and service delivery 
strategies now and in the future.

* Industry benchmarks in such areas as skills, education levels, and 
geographic and demographic trends.

* Criteria and rationales that the agency uses to determine when to 
target training and development strategies to fill skill gaps and 
enhance capacity.

1(d): How does the agency identify the appropriate level of investment 
to provide for training and development efforts and prioritize funding 
so that the most important training needs are addressed first?

Adequate planning allows agencies to establish priorities and determine 
the best ways to leverage investments to improve performance. An agency 
can aid in this process by developing an annual training plan that 
targets developmental areas of greatest need and that outlines the most 
cost-effective training approaches to address those needs. When 
assessing investment opportunities for its training plan, the agency 
ought to consider the competing demands confronting the agency, the 
limited resources available, and how those demands can best be met with 
available resources. If training is identified as a solution to improve 
performance, agencies will need to compare various training strategies 
by weighing their estimated costs and anticipated benefits. This 
deliberation could include a ranking process using weighted criteria to 
compare and rank possible training programs. Such criteria could 
include, for example, expected demand for the investment from internal 
sources, availability of resources to support the effort, potential for 
increased revenue, and risk of unfavorable consequences if investments 
are not made. With this information, an agency then needs to build a 
business case to support the selected training strategy. Developing a 
business case for training and development solutions sets forth the 
expected costs and benefits of the performance improvement investment 
and provides decision makers with essential information they need to 
allocate necessary resources. As with any investment, the agency's goal 
is to maximize value while managing risk.

In addition, agencies should consider succession planning when 
prioritizing their training efforts. This succession planning includes 
a review of current and emerging leadership needs in light of strategic 
and performance planning and identifies sources of executive talent, 
including those within the agency. Current retirement eligibility 
trends in the federal government suggest a loss in institutional 
knowledge, expertise, and leadership continuity, and underscore the 
need for rigorous succession planning and related leadership 
development efforts. Agencies also face challenges in the amount of 
diversity of their executive and managerial ranks, demonstrating the 
importance of including strategies to address the priorities identified 
during succession planning as part of agencies' training plans.

Look for:

* Evidence that the agency treats expenditures for training and 
development not as costs to be minimized but rather as investments that 
should be managed to maximize value while minimizing risk.

* Goals and expectations for training and development investments that 
are transparent and clearly defined and whose rationale is consistent 
across the range of human capital programs at the agency.

* A training plan or other document that presents a business case for 
proposed training and development investments, including the identified 
problem or opportunity, the concept for an improved situation or 
condition, linkages with the agency's strategic objectives, anticipated 
benefits and projected costs, and ways to mitigate associated risks.

* Evidence that managers provide resources (funds, people, equipment, 
and time) to support training and development priorities.

* Use of established measures that provide meaningful data on training 
and development policies and practices and show how specific efforts 
have promoted mission accomplishment.

* Indications that the agency has identified best practices or 
benchmarked elements of its training and development programs against 
high-performance organizations with similar missions.

* Linkages between succession planning efforts and the agency training 
plan, such as for leadership development programs that are targeted to 
help address specific challenges related to diversity, leadership 
capacity, and retention.

1(e): What measures does the agency use in assessing the contributions 
that training and development efforts make toward individual mastery of 
learning and achieving agency goals?

In planning the training and development strategies to be implemented, 
agencies need to establish ways for measuring the contributions that 
employees' training and development make to achieve results. This 
process should involve obtaining up-front agreement with key 
stakeholders on what success is and how it will be measured. In 
planning future projects and programs, agencies can often learn much 
from an assessment of performance data and feedback from previous 
years' experiences. For example, the percentage of an agency's 
operating budget spent on training, along with other performance 
information, and comparable industry benchmarks can provide 
constructive insight into the status of the agency's learning 
environment. With this type of information, agencies are in a solid 
position to build on lessons learned and to gain greater insight into 
the contributions of training and development efforts.

Look for:

* Evidence that the agency considered available performance data and 
contemplated options for improving future data collection and analysis 
efforts.

* Assessments of the agency's human resource information system and its 
capacity to provide relevant and reliable data for fact-based decision 
making.

* Targets and goals in strategic and performance plans that establish 
how training and development strategies are expected to contribute to 
improved organizational and programmatic results.

* Targets and goals in strategic human capital plans to enhance 
employees' skills and competencies, with measures of resulting changes 
in these skills and competencies.

* Measures of job satisfaction, productivity measures, and other 
specific metrics in place.

1(f): How does the agency incorporate employees' developmental goals in 
its planning processes?

Agencies can use a variety of methods that allow employees to identify 
their developmental needs and help agencies to incorporate employees' 
developmental goals in agencies' planning processes. In workforce 
planning efforts, agencies can survey or interview employees to 
determine their views and perceptions on training and development in 
general and more specifically on competencies and skills needed for the 
future. Employee views can be consolidated with other workforce 
planning information to identify developmental goals and skill gaps and 
to assess possible training needs.

Agencies can also identify employee developmental goals through the use 
of individual development plans (IDP).[Footnote 8] IDPs can serve as a 
useful planning tool by providing input to decision makers as they set 
training priorities and identify future skill and competency needs for 
the agency. Compiling employees' IDPs using automation can identify 
these developmental needs for agency managers and can assist the 
agency's training and development unit in planning and scheduling 
future courses and developmental programs. IDPs can also serve as a 
budgetary tool by providing the agency with the opportunity to assess 
the level of financial resources that might be needed to fulfill 
employees' development goals. To further assist in planning for 
financial resources, agencies could also establish individual learning 
accounts[Footnote 9] to allocate specific dollar amounts for each 
employee's training needs. The use of individual learning accounts not 
only can help agencies in planning needed financial resources for 
training and development but also will provide employees with an 
opportunity to assume a greater responsibility for their professional 
development.

Look for:

* Surveys of and interviews with agency employees for their views on 
the agency's support for their developmental needs and particular 
training and development programs that might be needed.

* Indications that agency leaders systematically consider and act, when 
appropriate, on employees' suggestions for improving learning products, 
for developing training programs, and for providing needed resources 
and useful tools.

* Use of IDPs to identify specific developmental needs and areas for 
further enrichment for each employee.

* Use of individual learning accounts or other similar approaches to 
aid the agency's planning and budgeting efforts and to enhance 
accountability for employees' involvement in their professional 
development.

1(g): How does the agency integrate the need for continuous and life-
long learning into its planning processes?

It is important that agencies treat continuous learning as an 
investment in success rather than as a cost to be minimized. Agencies 
may have various reasons for investing in continuous learning for their 
employees, such as developing the new skills needed for managing change 
and fostering the skills and modes of behavior needed in flatter, more 
participatory, customer-focused, results-oriented work environments. 
In planning training and development efforts, agencies can address 
employees' career development issues as well as skill-specific training 
needs. IDPs can serve a useful role in addressing employees' needs for 
continuous and life-long learning by allowing employees to set short-
and long-term developmental goals for themselves. As part of this 
process, employees should be provided candid and constructive job 
performance counseling to aid them in enhancing needed competencies.

Whenever possible, the culture of the organization should encourage 
employees to assume responsibility for their own learning and take an 
active role in their professional development. In addition, agencies 
can require employees to complete a specific level of continuing 
professional education (CPE). Agencies can also highlight the 
availability of training and development opportunities as an incentive 
to help recruit and retain employees. Agency leaders must recognize 
that their organizational cultures can be resistant to change and that 
they may need to provide incentives for organizational and cultural 
change and to promote innovation and prudent risk taking.

Look for:

* A statement in the agency's strategic plan or other documents that 
expresses the organizational value placed on continuous learning and 
improvement.

* Opportunities for employees and employee organizations to contribute 
their views on the agency's shared vision and strategies for achieving 
it, including innovative ideas and process improvements, using ongoing 
efforts such as input to strategic planning efforts or employee 
suggestion programs, and fixed routines such as employee exit surveys.

* Feedback from employee surveys, articles in organizational 
newsletters, Web site links, or other mechanisms that provide 
information on employees' perceptions of the organization's learning 
environment and resulting actions taken.

* Evidence that employee initiatives to build institutional knowledge 
are valued and encouraged, such as the level of employee participation 
in professional organizations or the incidence of speaker programs 
organized by employees to raise their knowledge of key issues.

* Efforts to identify and benchmark with best practices in continuous 
learning and knowledge management among organizations with comparable 
missions and service requirements.

* Use of IDPs for both short-and long-term developmental needs of 
employees.

* Information available to employees about career ladders and how 
training and development opportunities could help them attain career 
goals.

1(h): Does the agency consider governmentwide reforms and other 
targeted initiatives to improve management and performance when 
planning its training and development programs?

When planning training and development efforts, agencies should look to 
the actions of the administration, Congress, and internal and external 
auditors by considering administration priorities, legislative 
reforms, and major management challenges that might shape agency 
priorities and strategies for training and development. It is not 
unreasonable to expect that each new administration may propose 
different approaches designed to ensure that agencies achieve 
management and performance improvements and accomplish agency missions 
and goals. As an administration focuses its efforts on addressing its 
priorities, agencies can benefit by having mechanisms or processes for 
considering whether and to what extent these initiatives could be 
linked to employees' skills and competencies and the related training 
and development approaches that might be needed. In similar fashion, 
agencies could benefit from conducting fairly regular and systematic 
assessments of recent and potential legislative reforms that may affect 
them. Legislative changes that mandate additional requirements or 
provide additional flexibility, for example, may affect agency 
operations and processes in a way that could necessitate new or revised 
training and development for employees. During planning efforts, 
agencies should also take into account the major management challenges 
identified by GAO and applicable inspectors general. These major 
management challenges--high-profile programs, mission areas, or 
management functions requiring concerted attention--potentially could 
be caused in part by lack of needed skills and competencies to carry 
out the agency's goals. Moreover, these challenges could possibly be 
addressed in some measure through the implementation of training and 
development strategies that are linked to performance improvements.

Look for:

* Evidence that the agency is using the administration's metrics (e.g., 
scorecards) as a method of assessing organizational performance.

* Indications that the agency is systematically assessing the 
implications of legislative changes on the agency's operations and 
programs, including its training and development efforts.

* Agency leaders' statements, strategic and performance planning 
documents, and training programs that are targeted toward addressing 
management challenges.

* Agency tracking and assessment of its efforts to address the major 
management challenges identified by GAO and the inspectors general.

1(i): Does the agency have a formal process to ensure that strategic 
and tactical changes are promptly incorporated in training and 
development efforts as well as other human capital strategies as 
needed?

Strategic and tactical changes will quite often influence policies, 
programs, and practices that have been designed to guide the agency 
toward achieving its mission. In responding to these changes, senior 
managers need to continually observe and assess how such changes may 
affect the agency's human capital strategies and related training 
needs. A constant watch will help ensure that the agency has a current 
and valid framework of human capital policies, programs, and practices 
specifically designed to steer the agency toward achieving its mission. 
Also, including important agency stakeholders in the process can 
contribute to an open and continuous exchange of ideas and information. 
Changes such as new initiatives, technological innovations, workforce 
attrition, or reorganizations and restructuring will likely require 
agencies to realign and update the mix of competencies and skills 
considered necessary, resulting in the need for new or revised training 
and development programs. Having a formal process for incorporating 
these strategic and tactical changes will help to ensure that new and 
revised training and development efforts are quickly brought on line. 
Capability to adapt to ongoing change should greatly aid agencies in 
providing training to employees when they need it most.

Look for:

* Periodic reassessments as part of a continual effort to evaluate and 
improve the agency's human capital systems, including training and 
development efforts.

* Indications that the agency has communicated and reinforced the 
relevance of its shared vision among all employees and created, as 
appropriate, effective strategies for managing change.

* Evidence of timely changes reflected in training and development 
efforts in response to specific strategies or tactical opportunities 
and imperatives.

* A variety of training techniques to help employees adjust to 
organizational and operational changes.

* Plans that describe or outline the way in which the agency intends to 
incorporate strategic and tactical changes into its training and 
development efforts, such as contingency plans to address rapid 
upsurges or declines in demand for training.

Component 2: Design/Development:

Design and development involves identifying specific training and 
development initiatives that the agency will use, along with other 
strategies, to improve individual and agency performance. Some key 
questions related to design/development include the following.

What steps does the agency take to ensure that training is connected to 
improving individual and agency performance in achieving specific 
results? :

How is the design of the training or development program integrated 
with other strategies to improve performance and meet emerging demands, 
such as changing work processes, measuring performance, and providing 
performance incentives?

Does the agency use the most appropriate mix of centralized and 
decentralized approaches for its training and development programs?

What criteria does the agency use in determining whether to design 
training and development programs in-house or obtain these services 
from a contractor or other external source? :

How does the agency compare the merits of different delivery mechanisms 
(such as classroom or computer-based training) and determine what mix 
of mechanisms to use to ensure efficient and cost-effective delivery? :

Does the agency determine a targeted level of improved performance in 
order to ensure that the cost of a training or development program is 
appropriate to achieve the anticipated benefit?

How well does the agency incorporate measures of effectiveness into 
courses it designs?

2(a): What steps does the agency take to ensure that training is 
connected to improving individual and agency performance in achieving 
specific results?

To help ensure that each training program is connected to improving 
individual and agency performance, it is especially crucial that 
agencies analyze their strategic and performance goals to determine 
where training and development could enhance goal achievement. After 
identifying the goals that could be enhanced with training solutions, 
the agency should identify agencywide competencies needed to support 
these goals. In addition to considering competencies at this "macro" 
level, the agency should assess skills and competencies for key 
occupational groups within the agency as well as performance needs and 
skills and competencies for individual employees. To aid in this 
endeavor, the agency's training organization can compile employees' 
IDPs by using a learning management system[Footnote 10] to identify, 
prioritize, and schedule training agencywide. A process that enables 
stakeholders to provide their input, feedback, and ideas into the 
design of training programs and that incorporates diverse perspectives 
helps ensure applicability, encourages ownership, and enhances 
enthusiasm about the programs. Stakeholders should include senior and 
line managers as well as subject matter, human capital, and technical 
experts.

Look for:

* A formal training and professional development strategy, or a 
discussion of training and development in other strategic or human 
capital planning documents.

* Statements and actions by agency leaders that demonstrate their 
support and belief in the value of continuous learning.

* Specific steps the agency takes to ensure that employees selected for 
various positions have the requisite knowledge, skills, and abilities.

* Organizational, occupational, and individual needs assessments, along 
with causes and reasons for existing gaps as well as possible solutions 
to those gaps.

* Tracking and other control mechanisms to ensure that all employees 
receive appropriate training.

2(b): How is the design of the training or development program 
integrated with other strategies to improve performance and meet 
emerging demands, such as changing work processes, measuring 
performance, and providing performance incentives?

When designing training and development programs, agencies need to 
consider integrating them with other strategies to improve performance 
and meet emerging demands. Agency managers should keep in mind that a 
wide variety of interventions can be used to enhance performance and 
that training alone may not be sufficient and may not always be part of 
an appropriate solution. In some cases, for example, barriers to 
performance could relate to insufficient performance incentives or 
obsolete technology rather than a lack of knowledge or skills. 
Solutions such as clear and timely feedback on employee performance or 
a reward system that is properly aligned with employee performance may 
be key in providing adequate employee feedback or enhanced rewards for 
improved performance. Other solutions could involve new tools and 
resources, enhanced technology, or job redesign. It should be noted 
that although training alone may not be appropriate to correct 
problems, additional training may be needed to augment changes 
involving an agency's performance management systems, technologies, or 
working environment. New ways of accomplishing agency objectives may 
well require new or revised training initiatives to familiarize 
employees with these new processes.

Look for:

* Identification of needed performance improvements and consideration 
of a mix of solutions needed to achieve the improvements.

* Design and use of training and development initiatives intended to 
complement targeted performance improvement efforts.

* Integrated packages of performance solutions that include training 
and development initiatives.

* The involvement of line managers, technical experts, human capital 
professionals, and others needed to develop an integrated way to 
address specific performance gaps or necessary enhancements.

* Training on building team relationships and new ways of working.

* Cross-training initiatives that broaden employees' perspectives and 
integrate knowledge about agency operations to improve results.

2(c): Does the agency use the most appropriate mix of centralized and 
decentralized approaches for its training and development programs?

While recognizing that neither approach fits every situation, agencies 
need to consciously think about the advantages and disadvantages of 
using centralized and decentralized approaches, particularly for the 
design of training and development programs. Centralizing design can 
enhance consistency of training content and offer potential cost 
savings. Departments and agencies with centralized approaches may, for 
example, have established internal "universities" to provide course 
content to as wide an audience as possible within the departments or 
agencies. Some agencies have also considered moving toward using 
learning content management systems[Footnote 11] as a method of 
facilitating and centralizing the development of training content using 
information technology. Likewise, centralization advantages can also 
continue into delivery and implementation of the programs. 
Centralization can help agencies realize cost savings through 
standardization of record keeping and simplified and more accurate 
reporting on courses, certifications, educational attainment, costs, or 
standards. A central learning management system, for example, can 
provide a more efficient means of ensuring quality, administrative 
efficiency, economy, or adequacy to meet requirements.

A decentralized approach to training design can enable agencies to 
tailor training programs to better meet local and organizational unit 
needs. Agencies with decentralized approaches often embed training 
representatives within their business lines and field structures to 
assist in coordination of training efforts, including design and 
development. In addition to enhancing local control over training 
content, decentralized approaches may enable field offices and 
organizational units to exert more control over resources and 
associated costs of training. Overall, some agencies have found success 
in implementing a combination of both centralized and decentralized 
approaches by centrally managing reporting and record keeping while 
allowing some localized management of training content. Whether they 
use a centralized or decentralized approach (or a combination of both) 
to design training and development efforts, agencies must limit 
unnecessary overlap and duplication of effort and ensure delivery of an 
integrated message when appropriate.

Look for:

* Mechanisms to help ensure that economies of scale are achieved by 
centralizing the design and delivery/purchase of training that has 
widespread applicability throughout the agency.

* Mechanisms to help ensure that decision-making responsibility is 
appropriately decentralized for highly customized training needs.

* Unnecessary overlap and duplication of effort in course design and 
development.

* Inconsistent training content delivered at different field locations.

* Gaps in training provided at certain field locations or within 
specific offices.

* Uncoordinated purchases of training services that result in higher 
than necessary overall training costs.

* Different levels or amounts of training provided to groups of 
employees with similar needs at different locations.

2(d): What criteria does the agency use in determining whether to 
design training and development programs in-house or obtain these 
services from a contractor or other external source?

Once the agency has identified its training and development needs, it 
must decide whether to buy or build the solution. Training can be 
provided by the agency itself, another government agency, a school, a 
manufacturer, a professional association, or other competent persons or 
groups in or out of government. To aid in decision making at this 
juncture, agencies should try to develop clear criteria for determining 
when to contract for training and development services. Factors that 
agencies should consider in these decisions include the capability of 
in-house staff to develop and implement the training; the prior 
experience, capability, and stability of possible providers in the 
marketplace; and agency limitations on cost, time, and resources. In 
certain circumstances, for example, agencies might rely on input from 
subject matter experts and high performers within the agency to support 
the design of training and development programs. These internal 
resources can often provide valuable insight into training design 
because of their familiarity with the agency's policies, programs, and 
corporate culture.

Interagency training can be used to supplement the training provided 
within the agency. Such interagency training can help address common 
developmental needs governmentwide and promote cost-efficiency by 
taking advantage of existing resources rather than creating similar 
programs in multiple agencies. In other cases, agencies might 
complement the knowledge, skills, and abilities of their staff by 
seeking outside expertise from consultants, professional associations, 
and other organizations. Such outside experts could provide cost-
efficient and specialized expertise on an as-needed basis, introduce a 
fresh perspective to addressing the agency's human capital challenges, 
and ensure confidentiality when obtaining employees' input on related 
human capital issues.

Look for:

* Efforts to identify cost-effective and robust options on designing 
training and development programs.

* The explicit use of fair and rational criteria in agency decisions 
about when and whether to design training and development programs in-
house or obtain these services from a contractor or other external 
source.

* Mechanisms to update decision rules and criteria on an ongoing basis, 
recognizing changes in such areas as market conditions, agency 
capabilities, and technological advances.

* Consideration of the consequences of sourcing decisions for the 
agency, including the impact on working relationships with employee 
organizations and other stakeholders.

2(e): How does the agency compare the merits of different delivery 
mechanisms (such as classroom or computer-based training) and determine 
what mix of mechanisms to use to ensure efficient and cost-effective 
delivery?

When considering the options of mechanisms for delivering training, 
agencies need to consider essential issues such as the goals and 
objectives for the training, the type of audience intended for the 
training, the nature of the training content, the availability of 
technology and resources, and the timing for delivering the training. 
Agencies can use a variety of instructional approaches to achieve 
learning--in the classroom, through distance learning, or in the 
workplace. Agencies also need to consider whether to provide 
individualized instruction or team-based training, for example. When 
warranted, agencies should consider blended learning that combines 
different teaching methods (e.g., Web-based and instructor-led) within 
the same training effort and provide trainees with the flexibilities to 
choose among different training delivery methods while leveraging 
resources in the most efficient way possible. When assessing delivery 
options, agencies can try to achieve economies of scale and avoid 
duplication of effort by taking advantage of existing course content or 
training, such as sharable on-line courseware[Footnote 12] or 
multiagency training programs.

Many organizations are taking advantage of more flexible design and 
delivery methods made possible by technology to deliver training to the 
user's desktop, thereby making training more accessible and cost 
effective.[Footnote 13] However, agencies must also consider the 
technological challenges of various approaches. For example, bandwidth 
could be insufficient to support desired use of multimedia interactive 
courseware; concerns about network security may impede learners' 
ability to access education and training material anytime and anywhere; 
and technological standards and specifications for emerging approaches 
might still be evolving. In addition, using distance learning 
approaches can be a challenge for some agencies with typical 
schoolhouse delivery approaches; agency schoolhouses can be resistant 
to change given that their infrastructure--funding, faculty, and 
facilities--is often closely tied to student throughput.

Look for:

* A comprehensive mix of formal and on-the-job training opportunities 
offered to employees.

* A suitable blend of training content that includes both the 
theoretical basis of the material (such as an explanation of the 
context and principles involved) as well as practical application 
issues (such as agency administrative procedures related to the 
material).

* Decision rules or other information identifying the factors that the 
agency considers in determining the most effective mix of mechanisms to 
incorporate into designs for training and development.

* Analysis of cost data on different delivery mechanisms.

* Strategies to continually update training and development 
opportunities, such as making use of advances in technologies.

* Evidence that the agency is investing in updated technologies and is 
open to new approaches.

2(f): Does the agency determine a targeted level of improved 
performance in order to ensure that the cost of a training or 
development program is appropriate to achieve the anticipated benefit?

An agency's ultimate goal in undertaking training and development 
efforts should be to optimize employee and organizational performance. 
In assessing how and to what degree performance could be improved with 
a specific training program, agencies should try to establish a 
targeted level of improved performance as well as assess the possible 
consequences if the training were not to occur. Determining such a 
targeted level of improved performance can aid agencies in assessing 
whether the expected costs associated with the proposed training are 
worth the anticipated benefits. When considering this targeted level of 
performance, agencies can benefit from considering the implications of 
both short-and long-term results.

Before committing to provide training, an agency should take into 
account the potential costs and anticipated benefits of the program. 
Expected costs of training to consider include development costs, 
direct implementation costs, indirect implementation costs (i.e., 
overhead), compensation for participants, and lost productivity or 
costs of "backfilling" positions during training. Anticipated benefits 
of training to consider include increased productivity (output), 
improved quality, reduced errors, and time and resource savings. Such 
an analysis can help the agency determine whether potential benefits 
outweigh the expected costs of the training effort.

Look for:

* Specific performance improvement goals in agency planning documents 
such as performance and strategic human capital plans, workforce plans, 
and training plans.

* Training and development design and evaluation documents that focus 
on identifying targeted performance improvements and report on progress 
in achieving results.

* Identification and consideration of expected costs and anticipated 
benefits of proposed training and development efforts.

2(g): How well does the agency incorporate measures of effectiveness 
into courses it designs?

The design of a training or development program should involve the 
formulation of a learning objective,[Footnote 14] which should be 
stated in terms that are specific and achievable. To help determine 
whether such a learning objective will be achieved, agencies should 
incorporate measures of effectiveness into the courses they design. 
Defining objectives in a measurable way enables agencies to offer a 
more convincing quality of feedback. Different types of performance 
indicators can be used to measure goal attainment, such as input, 
output, impact, and outcome. Whenever possible, training goals should 
measure the organizational results being achieved by the training 
participants rather than be limited to measuring the training inputs or 
outputs (e.g., number of people trained). Also, performance measures 
should link directly to the offices responsible for making the programs 
work. Training programs that are designed to address the agency's 
strategic goals often do not succeed without cooperation and shared 
accountability with the program offices.

Look for:

* Clear linkages between specific learning objectives and 
organizational results.

* Well-written learning objectives that are unambiguous, achievable, 
and measurable.

* Efforts to ensure that learning objectives have been effectively 
communicated to all interested parties.

* Procedures to incorporate feedback from line managers, subject matter 
experts, top leadership, and technical, human capital, and other 
stakeholders on designing learning objectives and determining which 
measures are best to determine effectiveness.

Component 3: Implementation:

Implementation involves ensuring effective and efficient delivery of 
training and development opportunities in an environment that supports 
learning and change. Some key questions related to implementation 
include the following.

What steps do agency leaders take to communicate the importance of 
training and developing employees, and their expectations for training 
and development programs to achieve results?

Is there a training and performance organization that is held 
accountable, along with the line executives, for the maximum 
performance of the workforce? :

Are agency managers responsible for reinforcing new behaviors, 
providing useful tools, and identifying and removing barriers to help 
employees implement learned behaviors on the job?

How does the agency select employees (or provide the opportunity for 
employees to self-select) to participate in training and development 
efforts?

What options has the agency considered in paying for employee training 
and development and adjusting employee work schedules so that employees 
can participate in these developmental activities?

Does the agency take actions to foster an environment conducive to 
effective training and development? :

What steps does the agency take to encourage employees to buy in to the 
goals of training and development efforts, so that they participate 
fully and apply new knowledge and skills when doing their work?

Does the agency collect data during implementation to ensure feedback 
on its training and development programs?

3(a): What steps do agency leaders take to communicate the importance 
of training and developing employees, and their expectations for 
training and development programs to achieve results?

Senior leaders in the agency can play a critical role by clearly 
communicating throughout the organization that investments in training 
and development are expected to produce results and that open, candid 
feedback from employees can enhance the effectiveness of these 
investments. To better accomplish these efforts, agency leaders should 
develop a mix of communication strategies to encourage and reward 
employees for participating in training and development activities. 
These strategies should focus on ways to foster understanding of the 
importance, benefits, and expected impact of training and development 
efforts throughout the agency. Agencies can show their commitment to 
strategic human capital management by investing in professional 
development programs that can assist in meeting specific performance 
needs. These programs can include opportunities for a combination of 
formal and on-the-job training, leadership development and rotational 
assignments, periodic formal assessments, action learning[Footnote 15] 
and other team-based approaches, and mentoring relationships with 
senior managers. In helping to develop and carry out these 
communication strategies, agency senior executives have a central 
responsibility to foster employee self-development and recognize self-
initiated performance improvements, provide training on a 
nondiscriminatory basis, and establish and make full use of agency 
facilities for training employees.

Look for:

* Mechanisms for employees and employee organizations to provide 
feedback on their perceptions and specific experiences with training 
and development.

* Comprehensive communication strategies to encourage employees to 
participate in training and development activities.

* Executive-level champions (sponsors) enlisted by the agency to ensure 
that training strategies are incorporated into organizational decision 
making and aligned with organizational goals.

* Information in plans regarding training and development investments, 
expectations, and accomplishments.

* Transparent information available to employees though memoranda, 
announcements, and intranet Web sites related to career maps and paths, 
competency models, CPEs, and other professional requirements such as 
licenses and certifications.

* Evidence that agency leaders provide needed tools and resources to 
line managers and employees.

* Consistent support and appropriate funding for the agency's overall 
training and development efforts.

3(b): Is there a training and performance organization that is held 
accountable, along with the line executives, for the maximum 
performance of the workforce?

In addition to the buy-in that occurs through stakeholder involvement 
in the planning, design, and development of training, agencies need to 
ensure accountability by holding the training and performance 
organization accountable, along with line management, for maximum 
performance of the workforce. The agency's training organization and 
agency line managers should, for example, make every effort to 
demonstrate the linkages between the agency's mission and goals and its 
training and development efforts. These important stakeholders should 
also work together to establish control mechanisms to ensure that 
agency employees successfully complete required and assigned training 
and development. To advance this purpose, agencies must assign 
authority and delegate responsibility to the proper personnel and 
establish clear accountability for maximizing workforce performance. 
Likewise, if agencies expect both their training organizations and line 
managers to assume greater responsibility and be held accountable for 
results, agencies must ensure that these key stakeholders have the 
tools and resources they need to fulfill these expectations.

Look for:

* Evidence that the agency assigns authority and delegates 
responsibility to the proper personnel and establishes clear 
accountability for maximizing workforce performance and for achieving 
the agency's training and development goals.

* Policies, organizational charts, or other representations depicting 
the linkages between the agency's mission and goals and its training 
and development organization.

* Indications that training officials and line managers work in 
partnership to achieve common goals.

* Possible stovepipes in the organization, caused by fragmented lines 
of communication and accountability, that may contribute to duplicated 
effort or missed opportunities.

3(c): Are agency managers responsible for reinforcing new behaviors, 
providing useful tools, and identifying and removing barriers to help 
employees implement learned behaviors on the job?

To help employees implement learned behaviors on the job, agency 
managers can work to reinforce new behaviors, provide useful tools, and 
identify and remove barriers that impede performance. To stress the 
importance of this responsibility, agency managers should be held 
accountable for creating an environment that encourages innovation and 
supports continuous improvement to achieve strategic goals and 
objectives. Agencies should create the expectation that managers will 
discuss developmental needs with their employees and identify where 
training and development is appropriate. Agencies also can track 
managerial support for training through both enrollment and 
participation rates in their units.

To reinforce new behaviors, agency managers and supervisors should 
ensure that their employees understand the importance of using 
knowledge and skills gained in training to improve performance and are 
rewarded appropriately for achieving results. Agency managers should 
also provide useful tools to help their employees implement learned 
behaviors on the job. Helpful tools such as job aids[Footnote 16] can 
minimize or eliminate the need for specific training altogether. Agency 
managers should also take steps in removing barriers to training and 
using learned behaviors on the job. For example, managers and 
supervisors could take steps to address the workday distractions that 
can interrupt employees' training efforts and actively reinforce the 
importance of separating "work time" from "training time.":

Look for:

* The extent to which managers are evaluated on their efforts to 
develop their employees and enhance opportunities for employees to 
improve performance and achieve results.

* Responses in employee satisfaction surveys or other feedback on 
issues related to the organization's culture and working environment.

* Use of feedback from supervisors and participants on the extent to 
which training and development resulted in changes in individual job 
performance.

* Policies and procedures to ensure that training and development 
efforts and expectations are discussed and understood by managers, 
supervisors, employees, training coordinators, and others.

* Employee feedback on managers' and supervisors' performance in 
reinforcing new behaviors, providing needed tools, and removing 
barriers to implementing learned behaviors on the job.

* Examples of tools such as job aids to assist employees in 
implementing learned behaviors on the job.

* Rewards and incentives for managers and supervisors who consider new 
ways of working, provide needed tools to employees, and identify and 
remove barriers to improved performance.

* Rewards and incentives for employees who use new knowledge and skills 
to achieve results.

3(d): How does the agency select employees (or provide the opportunity 
for employees to self-select) to participate in training and 
development efforts?

Agencies sometimes select employees to participate in training and 
development for a variety of reasons unrelated to the performance needs 
of the organization or individual.[Footnote 17] For example, employees 
have been selected on a sporadic, unplanned basis or as a reward for 
previous superior performance or contributions. For optimal effect, 
however, participation of employees in training and development 
programs should be linked to agreed-upon goals and priorities 
established by supervisors and their employees. Likewise, these goals 
and priorities should align with those expressed in the agency's 
training, performance, or other relevant plans. In addition, employees 
should be selected for developmental programs based on the suitability 
and usefulness of the training content. In some cases, employees may 
already know the material or do not need to know the material to 
perform their duties.

It is also essential that agencies consider all employees fairly. 
Agency leaders need to establish procedures to ensure that the 
selection of employees for training proceeds without regard to 
political preference, race, color, religion, national origin, sex, 
marital status, age, or handicapping condition, and with proper regard 
for employee privacy and constitutional rights as provided by merit 
system principles.[Footnote 18] In addition, the agency must follow 
merit promotion procedures in selecting employees for training designed 
primarily to prepare trainees for advancement and not directly related 
to improving performance in their current positions. Because certain 
developmental assignments can enhance careers and help qualify people 
for promotion, they should be open to competition, and agencies should 
advertise these assignments to all eligible candidates.

Look for:

* The selection of employees for training and development opportunities 
on the basis of agreed-upon goals and priorities.

* Selection criteria for executive candidates that are specifically 
linked to the agency's shared vision and the competencies and broad 
expectations it has for its leaders.

* The suitability and timeliness of the selection of employees for 
training and development given employees' current duties and existing 
skills and competencies.

* Strong indications that the agency recognizes that an inclusive 
workforce is a competitive advantage for achieving results and that it 
demonstrates this by working to meet the training and development needs 
of employees of all backgrounds.

* Actions taken by agency leaders and managers to ensure or enhance 
diversity in the content and delivery of, and participation in, the 
agency's training and development programs.

* Procedures to ensure fair selection of employees for training and 
development opportunities.

* Evidence of union and employee complaints, grievances, or concerns 
related to unfair or discriminatory training practices.

3(e): What options has the agency considered in paying for employee 
training and development and adjusting employee work schedules so that 
employees can participate in these developmental activities?

In general, agencies may pay training and development expenses from 
appropriated funds or other available funds. Agencies can pay all of 
the training costs for employees or can agree with the employees to pay 
some or none of the costs. Agencies also have the flexibility to 
advance or reimburse employees all or part of the costs of approved 
training. Expenses of training can include the cost of tuition; 
purchase or rental of books, materials, and supplies; laboratory and 
library fees; and travel, per diem, and relocation expenses. In 
addition, agencies may pay the expenses for employees to obtain 
professional credentials, including expenses for professional 
accreditation, state-imposed and professional licenses, and 
professional certification as well as examinations to obtain such 
credentials. Agencies can also provide financial incentives, such as 
retention allowances, to workers who obtain job-related degrees and 
certifications. Furthermore, agencies have the authority to pay for 
employees to obtain academic degrees, as long as the training meets 
agency needs and is not designed only to help an employee obtain a 
promotion. Likewise, agencies can also pay for employees' student loan 
repayments.

In addition to the options in paying for employees' training and 
development, agencies also have flexibilities in scheduling employees' 
time related to these developmental efforts. Agencies can allow 
employees to participate in training and development during normal duty 
hours or during nonduty hours. Agencies may also adjust employees' work 
schedules to accommodate educational endeavors, as long as it will not 
unduly interfere with work accomplishment and agencies incur no 
additional personnel costs.

Look for:

* Evidence that the agency has taken into account the full range of 
flexibilities in paying for employees' training and development.

* Indications that the agency has considered various options available 
for scheduling training and development for its employees.

* Oversight systems that ensure employees take advantage of legitimate 
training and development opportunities and the agency does not pay for 
fraudulent or inadequate training.

3(f): Does the agency take actions to foster an environment conducive 
to effective training and development?

An environment conducive to training and development can go a long way 
toward contributing to effective learning across the agency. Agencies 
can benefit considerably by making use of instructors, facilitators, 
mentors, and coaches who are engaging, responsive, flexible, 
knowledgeable, and experienced. This approach, which could itself 
involve training for trainers and coaches, ensures that these trainers 
and coaches not only know the subject matter and issues involved but 
also can effectively transfer these skills and knowledge to others. 
Agencies also need space, facilities, and equipment that are adequate 
to meet demand and are favorable to successful learning. For example, 
employees may need sufficient time away from normal work duties to 
access computers or simulators to complete a training program. 
Similarly, agencies need suitable administrative systems that can aid 
in project management and scheduling of training and development 
events. Furthermore, proper timing and pacing of training courses and 
developmental assignments can also contribute to successful learning. 
This practice can be particularly effective when recognizing the timing 
that best meets the needs of both the agency and the individual.

The delivery of training and development programs should also recognize 
specific job processes and procedures in the agency as well as the 
agency's general organizational culture. It is obviously a waste of 
resources when training and development programs do not correspond with 
how specific jobs should be done. To help in this regard, facilitators 
and instructors should make sure that employees know why they are 
participating in the training by clearly communicating learning 
objectives and linking them to managers' expectations and 
organizational goals. Likewise, because an organization's beliefs and 
values affect the behavior of its members, the delivery of training and 
development programs should also take into account the organizational 
culture of the agency. For example, the culture of an agency that 
already has computers easily accessible to most employees may more 
readily adapt to e-learning approaches than that of an agency whose 
employees have limited access to, or do not rely as much on, technology 
in carrying out their work. By recognizing and implementing training 
and development programs that reflect these considerations, agencies 
can help foster more active participation by employees in training 
courses and developmental assignments.

Look for:

* Ways the agency ensures that it employs engaging, responsive, 
flexible, knowledgeable, and experienced instructors, facilitators, 
mentors, and coaches.

* Evidence that the agency has properly trained managers to coach, 
evaluate, and conduct employee career discussions.

* Space, facilities, and equipment that meet the developmental needs of 
participants without creating unplanned excess capacity.

* Administrative systems and databases that enable the agency to 
properly manage scheduling and support of training and development 
programs.

* Appropriate timing and pacing for training sessions and developmental 
assignments given the developmental needs of employees and the mission-
and program-related needs of the agency or the federal government 
overall.

* Efforts to foster active involvement of participants in training and 
development programs.

* Evidence that the agency's training and development activities 
appropriately reflect and take into account the organizational culture 
of the agency.

3(g): What steps does the agency take to encourage employees to buy in 
to the goals of training and development efforts, so that they 
participate fully and apply new knowledge and skills when doing their 
work?

Agencies can undertake various steps to encourage employee buy-in to 
the goals of training and development efforts. Ensuring employee input 
and ongoing feedback is one important step to increasing buy-in and 
promoting a shared understanding between managers and employees of 
training and development goals and related performance measures. As 
employees develop a shared or common understanding of how their 
individual and combined efforts contribute to the agency's overall 
results and successes, they can better focus on their own efforts and 
priorities. Agencies can use a range of communication methods to build 
organizational teamwork, including two-way communication between 
leaders and employees about employees' efforts and their contributions 
to the agency's outcomes. Agencies can draw on employees' frontline 
knowledge of work processes and customer needs. They also can empower 
employees to contribute constructive ideas for improving existing 
training and development policies and practices as well as identifying 
additional training and development needs for individual employees and 
the agency.

Agencies can also encourage buy-in by ensuring employees' ready access 
to development information, allowing the employees to control their own 
development and career paths. The availability of opportunities for 
employees to direct their own learning pace and environment can also 
enhance employee loyalty. Some organizations have developed 
comprehensive guidance to help employees manage their career paths and 
enhance their professional development. Also, some agencies have 
developed Web-based, single-point-of-entry systems that allow 
employees located worldwide to access training and career development 
information. Agencies have also encouraged or required the use of self-
directed tools, such as IDPs, to give employees responsibility for 
assessing their development needs. In some cases, agencies may 
establish training agreements[Footnote 19] and continued service 
agreements[Footnote 20] with specific employees that allow for employee 
development while also protecting agency interests.

Look for:

* Evidence that employees are encouraged to identify and take advantage 
of training and professional development activities and that available 
training is perceived as relevant and professionally rewarding.

* Indications that agency leaders seek out the views of employees at 
all levels in developing approaches to training and development and 
that communication flows up and down the organization.

* Opportunities for employees to work in a learning environment, 
including (1) access to course catalogs and other training and 
development events of potential interest (such as conferences and 
briefings) and (2) availability of self-paced learning when 
appropriate.

* Policies and use of IDPs and other mechanisms to encourage employee 
development.

* Rewards and incentives for employees who actively support their own 
individual development and the development of other employees at the 
agency.

* Use of training agreements and continued service agreements as career 
development tools and methods for fully utilizing employees to meet 
organizational and staffing needs.

3(h): Does the agency collect data during implementation to ensure 
feedback on its training and development programs?

As with other programs or services that agencies deliver, it is 
important for agencies to use program performance information in 
assessing the progress that training and development programs make 
toward achieving results. Agencies should keep in mind that they need 
to collect data corresponding to established training objectives 
throughout the implementation process to refine and continually 
improve, deliver, and enhance learning. These data include information 
collected through interviews and surveys, analysis of work samples, and 
reviews of existing monitoring and reporting data. In addition to 
information from the training participants themselves, agencies should 
seek input from trainers, supervisors, coworkers, and customers. 
Information systems, such as learning management systems and financial 
management systems, can also provide crucial data for demonstrating 
results. A rigorous data collection effort will allow for ongoing 
evaluation of training and development efforts and improve agencies' 
ability to make needed adjustments.

Look for:

* Information and examples showing how the agency determines when and 
how to adjust ongoing implementation of training and development 
efforts based on the agency's tracking of performance data.

* Feedback from key stakeholders on how well training and development 
programs are working and whether adjustments may be needed.

* Information on how the agency establishes accountability for results 
of training and development efforts.

* Evidence that the agency collects appropriate performance data during 
implementation.

Component 4: Evaluation:

Evaluation involves assessing the extent to which training and 
development efforts contribute to improved performance and results. 
Some key questions related to evaluation include the following.

To what extent does the agency systematically plan for and evaluate the 
effectiveness of its training and development efforts?

Does the agency use the appropriate analytical approaches to assess its 
training and development programs?

What performance data (including qualitative and quantitative measures) 
does the agency use to assess the results achieved through training and 
development efforts? :

How does the agency incorporate evaluation feedback into the planning, 
design, and implementation of its training and development efforts?

Does the agency incorporate different perspectives (including those of 
line managers and staff, customers, and experts in areas such as 
financial, information, and human capital management) in assessing the 
impact of training on performance? :

How does the agency track the cost and delivery of its training and 
development programs?

How does the agency assess the benefits achieved through training and 
development programs?

Does the agency compare its training investments, methods, or outcomes 
with those of other organizations to identify innovative approaches or 
lessons learned?

4(a): To what extent does the agency systematically plan for and 
evaluate the effectiveness of its training and development efforts?

The changing role of government requires not only new organizational 
structures and innovative ways of working but also an ever-increasing 
need to assess the best means of fulfilling multiple priorities with 
limited resources. Agency leaders and other decision makers are 
increasingly emphasizing the importance of demonstrating results 
achieved through the significant investments in time and money devoted 
to training and developing employees. Training and development efforts 
are often quite complex and challenging to evaluate, however. Since 
training and development strategies interrelate with other strategies 
and factors in attempting to change people and organizations, isolating 
the performance improvements that result from a specific training 
activity is especially difficult. Perhaps, as a consequence, the 
traditional approach of collecting and reporting data related to 
training and development often involved indicators that could be 
readily quantified, such as the number of employees trained, training 
hours per employee, and total training hours. While necessary, these 
kinds of measures do not fully provide agencies with the kind of 
information they need to determine how training and development efforts 
contribute to improved performance, reduced costs, or a greater 
capacity to meet new and emerging transformation challenges.

To measure the real impact of training, agencies need to move beyond 
these data on inputs and outputs by developing additional indicators 
that help determine how training and development efforts contribute to 
the accomplishment of agency goals and objectives. These efforts can be 
outlined in a data collection and analysis plan, including a 
description of measures to be used to demonstrate internal influences 
on productivity and the external influence on customers. Such a plan 
highlights the importance of having clear goals about what the training 
or development program is expected to achieve and agreed-upon measures 
to ascertain progress toward these goals. Developing and using such a 
plan can guide the agency in a systematic approach to assessing the 
effectiveness and efficiency of both specific training and development 
programs and more comprehensively assessing its entire training and 
development effort. For example, a major program requiring substantial 
investment merits more focused attention and analysis, so an agency may 
decide to devote most of its evaluation resources to that program. 
Planning will allow an informed and strategic perspective for 
evaluation decisions, however, rather than an ad hoc approach that 
might result in missing important opportunities and either over 
investing or under investing in evaluations. Agencies can use the 
results of these evaluations for better decision making on whether to 
modify or redesign training programs or eliminate ineffective programs. 
They can also use evaluations in decisions about future training and 
development programs, such as evaluations of data on delivery 
mechanisms and environmental barriers to improved performance that need 
to be addressed.

Look for:

* Agency leadership's commitment and belief in the value of training 
and development as expressed through its receptiveness to and use of 
results from employees' feedback on developmental needs.

* A data collection and analysis plan that sets priorities for 
evaluations and systematically covers the methods, timing, and 
responsibilities for data collection.

* Consideration of various factors, such as the working environment and 
the job market, that may affect how the agency uses training to improve 
results, either internally (such as by enhancing productivity) or 
externally (such as by improving customer service).

* Results of the agency's training and development efforts being widely 
shared across the organization.

4(b): Does the agency use the appropriate analytical approaches to 
assess its training and development programs?

When evaluating specific training and development programs, agencies 
should select the analytical approach that best measures the effect of 
a program while also considering what is realistic and reasonable given 
the broader context of the issue and fiscal constraints. In recent 
years, a growing number of organizations have adopted a balanced, 
multilevel approach to evaluating their training and development 
efforts. Such an approach can help provide varied data and perspectives 
on the effect that training efforts have on the organization. One 
commonly accepted model consists of five levels of assessment.[Footnote 
21] The first level measures the training participants' reaction to, 
and satisfaction with, the training program or planned actions to use 
new or enhanced competencies. The second level measures the extent to 
which learning has occurred because of the training effort. The third 
level measures the application of this learning to the work environment 
through changes in behavior that trainees exhibit on the job because of 
the training or development program. The fourth level measures the 
impact of the training program on the agency's program or 
organizational results. Finally, the fifth level--often referred to as 
return on investment (ROI)--compares the benefits (quantified in 
dollars) to the costs of the training and development program.

Not all training and development programs require, or are suitable for, 
higher levels of evaluation. Indeed, higher levels of evaluation can be 
challenging to conduct because of the difficulty and costs associated 
with data collection and the complexity in directly linking training 
and development programs to improved individual and organizational 
performance. Figure 3 depicts an example gradation of the extent to 
which an agency could use the various levels of evaluation to assess 
its training and development programs. For example, an agency may 
decide to evaluate participants' reactions for all (100 percent) of its 
programs, while conducting an ROI analysis for 5 percent of its 
programs. Factors to consider when deciding the appropriate level of 
evaluation include estimated costs of the training effort, size of the 
training audience, management interest, program visibility, and the 
anticipated "life span" of the effort. Each agency will need to 
consider the feasibility and cost-effectiveness of conducting these in-
depth evaluations, along with budgetary and staffing circumstances that 
may limit the agency's ability to complete such evaluations.

Figure 3: Example Agency's Training and Development Programs Assessed 
Using Each Level of Evaluation:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

Look for:

* Demonstrated efforts to use appropriate methods to evaluate training 
and development efforts that recognize the feasibility and cost-
effectiveness of specific evaluation efforts.

* Guidelines or criteria for determining when and how the agency's 
training programs will be evaluated using different levels or 
analytical methods.

* Measures of training participants' reaction to, and satisfaction 
with, the training program or planned actions to use new or enhanced 
competencies.

* Measures of changes in knowledge, skills, and abilities; on-the-job 
behavior and progress on planned actions; and organizational impact.

* Comparisons of benefits (including qualitative, estimated, and in 
some cases monetized benefits) to the costs of the training and 
development program.

4(c): What performance data (including qualitative and quantitative 
measures) does the agency use to assess the results achieved through 
training and development efforts?

Successful organizations typically develop and implement human capital 
approaches based on a thorough assessment of the organizations' 
specific needs and capabilities. Valid and reliable data are the 
starting point for such assessments. To assess the results achieved 
through training and development, agencies can rely upon hard 
(quantitative) data, such as productivity/output, quality, costs, and 
time, or soft (qualitative) data, such as feedback on how well a 
training program satisfied employees' expectations. By taking steps to 
agree on measures of success up front, agency officials can decide on 
the objectives for each training and development program. For example, 
for an agency that has designed and implemented a program to train its 
employees on new procedures for processing specific applications, 
measures of productivity (output) could involve the number of 
applications processed per day, quality could be the number of errors 
per 1,000 applications processed, time could be the average number of 
hours to process each application, and cost could involve the total 
cost to process each application. Soft data could include employees' 
and managers' views, collected through questionnaires, on the extent to 
which employees applied the content of the training program to their 
jobs. For employees whose work is not as quantifiable, it is even more 
important that agency officials agree up front on the training 
program's objectives and how performance toward these objectives is to 
be evaluated. By engaging a broad perspective, agencies can help ensure 
buy-in from stakeholders about how training and development programs 
are assessed. These perspectives can also contribute to agencies' 
efforts to ensure that the data they use are verified and reliable. 
Logic models,[Footnote 22] the use of intermediate measures, and other 
approaches can help decision makers understand linkages, especially for 
developmental programs, where outcomes may not be apparent for several 
years.

As part of a balanced approach, assessing training and development 
efforts should also consider feedback from customers, such as whether 
employee behaviors or agency processes and services effectively met 
their needs and expectations. Using a balanced approach that reflects 
feedback from customers and employees, as well as organizational 
results, is particularly important as agencies transform their cultures 
and operations. In addition, because the work of federal employees can 
be complex and often cannot be reduced to a single task, a balanced 
approach to both the types and sources of data helps to strengthen the 
linkages between training and development programs and improved 
performance.

Look for:

* Use of both quantitative and qualitative measures to assess training 
results, in areas such as increased productivity and improved job 
satisfaction.

* Use of a balanced set of measures that reflect feedback from 
employees and customers and organizational results.

* Use of measurement tools, such as templates, that assist in 
systematically collecting valid and reliable performance data.

* Determined efforts to improve the quality of performance data.

4(d): How does the agency incorporate evaluation feedback into the 
planning, design, and implementation of its training and development 
efforts?

An agency should view its training and development efforts not as a 
static, after-the-fact requirement but as a continual, ongoing effort 
throughout the planning, design, and implementation components of the 
process. When undertaking planning and front-end analysis, the agency 
should make a concerted effort to identify and use focused and relevant 
data and measures that will aid in guiding future training and 
development efforts. These considerations may highlight the need for 
the agency to reassess what types of data it currently collects, how 
such data might be improved for future assessments, and how to build in 
agreed-upon measures up front to continually measure results.

For design and development of training, agencies should rely on 
evaluations and benchmarking to determine what approaches work best 
given all the related elements, such as the proposed audience for the 
training program, the material to be covered, and possible delivery 
mechanisms that could be employed. Building in such evaluation feedback 
will help to identify and remove obstacles to successful 
implementation. Reviewing staff and instructor feedback regularly is 
also important to improving the overall process and thus increasing the 
likelihood of success. Catching potential problems at the early stages 
of the process can save valuable time and resources that a major 
redesign of training would likely entail. Agencies can use evaluation 
feedback to identify problems and improve training and development 
programs as needed, either by making incremental changes or redesigning 
the entire training effort to incorporate major changes.

Look for:

* Indications that the agency is making fact-based determinations of 
the impact of its training and development programs by using these 
assessments to refine or redesign training and development efforts as 
needed.

* Systematic monitoring and feedback processes.

* Informal feedback mechanisms.

* Information showing that the agency reallocates or redirects its 
resources based on data derived from evaluating its training and 
development activities.

* Examples of evaluations, and possible resulting changes made, during 
the planning/front-end analysis, design/development, and 
implementation components of the training and development process.

* Indications of a program for bestowing awards, recognition, and 
incentives on the basis of meeting or exceeding targets related to 
improving training and development.

4(e): Does the agency incorporate different perspectives (including 
those of line managers and staff, customers, and experts in areas such 
as financial, information, and human capital management) in assessing 
the impact of training on performance?

To the extent possible, agencies need to ensure that they incorporate a 
wide variety of stakeholder perspectives in assessing the impact of 
training on employee and agency performance. Stakeholders' perspectives 
can be obtained through surveys and questionnaires, individual or group 
interviews, or communication with more formal multidisciplinary bodies 
such as advisory or education councils. The sources of such information 
could include the training participants themselves; training designers, 
developers, and facilitators; agency leaders, managers, supervisors, 
subordinates, and coworkers; employee organizations; internal and 
external customers; and functional and subject matter experts. To 
complete valid and useful evaluations, it could be helpful to address 
the possibility of low participation on the part of employees and 
managers in surveys and focus groups that may limit that agency's 
access to these important data.

Situations in which stakeholders could offer their perspectives abound. 
Training participants can provide valuable information on whether they 
were satisfied with the training, learned from the effort, and used 
these new skills and competencies on their jobs to improve results. 
Training facilitators can provide useful perspectives by observing the 
extent to which trainees are absorbing the training material and 
demonstrating newly acquired skills in the training environment. 
Managers, supervisors, subordinates, and coworkers can often provide 
practical insight on the extent to which employees' on-the-job behavior 
changed in light of training and development efforts. Internal and 
external customers can also provide worthwhile feedback to agencies 
about the extent to which employee performance has improved, 
particularly for competencies related to customer service. Lastly, 
subject matter experts and functional specialists may use feedback from 
trainees and instructors as the basis for their own valuable insights 
regarding the appropriate level of detail provided in a particular 
training program. Such insights play an important role in helping 
agencies find a comfortable median between overly broad and unduly 
detailed course content.

Look for:

* Surveys and questionnaires of stakeholders, such as employees, 
supervisors, managers, customers, subject matter experts, and advisory 
councils.

* Interviews and focus group meetings with stakeholders.

* Responsive and timely efforts to collect and analyze individuals' 
perspectives and to use this feedback to improve or redesign training 
programs when necessary.

4(f): How does the agency track the cost and delivery of its training 
and development programs?

Agency managers and supervisors are often aware that investments--both 
monetary and nonmonetary--in training and development initiatives can 
be quite large. However, across the federal government, evaluation 
efforts have often been hindered by the lack of accurate and reliable 
data to document the total costs of training efforts. To obtain a 
comprehensive determination of the costs of these initiatives, agencies 
need to find ways around barriers that prevent them from fully and 
accurately identifying the expenses associated with all components of 
their training and development processes. These costs can include 
expenses for instructional development; participant and instructor 
attendance; facility, material, and equipment costs; as well as travel 
and per diem expenses. To track the cost and delivery of training and 
development programs, agencies need credible and reliable data from 
learning management systems as well as accounting, financial, and 
performance reporting systems. To the extent possible, agencies also 
need to ensure data consistency across the organization. Variation in 
the methods used to collect data can greatly affect the analysis of 
uniform, quality data on the cost and delivery of training and 
development programs.

Look for:

* A comprehensive learning management system that can track the 
delivery of training within the agency.

* Accounting, financial, and performance reporting systems that produce 
credible, reliable, and consistent data on agency activities, including 
training and development programs.

* Identification and tracking of the associated costs of specific 
training and development programs.

* Concerted efforts to ensure the quality of agency data, such as 
improving administrative data systems as an aid to more relevant and 
reliable data and possibly conducting special data collections when 
necessary.

* Barriers to providing a comprehensive picture of costs, expenses, and 
other financial information related to training and development 
activities.

4(g): How does the agency assess the benefits achieved through training 
and development programs?

In addition to isolating and tracking the costs associated with 
training and development programs, agencies should also endeavor to 
identify the associated benefits of such efforts. These benefits can 
include, for example, increased productivity, enhanced customer 
satisfaction, increased quality, reduced errors, or decreased costs. 
From an agency's perspective, the benefits derived from a specific 
training and development program are of greatest significance when 
employees directly apply newly acquired learning in their individual 
job performance and, ultimately, their collective performance. Employee 
surveys or exit interviews may provide information on whether the 
agency's training and development programs help or hinder recruitment 
or retention, as access to training and a learning environment are 
important factors for some individuals.

An agency can use various analytical methods in attempting to assess 
the impact of a training and development program on individual and 
organizational performance. Feedback from stakeholders can provide 
estimates on the degree to which they believe improvement can be 
attributed to training. Using specific measures, agencies can also use 
performance tracking to monitor the performance of individuals and work 
units after training is completed to obtain before-and-after 
comparisons of performance. The use of control groups is another method 
agencies could consider to help reveal differences between the job 
performance of trained and untrained employees. Forward-looking 
approaches such as trend analysis and forecasting can serve as ways to 
estimate future performance without the training, thus allowing for a 
comparison with post-training performance. When using any of these 
analytical methods, agencies should keep in mind that the lack of 
change in employees' behavior after training does not necessarily mean 
that the training program was ineffective. Other factors such as 
incentives and work environment can also influence employees' use of 
newly acquired skills and competencies on their jobs.

The agency may decide it should take steps to determine whether the 
benefits derived from the training and development program are worth 
the associated costs. One way of looking at this is calculating how 
long it will take before the benefits from the training outweigh the 
projected costs. This information would be useful, for example, in 
establishing priorities among training and development programs, as 
well as in comparing training or development programs with other 
potential strategies and determining how effectively they could work 
together to improve performance.

Once benefits are identified, the agency can then decide whether to 
attempt to convert these benefits into a monetary value to calculate an 
ROI. Estimating the monetary value of these benefits is one of the most 
challenging parts of the effort to determine the ROI for a given 
training and development program. Converting some benefits into dollar 
amounts is straightforward, but other associated benefits may be much 
more difficult to translate into dollars. Once these costs and benefits 
have been estimated, the agency can then calculate an ROI ratio for the 
training program. In some cases, such as those involving initial e-
learning experiences, agencies may be able to identify immediate cost 
savings through reduced time, travel, and facility costs--and there may 
be sizeable investment start-up costs for e-learning as well. The key 
point remains--agencies' evaluations must be able to demonstrate that 
employees are learning and retaining the information provided in 
training or development programs. For example, e-learning may be more 
effective in some instances, while in others the topics or the 
employees may not learn as well from e-learning as through other 
methods. The bottom line is the extent to which any training and 
development program engages participants and helps improve employee and 
organizational performance.

Look for:

* Use of control groups to reveal possible differences between trained 
and untrained employees.

* Stakeholder feedback and estimates on improvements attributed to a 
training and development program.

* Use of forward-looking analytical approaches, such as forecasting and 
trend analysis, to aid in estimating and comparing future performance 
with and without the training intervention.

* Conversions of identified training benefits to monetary values.

* Comparisons of the associated costs and monetized benefits of 
training programs to determine an ROI.

* Use of data on associated benefits and the results of ROI analyses in 
the agency's decision making processes for refining, redesigning, or 
terminating specific training and development programs.

4(h): Does the agency compare its training investments, methods, or 
outcomes with those of other organizations to identify innovative 
approaches or lessons learned?

To aid in the effort of using data-driven assessments to develop and 
implement human capital approaches, agencies can compare their training 
investments, methods, or outcomes with those of other organizations. 
There are many ways to help improve performance, so it is important for 
agencies to continually look to others to identify innovative 
approaches that may relate to their training and development efforts. 
For example, strategies such as blended learning can offer various 
options to provide needed interactions, participant feedback, and 
access to experts. Information on how leading organizations use e-
learning can provide valuable input as agencies enhance their 
capabilities. Job aids, and other strategies to provide performance 
support embedded in the workflow, will also continue to affect when and 
how easily employees can obtain the information and skills they need to 
do their work, which shapes how the agency can best use its training 
and development investments.

Benchmarking is a technique that can help agencies determine who is the 
very best, who sets the standard, and what that standard is. With these 
data in hand, an agency can use benchmarking to compare its 
investments, approaches, and outcomes with those of public and private 
organizations that are undertaking notably innovative and effective 
training and development efforts. Of course, this must be done within 
the context of that agency's unique environment and situation. 
Organizations can successfully use benchmarking to increase 
productivity and quality through an understanding of what level of 
performance is possible and why a gap exists between current and 
optimal performance. Using these benchmarks, agencies can uncover 
weaknesses in their training and development strategies that need 
improvement and identify new ideas, mechanisms, and metrics that they 
could employ. As is often the case, agencies informed by such 
benchmarking of effective practices are likely to develop their own 
innovative approaches and lessons learned for improving individual and 
organizational performance.

Look for:

* Concerted efforts to identify agency work practices related to 
training and development that need improvement.

* Attempts to identify innovative and effective training and 
development efforts outside of the agency for possible benchmarking.

* Comparisons of the agency's activities and processes with those of 
other organizations considered "best in class" for particular training 
and development efforts.

* Implementation of identified benchmark solutions to improve 
performance.

[End of section]

Section 3: Summary Observations on the Training and Development 
Process:

Our examination of major issues to consider when assessing an agency's 
training and development efforts revealed certain core characteristics 
that constitute a strategic training and development process. We 
identified these core characteristics by analyzing and categorizing the 
various "look for" elements associated with the key questions, as 
described in section 2 of this guide. Figure 4 lists and summarizes the 
eight core characteristics of the training and development process that 
we identified as part of preparing this guide. We believe that a 
concerted effort to integrate these core characteristics can further 
each agency's efforts to continually improve its training and 
development process. Conversely, identifying where an agency's training 
and development process lacks these core characteristics can help 
address barriers that hinder its ability to achieve meaningful results.

Figure 4: Core Characteristics of a Strategic Training and Development 
Process:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

Strategic alignment. Clear linkages exist between the agency's mission, 
goals, and culture and its training and development efforts. The 
agency's mission and goals drive a strategic training and development 
approach and help ensure that the agency takes full advantage of an 
optimal mix of strategies to improve performance and enhance capacity 
to meet new and emerging challenges.

Leadership commitment and communication. Agency leaders and managers 
consistently demonstrate that they support and value continuous 
learning, are receptive to and use feedback from employees on 
developmental needs and training results, and set the expectation that 
fair and effective training and development practices will improve 
individual and organizational performance.

Stakeholder involvement. Agency stakeholders are involved throughout 
the training and development process to help ensure that different 
perspectives are taken into account and contribute to effective 
training and development programs. Stakeholders' views are incorporated 
in identifying needed performance enhancements, developing and 
effectively implementing well-thought-out strategies, and helping to 
conceptualize and use balanced measures that accurately reflect the 
extent to which training and development efforts contribute toward 
achieving results.

Accountability and recognition. Appropriate accountability mechanisms, 
such as performance management systems, are in place to hold managers 
and employees responsible for learning and working in new ways. 
Appropriate rewards and incentives exist and are used fairly and 
equitably to encourage innovation, reinforce changed behaviors, and 
enhance performance.

Effective resource allocation. The agency provides an appropriate level 
of funding and other tools and resources--along with external expertise 
and assistance when needed--to ensure that its training and development 
programs reflect the importance of its investment in human capital to 
achieving its mission and goals.

Partnerships and learning from others. Coordination within and among 
agencies achieves economies of scale and limits duplication of efforts. 
In addition to benchmarking high-performing organizations, these 
efforts allow an agency to keep abreast of current practices, enhance 
efficiency, and increase the effectiveness of its training and 
development programs.

Data quality assurance. The agency has established policies and 
procedures that recognize and support the importance of quality data 
and of evaluating the quality and effectiveness of training and 
development efforts. It establishes valid measures and validated 
systems to provide reliable and relevant information that is useful in 
improving the agency's training and development efforts.

Continuous performance improvement. Agency practices and policies 
foster a culture of continuous improvement and optimal organizational 
performance regarding training and other activities. Stakeholders rely 
on and use program performance information and other data to assess and 
refine ongoing training and development efforts; target new initiatives 
to improve performance; and design, develop, and implement new 
approaches to train and develop employees.

When using this guide to assess an agency's training and development 
efforts, it is important to recognize how these eight core 
characteristics can contribute to a strategic training and development 
approach. Each characteristic, such as stakeholder involvement, is a 
crucial part of each component and should be integrated throughout the 
training and development process. (See fig. 5.):

Figure 5: Linking Core Characteristics to the Components of the 
Training and Development Process:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

For example, in planning/front-end analysis, all of an agency's 
stakeholders, including human capital and training professionals, 
should be involved in decisions about how best to achieve strategic and 
performance goals through targeted training and development strategies. 
When designing and developing a specific training or development 
program, subject matter experts can contribute their knowledge and 
perspectives about what is needed to master the job's requirements and 
help identify which performance measures would best gauge the 
effectiveness of the training or development program. In 
implementation, trainers and participants can provide valuable feedback 
on how training efforts are going and point to refinements or additions 
that may be needed. Evaluation can be informed, not only through 
participants' reactions, but also through involving stakeholders such 
as peers, managers, or others who are in a position to observe 
behavioral or organizational changes and provide information on how 
training and development efforts contributed to these changes.

[End of section]

Related GAO Products:

Human Capital: Selected Agency Actions to Integrate Human Capital 
Approaches to Attain Mission Results. GAO-03-446. Washington, D.C.: 
April 11, 2003.

Military Transformation: Progress and Challenges for DOD's Advanced 
Distributed Learning Programs. GAO-03-393. Washington, D.C.: 
February 28, 2003.

Defense Management: Army Needs to Address Resource and Mission 
Requirements Affecting Its Training and Doctrine Command. GAO-03-214. 
Washington, D.C.: February 10, 2003.

Information Technology Training: Practices of Leading Private-Sector 
Companies. GAO-03-390. Washington, D.C.: January 31, 2003.

Human Capital: Effective Use of Flexibilities Can Assist Agencies in 
Managing Their Workforces. GAO-03-2. Washington, D.C.: December 6, 
2002.

A Model of Strategic Human Capital Management. GAO-02-373SP. 
Washington, D.C.: March 15, 2002.

Export Promotion: Government Agencies Should Combine Small Business 
Export Training Programs. GAO-01-1023. Washington, D.C.: September 21, 
2001.

Human Capital: Practices That Empowered and Involved Employees. GAO-01-
1070. Washington, D.C.: September 14, 2001.

Veterans' Benefits: Training for Claims Processors Needs Evaluation. 
GAO-01-601. Washington, D.C.: May 31, 2001.

Human Capital: A Self-Assessment Checklist for Agency Leaders. GAO/OCG-
00-14G. Washington, D.C.: September 1, 2000.

Human Capital: Design, Implementation, and Evaluation of Training at 
Selected Agencies. GAO/T-GGD-00-131. Washington, D.C.: May 18, 2000.

Acquisition Reform: GSA and VA Efforts to Improve Training of Their 
Acquisition Workforces. GAO/GGD-00-66. Washington, D.C.: February 18, 
2000.

Human Capital: Key Principles From Nine Private Sector Organizations. 
GAO/GGD-00-28. Washington, D.C.: January 31, 2000.

Department of Energy: Actions Necessary to Improve DOE's Training 
Program. GAO/RCED-99-56. Washington, D.C.: February 12, 1999.

(450193):

FOOTNOTES

[1] U.S. General Accounting Office, A Model of Strategic Human Capital 
Management, GAO-02-373SP (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 15, 2002).

[2] In this guide, we use "program" to refer to a system of procedures 
or activities with the purpose of enhancing employees' skills and 
competencies; we use "efforts" to refer to the consolidated training 
and development programs of an agency or office.

[3] Training and development in the federal government is governed, 
generally, by the Government Employees Training Act, as amended, 5 
U.S.C. 4101-4120. Regulations are contained in 5 C.F.R. Part 410.

[4] See, for example, the following: U.S. General Accounting Office, 
Export Promotion: Government Agencies Should Combine Small Business 
Export Training Programs, GAO-01-1023 (Washington, D.C.: Sept. 21, 
2001); Veterans' Benefits: Training for Claims Processors Needs 
Evaluation, GAO-01-601 (Washington, D.C.: May 31, 2001); and 
Acquisition Reform: GSA and VA Efforts to Improve Training of Their 
Acquisition Workforces, GAO/GGD-00-66 (Washington, D.C.: Feb. 18, 
2000).

[5] U.S. General Accounting Office, Human Capital: Selected Agency 
Actions to Integrate Human Capital Approaches to Attain Mission 
Results, GAO-03-446 (Washington, D.C.: Apr. 11, 2003).

[6] A knowledge and skills inventory is a consolidated list of relevant 
knowledge, skills, abilities, behaviors, and other competencies that an 
organization's workforce is thought to possess.

[7] Benchmarking is a management tool used to study another 
organization's business practices in order to improve the performance 
of one's own organization. This structured technique generally includes 
identifying a work activity that needs improvement, identifying another 
organization that excels in the selected activity, identifying 
opportunities to improve your own practices, and then implementing 
these improvements.

[8] An IDP is a written plan, cooperatively prepared by the employee 
and his or her supervisor, that outlines the steps the employee will 
take to develop knowledge, skills, and abilities in building on 
strengths and addressing weaknesses as he or she seeks to improve job 
performance and pursue career goals. These individual developmental 
plans are also known as personal development plans, personal training 
plans, and individual training plans.

[9] An individual learning account is a defined amount of resources, 
such as money or time, that an agency sets aside for an individual 
employee to use for his or her learning and development throughout the 
year.

[10] A learning management system is a software application that helps 
register, track, and administer courses to a given student population.

[11] A learning content management system is a software application 
that helps create, store, and manage e-learning content.

[12] Sharable Content Object Reference Model (SCORM) is an evolving set 
of technical standards designed to ensure the interoperability, 
accessibility, and reusability of on-line courseware. Developing Web-
based learning content using a standard such as SCORM could allow for 
easier collaboration across organizations.

[13] Executive Order 13111, "Using Technology to Improve Training 
Opportunities for Federal Government Employees" (Jan. 12, 1999), 
encourages agencies to consider how savings achieved through the 
efficient use of training technology can be reinvested in improved 
training for their employees.

[14] A learning objective is a statement of the desired changes that 
the specific training and development program is intended to produce in 
the target population's skills, knowledge, abilities, or behaviors. 
Learning objectives are also known by similar names, such as training 
objectives and instructional objectives.

[15] Under action learning, a group of employees is formed to analyze 
and resolve an actual problem in the workplace.

[16] Job aids, also known as performance support tools, are mechanisms 
for storing information that are readily accessible to the employee and 
that decrease the need for memorization and thus assist the employee in 
implementing learned behaviors. A job aid, for example, could be a 
manual of standard operating procedures, a checklist of key practices, 
or a computer help system that provides answers to employee questions.

[17] Federal agencies are generally required by statute to provide 
certain employees with training on computer security, ethics, and 
management and supervision; in addition, each agency can require 
additional training for its employees.

[18] See 5 U.S.C. 2301(b)(2) and 5 C.F.R. 410.302(a)(1).

[19] A training agreement is a written agreement that an agency makes 
with an employee that provides for promotion or reassignment upon the 
employee's successful completion of a specific individual training plan 
within an agreed-upon time frame.

[20] A continued service agreement is a written agreement that an 
employee makes with the agency to continue to work for the government 
for a pre-established length of time in exchange for the government's 
paying for some or all of the associated costs of training.

[21] Donald L. Kirkpatrick (author of Evaluating Training Programs: The 
Four Levels) conceived a commonly recognized four-level model for 
evaluating training and development efforts. The fourth level is 
sometimes split into two levels with the fifth level representing a 
comparison of costs and benefits quantified in dollars.

[22] A logic model is an evaluation tool used to describe a program's 
components and desired results and explain the strategy--or logic--by 
which the program is expected to achieve its goals. By specifying what 
is expected at each step, a logic model can help define measures of the 
program's progress towards its ultimate goals.

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